Forwarded from Irish Patriots
https://www.irishmirror.ie/news/irish-news/ben-dunne-goes-further-eddie-27245070
The left know that the right will benefit most from this and they're panicking
The left know that the right will benefit most from this and they're panicking
Irish Mirror
Ben Dunne goes further than Eddie Hobbs and predicts 'economic depression' with Ireland 'headed for disaster'
“Whoever we put into power, it shouldn’t be any of those who are in there at the moment.”
Forwarded from Folk Wisdom & Ways
Irish Folklore☘️
The Irish Faoladh👆
Similar to the Scottish wulver, the Irish werewolf or faoladh, differed from the typical depictions of the man-eating werewolf stories we think of, as the Irish faoladh was often considered a creature of “good”.
While there are no wolves in Ireland today, with the last one reportedly killed in 1786, wolves were at one time an important part of the Irish countryside. Ireland was even referred to as Wolfland up until the Middle Ages, due to the amount of wolves that once roamed there. It is no surprise then that they were featured prominently in Irish folklore. Stories of people transforming into wolves was a favorite subject in tales that were passed down from generation to generation.
Although the faoladh shares the similarity to other werewolf traditions of it being a man or woman that shapeshifts into a wolf, it is often portrayed in stories as a protector or guardian of others rather than an unthinking, bloodthirsty creature.
One such story was written by Giraldus Cambrensis in his 12th century work, the Topographia Hibernica, which provided an account of a priest who was asked by a faoladh to administer last rites to its dying mate. The priest was told by the wolf that it was a native of Ossory and its current wolf form was the result of an ancient curse by a St. Natalis. Every seven years, a man and a woman were exiled from their homes in Ossory and transformed into wolves.The priest performed last rites over the gravely ill mate, and the grateful faoladh not only thanked him, but also shared its campfire and food for the night and promised to reward the priest when he regained his human form once again.
In another folktale, collected by Lady Speranza Wilde in her book, Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland, a farmer discovers a family of werewolves living in a nearby forest. The faoladh family is kind to him because the farmer saved a young wolf once, not knowing that it was their son.
However, the most fascinating piece of lore I came across for the Irish faoladh was that of the Laignach Faelad. These were not doomed, kind-hearted or guardian werewolves, but vicious werewolf warriors mentioned in a medieval Irish text called the Cóir Anmann. According to the text, this tribe of man-wolf shapeshifters were from what is now known as Tipperary Island, and were thought to be followers of the bloodthirsty Irish god, Crom Cruach (the Bowed God of the Mounds.) These ancient warriors were mercenary soldiers who would fight for any king willing to pay their price. Their brutality in battle made them desirable to any ruthless and desperate king willing to hire them. The price for their services? Not gold, but the flesh of newborns that they would feed on. Strangely, I find the thought of werewolves fighting alongside a king’s army on a battlefield is both terrifying and inspiring at the same time.
The folklore of the werewolf, while being shaped by the regions of the world the stories are from, still resonates today because of the very nature of folklore itself. Folklore binds our collective past and present with tales that are meant to be shared with each generation…be it about a kindly wulver or a shapeshifting warrior, the werewolf mythos is one that still calls to us today.
References
Bourgault du Cordray, Chantal (2006) Curse of the Werewolf: Fantasy, Horror and the Beast Within. I.B. Tauris.
Gerald of Wales (1983) The History and Topography of Ireland, translated by John J. O’Meara, Penguin Classics.
Lady Speranza Wilde (2006) Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms and Superstitions of Ireland. Kessinger Publishing, LLC. Leach, M. and Fried, J. (1949) Standard Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology, and Legend. Harper and Row.
Saxby, Jessie M.E. (1932) Shetland Traditional Lore. Grant & Murray.
Stewart, C. (1909) The Origin of the Werewolf Superstition. The University of Missouri Studies.
Summers, Montague (2003) The Werewolf in Lore and Legend. Dover Publications.
