Forwarded from The European Race ✨
The Greatness of our European Men. The beauty. The intelligence. The creativeness. The drive to succeed. The Hunger for world domination. Our men need to be reminded just how powerful they are together when fighting for their People. 😍❤️🙌🏻👏🏻 we need and miss our men more than ever. Stop being part of our destruction working for the Rothchilds and co corporations aka police and military. And start working for your European Tribes interests. Fight for your people. 🙌🏻👏🏻👊🏻#EuropeanMenForEurope #SaveEurope #RememberWhoYouAre #Fight #NeverGiveUpOnEurope
Forwarded from Æhtemen
Drink from Mimor’s bruna
awaken spirits deep
into your ancient forebears past
let your spirit seep
let them guide you forwards
their memories hold and keep
drink from Mimor’s bruna
awaken spirits deep.
We know Mimor's Bruna as Mimir's Brunnr. The OE word bruna which is cognate with brunnr means stream and survives in the modern English bourne. Mimor is OE and means 'mindful' - which fits the etymology of Mimir.
awaken spirits deep
into your ancient forebears past
let your spirit seep
let them guide you forwards
their memories hold and keep
drink from Mimor’s bruna
awaken spirits deep.
We know Mimor's Bruna as Mimir's Brunnr. The OE word bruna which is cognate with brunnr means stream and survives in the modern English bourne. Mimor is OE and means 'mindful' - which fits the etymology of Mimir.
Forwarded from Ice Age Farmer
US corn is being BAKED right now, much of it is tasseling, meaning yield will be impacted quite severely.
In other words, Andrey should already be worried about corn.
And about the culling of cattle herds happening now in Texas drought.
Grow your garden folks. Things are getting rough, and accelerating quickly.
#us #corn
In other words, Andrey should already be worried about corn.
And about the culling of cattle herds happening now in Texas drought.
Grow your garden folks. Things are getting rough, and accelerating quickly.
#us #corn
Forwarded from Ice Age Farmer
Europe is in free fall. In the last 12 hours:
- Russia hints NordStream 2 is NOT coming back online.
- German banks adjust models to say "We might survive if houses heat using firewood and we STOP all industry and economic activity (really strong plan guys!)
- Hungary announces ban on export of firewood:
https://musicnewsfirst.com/hungary-bans-the-export-of-energy-and-firewood-from-the-country/
#Eu #EnergyCrisis
- Russia hints NordStream 2 is NOT coming back online.
- German banks adjust models to say "We might survive if houses heat using firewood and we STOP all industry and economic activity (really strong plan guys!)
- Hungary announces ban on export of firewood:
https://musicnewsfirst.com/hungary-bans-the-export-of-energy-and-firewood-from-the-country/
#Eu #EnergyCrisis
😁1
The Bird Whisperers
Communicating with animals is probably not what most people first associate with "vikings" (as in, people with Scandinavian origins who lived during the "Viking Age", not the actual pirates that the term "viking" referred to), however, it ought to be.
In the Vǫlsunga saga, we learn of two men, outcasts and avengers, who not only donned wolf hides, but also learned about a healing herb from two weasels. The herb was later delivered into the shapeshifter´s hands when he needed it the most: by a crow.
The story is told in such a way as to reveal that the saga writer clearly expected his audience to accept this account without further inquiry – it was told and retold during eras where the notion of learning things and receiving useful things from animals was perfectly within the range of natural events.
We hear that the gods and other powers could ride or assume the hides of animals, and of the notion that animals could also serve them.
In the saga material, we sometimes hear of holy animals – usually the ones who are destined for the sacrificial altar, but in any case, they are holy beasts. And sometimes, they could speak and give counsel to the cunning people.
Omen Birds and Holy Horses
In Tacitus´ Germania, dating back to the first century A.D., we may read about the obtaining of omens from birds (what the Romans saw as normal) and from horses (what the Romans thought novel):
*
[Tacitus on the Taking of Omens]
"Although the familiar method of seeking information from the cries and the flight of birds is known to the Germans, they have also a special method of their own - to try to obtain omens and warnings from horses.
These horses are kept at the public expense in the sacred woods and groves that I have mentioned; they are pure white and undefiled by any toil in the service of man.
The priest and the king, or the chief of the state, yoke them to a sacred chariot and walk beside them, taking note of their neighs and snorts.
No kind of omen inspires greater trust, not only among the common people, but even among the nobles and priests, who think that they themselves are but servants of the gods, whereas the horses are privy to the gods' counsels."
