Traditional Europe
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💬🌳🏛🖼️📜 Quotes, nature, architecture, art and history about our homeland, Europe.
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A nearly complete 1st century BCE carnyx found in 2004 at Tintignac, France (the one in the left picture, with a reconstruction in the right).

Fashioned as a snarling boar, the carnyx was a war horn used by the Iron Age Celts between c. 200 BCE and c. 200 CE
“Fear not death for the hour of your doom is set and none may escape it.“

~ Völsunga Saga
Undine, Arthur Rackham (1909)

In european mythology, the ondines are water sprites who could be mortal if she married a human, but if her husband was unfaithful, she had to go back to the sea.
Forwarded from Worth Fighting For
Good morning 👍
Fionn mac Cumhaill fighting Aillen, illustration by Beatrice Elvery in Violet Russell’s Heroes of the Dawn (1914)
"The Rape of Polyxena" in the Loggia dei Lanzi of Florence, Italy
German infantrymen in a trench with gas masks, Flanders, Belgium. Late 1915
“Think Thousand times before taking a decision But - After taking decison never turn back even if you get Thousand difficulties!”

― Adolf Hitler
"The Hutsul Madonna triptych" — Kazimierz Sichulski, 1909.
The Elliptical staircase of the Palace Mannajuolo, Naples, Campania, Italy
"Der König überall / The King Everywhere". 1886, Robert Müller.

One of the more bizarre claims to fame attributed to the first King of Prussia is that the man who would go down in history known as Frederick the Great introduced the potato to Germany during his reign back in the 1700s. This starchy root vegetable has undoubtedly become a staple part of German cuisine - an essential addition to any plate of Schnitzel, Schweinshaxn, and Königsberger Klopse - however, whether Frederick the Great is truly deserving of the additional moniker, Der Kartoffelkönig (the potato king).