The Irish Faoladh👆
Similar to the Scottish wulver, the Irish werewolf or faoladh, differed from the typical depictions of the man-eating werewolf stories we think of, as the Irish faoladh was often considered a creature of “good”.
While there are no wolves in Ireland today, with the last one reportedly killed in 1786, wolves were at one time an important part of the Irish countryside. Ireland was even referred to as Wolfland up until the Middle Ages, due to the amount of wolves that once roamed there. It is no surprise then that they were featured prominently in Irish folklore. Stories of people transforming into wolves was a favorite subject in tales that were passed down from generation to generation.
Although the faoladh shares the similarity to other werewolf traditions of it being a man or woman that shapeshifts into a wolf, it is often portrayed in stories as a protector or guardian of others rather than an unthinking, bloodthirsty creature.
One such story was written by Giraldus Cambrensis in his 12th century work, the Topographia Hibernica, which provided an account of a priest who was asked by a faoladh to administer last rites to its dying mate. The priest was told by the wolf that it was a native of Ossory and its current wolf form was the result of an ancient curse by a St. Natalis. Every seven years, a man and a woman were exiled from their homes in Ossory and transformed into wolves.The priest performed last rites over the gravely ill mate, and the grateful faoladh not only thanked him, but also shared its campfire and food for the night and promised to reward the priest when he regained his human form once again.
In another folktale, collected by Lady Speranza Wilde in her book, Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland, a farmer discovers a family of werewolves living in a nearby forest. The faoladh family is kind to him because the farmer saved a young wolf once, not knowing that it was their son.
However, the most fascinating piece of lore I came across for the Irish faoladh was that of the Laignach Faelad. These were not doomed, kind-hearted or guardian werewolves, but vicious werewolf warriors mentioned in a medieval Irish text called the Cóir Anmann. According to the text, this tribe of man-wolf shapeshifters were from what is now known as Tipperary Island, and were thought to be followers of the bloodthirsty Irish god, Crom Cruach (the Bowed God of the Mounds.) These ancient warriors were mercenary soldiers who would fight for any king willing to pay their price. Their brutality in battle made them desirable to any ruthless and desperate king willing to hire them. The price for their services? Not gold, but the flesh of newborns that they would feed on. Strangely, I find the thought of werewolves fighting alongside a king’s army on a battlefield is both terrifying and inspiring at the same time.
The folklore of the werewolf, while being shaped by the regions of the world the stories are from, still resonates today because of the very nature of folklore itself. Folklore binds our collective past and present with tales that are meant to be shared with each generation…be it about a kindly wulver or a shapeshifting warrior, the werewolf mythos is one that still calls to us today.
References
Bourgault du Cordray, Chantal (2006) Curse of the Werewolf: Fantasy, Horror and the Beast Within. I.B. Tauris.
Gerald of Wales (1983) The History and Topography of Ireland, translated by John J. O’Meara, Penguin Classics.
Lady Speranza Wilde (2006) Ancient Legends, Mystic Charms and Superstitions of Ireland. Kessinger Publishing, LLC. Leach, M. and Fried, J. (1949) Standard Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology, and Legend. Harper and Row.
Saxby, Jessie M.E. (1932) Shetland Traditional Lore. Grant & Murray.
Stewart, C. (1909) The Origin of the Werewolf Superstition. The University of Missouri Studies.
Summers, Montague (2003) The Werewolf in Lore and Legend. Dover Publications.
Forwarded from Redboar 🐗 Vids and Memes archives.
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Shortened to 56:23
Source
Ireland Land of the Pharaohs - Andrew Power interview
Duration: 86:40
https://youtube.com/watch?v=nJWQVzIaKTI
Ireland Land of the Pharaohs - Andrew Power interview
Check out the online course Ancient Ireland Culture and Society | SAVE 20% through YT: http://www.goo.gl/0NDL8v.