*
More than a thousand years after Tacitus wrote his account of sacred horses, we may read in the Flateyarbók’s saga of Ólafr Tryggvason, chapter 322, that there were stallions by the path up to a temple of Freyr, and that it is said that the god Freyr owns them.
Atli Bargains with the Bird of the Grove
In the Helgakviða Hiǫrvarðssonar, a cunning man, Atli, sits out in a grove to hear the birds speak to him:
*
"Atli Earl´s Son stoon one day in a certain grove, and a bird sat in the branches up above him, and had heard that his men had called the wives of Hiǫrvarðr King the most beautiful in the world.
The bird tweeted, and Atli listened to what he said, and he (the bird) said:"
*
The bird speaks of maidens even more beautiful than the king´s wives, and Atli asks what he (the bird) wants in return for his counsel:
*
2: Atli said:
“May you see in kindness on Atli,
Iðmund´s Son [Son of Returning Origin],
you wise-minded bird!
Will you speak more?”
The bird said:
“I will, if the noble descendant
will sacrifice to me
and let me choose what I want
from the King´s settlement.”
*
Before Atli is ready to let the bird choose whatever it wants for its sacrifice, he must make sure that the bird is not actually going to choose (for sacrifice, as in death) the king, the king´s son, or the king´s wives or other noblewomen, but instead make a mutually good bargain, appealing to their good friendship:
*
3: Atli said:
“Choose not Hiǫrvarðr
nor his son
nor the beautiful
brides of the lords,
nor those brides who are
owned by the noble descendant (=the king)
Let us bargain well together
That is how friends behave.”
Communicating with animals is probably not what most people first associate with "vikings" (as in, people with Scandinavian origins who lived during the "Viking Age", not the actual pirates that the term "viking" referred to), however, it ought to be.
In the Vǫlsunga saga, we learn of two men, outcasts and avengers, who not only donned wolf hides, but also learned about a healing herb from two weasels. The herb was later delivered into the shapeshifter´s hands when he needed it the most: by a crow.
The story is told in such a way as to reveal that the saga writer clearly expected his audience to accept this account without further inquiry – it was told and retold during eras where the notion of learning things and receiving useful things from animals was perfectly within the range of natural events.
We hear that the gods and other powers could ride or assume the hides of animals, and of the notion that animals could also serve them.
In the saga material, we sometimes hear of holy animals – usually the ones who are destined for the sacrificial altar, but in any case, they are holy beasts. And sometimes, they could speak and give counsel to the cunning people.
Omen Birds and Holy Horses
In Tacitus´ Germania, dating back to the first century A.D., we may read about the obtaining of omens from birds (what the Romans saw as normal) and from horses (what the Romans thought novel):
*
[Tacitus on the Taking of Omens]
"Although the familiar method of seeking information from the cries and the flight of birds is known to the Germans, they have also a special method of their own - to try to obtain omens and warnings from horses.
These horses are kept at the public expense in the sacred woods and groves that I have mentioned; they are pure white and undefiled by any toil in the service of man.
The priest and the king, or the chief of the state, yoke them to a sacred chariot and walk beside them, taking note of their neighs and snorts.
No kind of omen inspires greater trust, not only among the common people, but even among the nobles and priests, who think that they themselves are but servants of the gods, whereas the horses are privy to the gods' counsels."
*
More than a thousand years after Tacitus wrote his account of sacred horses, we may read in the Flateyarbók’s saga of Ólafr Tryggvason, chapter 322, that there were stallions by the path up to a temple of Freyr, and that it is said that the god Freyr owns them.
Atli Bargains with the Bird of the Grove
In the Helgakviða Hiǫrvarðssonar, a cunning man, Atli, sits out in a grove to hear the birds speak to him:
*
"Atli Earl´s Son stoon one day in a certain grove, and a bird sat in the branches up above him, and had heard that his men had called the wives of Hiǫrvarðr King the most beautiful in the world.
The bird tweeted, and Atli listened to what he said, and he (the bird) said:"
*
The bird speaks of maidens even more beautiful than the king´s wives, and Atli asks what he (the bird) wants in return for his counsel:
*
2: Atli said:
“May you see in kindness on Atli,
Iðmund´s Son [Son of Returning Origin],
you wise-minded bird!
Will you speak more?”
The bird said:
“I will, if the noble descendant
will sacrifice to me
and let me choose what I want
from the King´s settlement.”
*
Before Atli is ready to let the bird choose whatever it wants for its sacrifice, he must make sure that the bird is not actually going to choose (for sacrifice, as in death) the king, the king´s son, or the king´s wives or other noblewomen, but instead make a mutually good bargain, appealing to their good friendship:
*
3: Atli said:
“Choose not Hiǫrvarðr
nor his son
nor the beautiful
brides of the lords,
nor those brides who are
owned by the noble descendant (=the king)
Let us bargain well together
That is how friends behave.”