Ireland, Egypt, ancient, history, pharaohs, Scotland, Scota, princess, prince, king, queen, royalty, tyrants, dictators, blue blood, throne, rule, ruling class, conspiracy, cover up, hidden history, Africa, afro centrism, Europe, pyramids, megaliths, Sphinx, antideluvian, pre flood, deluge, pre deluge, post deluge, diffusion, civilization, Britain, England, Ethiopia, Andrew Power, Land of the Pharaohs
Source
Ireland Land of the Pharaohs - Andrew Power interview
Duration: 86:40
https://youtube.com/watch?v=nJWQVzIaKTI
Ireland Land of the Pharaohs - Andrew Power interview
Check out the online course Ancient Ireland Culture and Society | SAVE 20% through YT: http://www.goo.gl/0NDL8v.
Ireland, Egypt, ancient, history, pharaohs, Scotland, Scota, princess, prince, king, queen, royalty, tyrants, dictators, blue blood, throne, rule, ruling class, conspiracy, cover up, hidden history, Africa, afro centrism, Europe, pyramids, megaliths, Sphinx, antideluvian, pre flood, deluge, pre deluge, post deluge, diffusion, civilization, Britain, England, Ethiopia, Andrew Power, Land of the Pharaohs
👍2
Forwarded from Éirí amach na hÓige channel
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Sinn Féin + PBP challenged by young galway activists.
Forwarded from Éirí amach na hÓige channel
Yesterday a few young Galway activists attended the cost of living protest in Galway organised by Sinn Féin, PBP and other groups who call themselves "opposition". There were also genuine people concerned about the rising cost of living.
We went there to challenge the hypocrisy of the opposition parties who pushed for harsher lockdowns instead of trying to stop them only now talking about the rise in the cost of living when they were no where to be seen on the street when the economy was shut down. We made up a sign and printed out flashcards to inform people that the likes of Sinn Féin and PBP are not the real resistance.
We got talking to lots of friendly locals who were very supportive of us and we had a great day.
We went there to challenge the hypocrisy of the opposition parties who pushed for harsher lockdowns instead of trying to stop them only now talking about the rise in the cost of living when they were no where to be seen on the street when the economy was shut down. We made up a sign and printed out flashcards to inform people that the likes of Sinn Féin and PBP are not the real resistance.
We got talking to lots of friendly locals who were very supportive of us and we had a great day.
Forwarded from carlos lastack
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WHAT IS THE REAL POWER OF SOUND?
& CAN MUSIC BE USED TO CONTROL THE MINDS OF PEOPLE?
By Amr Waked
Short Documentry.
A MUST WATCH!
& CAN MUSIC BE USED TO CONTROL THE MINDS OF PEOPLE?
By Amr Waked
Short Documentry.
A MUST WATCH!
Forwarded from Leabhair na hÉireann
1. The Story of the Irish Race - Seumas MacManus
[Period : Historical Summary / Topic - History ]
2. Irish Pedigrees; or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation - John O'Hart
[Period : Historical Summary / Topic - History ]
3. Táin Bó Cúailnge, there's various translations
[Period : 1st Century / Topic - "The Irish Iliad" / Irish Folklore / Celtic Ireland]
4. Gods and Fighting Men - Lady Gregory
[Period : 1st Century / Topic - / Irish Folklore / Celtic Ireland]
5. Confessio / Epistola - St. Patrick
[Period : 386 - 433 / Topic : St Patrick / Early Christian Ireland]
6. The divisions of Nature - Eriugena
[Period : 867 / Topic : Theologian / Philosophy]
7. The Brehon Laws: A Legal Handbook
[Period : Celtic Ireland - 1600s / Topic - Brehon Laws / Celtic Ireland]
8. Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland (or the Annals of the Four Masters) - by Cú Choigcríche Ó Cléirigh, Fearfeasa Ó Maol Chonaire, and Mícheál Ó Cléirigh
[Period : Beginning - 1616 / Topic - Irish History]
9. Captain Cuellar's Adventures in Connacht and Ulster: Author - Francisco de Cuellar
[Period : Beginning - 1588 / Topic - Ireland post Tudor Re-Conquest]
10. Our Martyrs: A record of those who suffered for the Catholic faith under the penal laws in Ireland - Denis Murphy
[Period : 1535-1691 / Topic - Irish Martyrs / Penal Laws]
11. The Cromwellian settlement of Ireland - Prendergast, John P. (John Patrick)
[Period : 1650 - 1680 / Topic - Cromwellian Conquest / Irish Slavery]
12. To Hell or Barbados - The ethnic cleansing of Ireland - SEAN O'CALLAGHAN
[Period : 1650 - 1680 / Topic - Cromwellian Conquest / Irish Slavery]
13. Beatha Theobald Wolfe Tone : mar do fríth 'na scríbhinní féin agus i scríbhinní a mhic - Ó SIOCHFHRADHA, Pádraig (1883–1964)
[Period : 1763 - 1798 / Topic - Rebellion of 1798 ]
14. Wolfe Tone - Marianne Elliott
[Period : 1763 - 1798 / Topic - Rebellion of 1798 ]
15. The Crusade of the Period: and Last Conquest of Ireland (Perhaps) - John Mitchell
[Period : 1815 - 1875 / Topic - Politics, History ]
16. Jail Journal - John Mitchell
[Period : 1815 - 1875 / Topic - Politics, History ]
17. Collected Works of James Connolly (WIP)
[Period : 1900 - 1916 / Topic : 1916 Easter Rising]
18. The Coming Revolution: Political Writings of Patrick Pearse
[Period : 1909 - 1916 / Topic : 1916 Easter Rising]
19. The Path to Freedom - Michael Collins
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence]
20. Guerilla Days in Ireland - Tom Barry
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence]
21. My Fight for Irish Freedom - Dan Breen
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence ]
22. On Another Man's Wound - Ernie O'Malley
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence ]
23. The Singing Flame - Ernie O'Malley
[Period : 1911 - 1923 / Topic - Irish Civil War ]
24. THE SECRET SOCIETIES OF IRELAND. Their rise and progress - Captain H. B. C Pollard
[Period : 1850s - 1922 / Topic - Irish Secret Societies]
25. Money for Ireland: Finance, Diplomacy, Politics and the First Dail Eireann Loans - Francis M. Carroll
[Period : 1919-1936 / Topic - Irish Monetary History / Economics]
26. Crusade In Spain - Eoin O'Duffy
[Period : 1930s / Topic - Politics / Spanish Civil War]
27. Architects of the Resurrection Ailtirí na hAiséirghe and the Fascist New Order in Ireland - R M Douglas
[Period :1930 - 1945 / Topic - Politics, History ]
28. Anglo Republic: Inside the bank that broke Ireland - Carswell, Simon
[Period : 2002 - 2010 / Topic - Celtic Tiger / Economics / 2008 Recession]
[Period : Historical Summary / Topic - History ]
2. Irish Pedigrees; or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation - John O'Hart
[Period : Historical Summary / Topic - History ]
3. Táin Bó Cúailnge, there's various translations
[Period : 1st Century / Topic - "The Irish Iliad" / Irish Folklore / Celtic Ireland]
4. Gods and Fighting Men - Lady Gregory
[Period : 1st Century / Topic - / Irish Folklore / Celtic Ireland]
5. Confessio / Epistola - St. Patrick
[Period : 386 - 433 / Topic : St Patrick / Early Christian Ireland]
6. The divisions of Nature - Eriugena
[Period : 867 / Topic : Theologian / Philosophy]
7. The Brehon Laws: A Legal Handbook
[Period : Celtic Ireland - 1600s / Topic - Brehon Laws / Celtic Ireland]
8. Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland (or the Annals of the Four Masters) - by Cú Choigcríche Ó Cléirigh, Fearfeasa Ó Maol Chonaire, and Mícheál Ó Cléirigh