👍1
4: The bird said:
“Temples may I choose
many shrines
gold-horned cattle
from the Esteemed One´s (the king´s) settlement
If he (the king), with Sigrlinn,
may sleep in her arms
and (if she), without being forced,
follows the royal one.”
*
There is clearly a bargain here, where the cunning man, who may speak to birds in the sacred grove, ensures that the bird will not choose for its sacrifice any of the noble people that the cunning man serves, and the bird instead chooses cattle for sacrifice, as well as temples and shrines in its honor. For this price, it will ensure that the mysterious woman of the other world will fylgja – follow – the king, by her own choosing.
Sigurðr Learns the Speech of Birds
In a later poem, the Fafnismál, a young man, Sigurðr, speaks with a dying serpent and listens to the speech of birds:
*
"Sigurðr took the heart of Fafnir (the serpent) and cooked it on the fire. And when he thought it was thoroughly cooked, then the fat dripped from the heart, then he took his finger into the heart to check if it was fully cooked. He got burnt and put his finger into his mouth.
And the heartblood of the serpent that came on his tongue enabled him to understand the speech of birds, he heard that the nuthatches were tweeting in the branches. The nuthatch said:"
*
Basically, the nuthatches advise him and warn him.
The Woman who Talked to Birds and Horses
Later on, in the Edda poem Guðrúnarkviða hin fyrsta [The First Poem of Guðrún] we hear that Sigurðr´s wife, Guðrún, also learned to understand the speech of birds through a similar process:
*
"It is a legend among men, that Guðrún had eaten of the heart of the serpent Fafnir, and that she could understand the speech of birds."
*
In the same poem, we learn that she owns geese – a type of bird that the Romans once liked to use for the taking of omens, and that her geese react to her emotions, cackling in response to her weeping:
*
16: Then wept Guðrún,
Giuki´s daughter,
so that her tears
fell through her hair
And they cried along with her,
the geese in the meadow,
the splendid birds
that the maiden owned."
*
Guðrún can also read the minds of horses, it seems. In the Guðrúnarkviða hin forna, she learns of the death of her husband from his horse, Grani, a horse who weeps in grief for his rider, while all the other horses in the vicinity get equally upset about the murder:
*
"…she (Guðrún) talked to him and said (…):
4: Grani (the horse) ran from the Parliament
the noise could be heard
and then Sigurðr
himself, did not come:
All the saddle-beasts (horses)
were dripping from sweat
exhausted by their work
beneath the killing men.
5: I (Guðrún) went, weeping
to speak with Grani (the horse)
Of tidings, I asked
the horse to tell me;
Grani neighed then
and hid his head in the grass
the horse knew
that his master was dead." - Maria Kvilhaug
“Temples may I choose
many shrines
gold-horned cattle
from the Esteemed One´s (the king´s) settlement
If he (the king), with Sigrlinn,
may sleep in her arms
and (if she), without being forced,
follows the royal one.”
*
There is clearly a bargain here, where the cunning man, who may speak to birds in the sacred grove, ensures that the bird will not choose for its sacrifice any of the noble people that the cunning man serves, and the bird instead chooses cattle for sacrifice, as well as temples and shrines in its honor. For this price, it will ensure that the mysterious woman of the other world will fylgja – follow – the king, by her own choosing.
Sigurðr Learns the Speech of Birds
In a later poem, the Fafnismál, a young man, Sigurðr, speaks with a dying serpent and listens to the speech of birds:
*
"Sigurðr took the heart of Fafnir (the serpent) and cooked it on the fire. And when he thought it was thoroughly cooked, then the fat dripped from the heart, then he took his finger into the heart to check if it was fully cooked. He got burnt and put his finger into his mouth.
And the heartblood of the serpent that came on his tongue enabled him to understand the speech of birds, he heard that the nuthatches were tweeting in the branches. The nuthatch said:"
*
Basically, the nuthatches advise him and warn him.
The Woman who Talked to Birds and Horses
Later on, in the Edda poem Guðrúnarkviða hin fyrsta [The First Poem of Guðrún] we hear that Sigurðr´s wife, Guðrún, also learned to understand the speech of birds through a similar process:
*
"It is a legend among men, that Guðrún had eaten of the heart of the serpent Fafnir, and that she could understand the speech of birds."