[Period : Beginning - 1616 / Topic - Irish History]
9. Captain Cuellar's Adventures in Connacht and Ulster: Author - Francisco de Cuellar
[Period : Beginning - 1588 / Topic - Ireland post Tudor Re-Conquest]
10. Our Martyrs: A record of those who suffered for the Catholic faith under the penal laws in Ireland - Denis Murphy
[Period : 1535-1691 / Topic - Irish Martyrs / Penal Laws]
11. The Cromwellian settlement of Ireland - Prendergast, John P. (John Patrick)
[Period : 1650 - 1680 / Topic - Cromwellian Conquest / Irish Slavery]
12. To Hell or Barbados - The ethnic cleansing of Ireland - SEAN O'CALLAGHAN
[Period : 1650 - 1680 / Topic - Cromwellian Conquest / Irish Slavery]
13. Beatha Theobald Wolfe Tone : mar do fríth 'na scríbhinní féin agus i scríbhinní a mhic - Ó SIOCHFHRADHA, Pádraig (1883–1964)
[Period : 1763 - 1798 / Topic - Rebellion of 1798 ]
14. Wolfe Tone - Marianne Elliott
[Period : 1763 - 1798 / Topic - Rebellion of 1798 ]
15. The Crusade of the Period: and Last Conquest of Ireland (Perhaps) - John Mitchell
[Period : 1815 - 1875 / Topic - Politics, History ]
16. Jail Journal - John Mitchell
[Period : 1815 - 1875 / Topic - Politics, History ]
17. Collected Works of James Connolly (WIP)
[Period : 1900 - 1916 / Topic : 1916 Easter Rising]
18. The Coming Revolution: Political Writings of Patrick Pearse
[Period : 1909 - 1916 / Topic : 1916 Easter Rising]
19. The Path to Freedom - Michael Collins
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence]
20. Guerilla Days in Ireland - Tom Barry
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence]
21. My Fight for Irish Freedom - Dan Breen
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence ]
22. On Another Man's Wound - Ernie O'Malley
[Period : 1919 - 1921 / Topic - War of Independence ]
23. The Singing Flame - Ernie O'Malley
[Period : 1911 - 1923 / Topic - Irish Civil War ]
24. THE SECRET SOCIETIES OF IRELAND. Their rise and progress - Captain H. B. C Pollard
[Period : 1850s - 1922 / Topic - Irish Secret Societies]
25. Money for Ireland: Finance, Diplomacy, Politics and the First Dail Eireann Loans - Francis M. Carroll
[Period : 1919-1936 / Topic - Irish Monetary History / Economics]
26. Crusade In Spain - Eoin O'Duffy
[Period : 1930s / Topic - Politics / Spanish Civil War]
27. Architects of the Resurrection Ailtirí na hAiséirghe and the Fascist New Order in Ireland - R M Douglas
[Period :1930 - 1945 / Topic - Politics, History ]
28. Anglo Republic: Inside the bank that broke Ireland - Carswell, Simon
[Period : 2002 - 2010 / Topic - Celtic Tiger / Economics / 2008 Recession]
Libraryireland
Irish Pedigrees, Volume 1
Contents, from Irish Pedigrees; or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation, by John O'Hart
👍2
Forwarded from Grand Torino (GRAND TORINO)
The increased cost of living has been caused by printing money through lockdown.
Our own government put us into a lockdown and collapsed our economy.
The opposition political parties supported these lockdowns.
The EU and WEF directed national government's to lockdown thus collapsing the world economy.
This is so they can reboot a broken economic system and install a digital currency and surveillance state.
Control the money and control the people.
It is that simple.
Our own government put us into a lockdown and collapsed our economy.
The opposition political parties supported these lockdowns.
The EU and WEF directed national government's to lockdown thus collapsing the world economy.
This is so they can reboot a broken economic system and install a digital currency and surveillance state.
Control the money and control the people.
It is that simple.