*
In the same poem, we learn that she owns geese – a type of bird that the Romans once liked to use for the taking of omens, and that her geese react to her emotions, cackling in response to her weeping:
*
16: Then wept Guðrún,
Giuki´s daughter,
so that her tears
fell through her hair
And they cried along with her,
the geese in the meadow,
the splendid birds
that the maiden owned."
*
Guðrún can also read the minds of horses, it seems. In the Guðrúnarkviða hin forna, she learns of the death of her husband from his horse, Grani, a horse who weeps in grief for his rider, while all the other horses in the vicinity get equally upset about the murder:
*
"…she (Guðrún) talked to him and said (…):
4: Grani (the horse) ran from the Parliament
the noise could be heard
and then Sigurðr
himself, did not come:
All the saddle-beasts (horses)
were dripping from sweat
exhausted by their work
beneath the killing men.
5: I (Guðrún) went, weeping
to speak with Grani (the horse)
Of tidings, I asked
the horse to tell me;
Grani neighed then
and hid his head in the grass
the horse knew
that his master was dead." - Maria Kvilhaug
Forwarded from Diary of an Underground Ronin
"It never troubles a wolf how many sheep there may be."
— Virgil
— Virgil
Forwarded from ȺηтнαѕGαтє
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🇩🇪German and 🇳🇱Dutch farmers block distribution center in Ter Apel in the Netherlands. This is what scares corrupt EU politicians, the union between the peoples of Europe.
❤6
Forwarded from Memory Of Honor
The Cimbri were one of the Germanic tribes written about by the Roman historian Plutarch. Plutarch wrote that during a war with the Romans in 101 BCE the Cimbri chariots were filled with women & children. The Cimbri women, while standing on their chariots, aimed sharp arrows at all the men that fled from battle, killing their own sons, husbands, brothers & fathers. The brave women then strangled their infants & children to death with their own hands, and last of all they killed themselves rather than fall into the arms of the Romans. Such was the Courage, Bravery, Virtue & Honor of the those ancient women. Those fearless women understood the eternal & unchanging Noble Virtue of “Death Before Dishonor” - a Virtue no longer understood by modern “men.”
🔥3
Watch "Pagan Ireland | How the Ancient Irish Lived as Pagans" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/anzWnroMups
https://youtu.be/anzWnroMups
YouTube
Pagan Ireland | How the Ancient Irish Lived as Pagans
https://bit.ly/brehonacademy_courses Chapter from P.W. Joyce's Story of Ancient Irish Civilisation, titled 'How the Ancient Irish Lived as Pagans'.
#irishhistory
THE BREHON ACADEMY
Join https://bit.ly/brehonmembers
Learn https://bit.ly/brehonacademy_courses…
#irishhistory
THE BREHON ACADEMY
Join https://bit.ly/brehonmembers
Learn https://bit.ly/brehonacademy_courses…
👍3
Forwarded from BC Neanderthal Mindset
"Have you noticed how a lifelong devotion to physical exercise, to the exclusion of anything else, produces a certain kind of mind? Just as a neglect of it, produces another type? One type tends to be uncivilized and tough, the other soft and over-sensitive."
- Socrates
- Socrates
Forwarded from Make Europa Snow 🤍❄️🧬
Defend & Save her from being in a communist anti-white multicultural Future that's if she survives our enemies plans of White genøcide.
PROTECT WHITE CHILDREN!!!
PROTECT WHITE CHILDREN!!!
❤4
Forwarded from 🌲𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐞 𝐇𝐨𝐦𝐞🌲
Not every girl survives the forest. Sometimes she becomes it.
— Catherine Garbinsky, from “The Princess & the Thorns,” Even Curses End
— Catherine Garbinsky, from “The Princess & the Thorns,” Even Curses End
Watch "A $54,000 HAY BILL: Why Texas Ranchers are Liquidating Beef Cattle | DROUGHT UPDATE EAST TEXAS 2022" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/hnnE50u13J0
https://youtu.be/hnnE50u13J0
YouTube
"INSANE COSTS!" WHY TEXAS RANCHERS ARE RUSHING TO SELL CATTLE | DROUGHT 2022 Hay Beef COW Market
BUY THE BOOK HERE: http://bit.ly/ShepherdessMERCH
Join my Newsletter: http://bit.ly/ShepherdessNWSLTR
EMAIL: shepherdess (at) harmonyfarms.blog
Why are Texas ranchers selling their cattle? Why are hay prices so high? Why are there hay shortages? This video…
Join my Newsletter: http://bit.ly/ShepherdessNWSLTR
EMAIL: shepherdess (at) harmonyfarms.blog
Why are Texas ranchers selling their cattle? Why are hay prices so high? Why are there hay shortages? This video…