Survive the Jive: All-feed
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All StJ activity updates here on the All feed. ᛝ🐗
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French people are understandably angry about the development of a Mr Bricolage hardware shop on a Neolithic megalith site. I shall visit the shop myself in a week or so to inspect the damage.
An interesting day for me. I gave private tuition to an intersting young man who wanted to learn about Anglo-Saxon history. Then a villager told me I ought to get on tik tok which I reluctantly conceded may eventually become necessary and finally a couple of Northern tourists stopped to look at my cottage which they said was beautiful.
An Iron Age Briton buries his comrade
Anglo-Saxon mount, Grimsby, Lincolnshire. 6th or 7th c. Two bearded faces possibly represent the divine twins Hengest and Horsa
Forwarded from Irminfolk Odinist Community (Michael S)
Announcing Tom Rowsell, Renowned Historian and Host of "Survive the Jive" Podcast, as Honored Guest Speaker at Folkish Summer Hallowing 2023

The Irminfolk is thrilled to announce that Tom Rowsell, host of the captivating podcast "Survive the Jive," will be joining us as a distinguished guest speaker at the upcoming Folkish Summer Hallowing 2023. This highly anticipated event will take place from August 16 to 19 in the picturesque valleys of Wayne County Pennsylvania and promises to be an unforgettable celebration of cultural heritage, Heathen faith, and intellectual exploration.

Tom Rowsell is an accomplished British historian, YouTuber, and documentary film-maker who has made remarkable contributions to the field of pre-Christian religions. His popular podcast, Survive the Jive, delves into various topics, including Germanic paganism, Archaeogenetics, and Indo-European studies with thought-provoking content.

We are honored to welcome Tom Rowsell to the United States for the very first time. His presence at Folkish Summer Hallowing 2023 will undoubtedly enrich our event, offering attendees a unique opportunity to engage with an exceptional scholar and storyteller. Rowsell's extensive knowledge, combined with his passion for uncovering hidden histories, will shed new light on ancient traditions and their significance today.

Tickets for Folkish Summer Hallowing 2023 are on sale now. Space is limited. Don't miss out!

For info and tickets:
Folkishsummerhallowing.com
Forwarded from Folkish France
The small destroyed menhirs were estimated to date back from 5480 to 5320 BCE, the oldest dating obtained for a menhir in western France according to Christian Obeltz, a researcher on Neolithic populations, correspondent for the DRAC and collaborator of the National Centre for Scientific Research in Nantes.

He expresses his regret at the disappearance of such a site that could have been rich in teachings if more in-depth excavations had been carried out. He notes that one of the rows of standing stones had been "exactly in its original place for seven thousand years."

The town hall, regretting the destruction, claims that a rigorous examination of the project was carried out before the building permit was issued. It passes the buck to the DRAC, which had identified the site as a prescription zone in the old land use plan, but no longer in the new local urban plan not listed among archaeological presumption zones. 🤡

Pictured: the site after its destruction in 2023.

Post 2/2

1st post
Forwarded from TheBeakerLady
The star of my upcoming post on the Abashevo culture.

This young man was an Abashevo warrior who was buried with 26 other men in a mass grave under a kurgan. The Abashevo descended from the Fatyanovo culture and would lead to the formation of the Sintashta culture. They are theorized to have spoken a proto-Indo-Iranian language.

Thanks to @thechadpastoralist for his assistance on this reconstruction. I also want to thank Upasaka as well for his helpful feedback on the piece.
Forwarded from Dan Davis Author
There are thousands upon thousands of Neolithic tombs in Europe and many of them are collective burials, meaning they contained the remains of more than one person.

However this still represents a tiny fraction of all the people who lived during the Neolithic period.

So what did they do with all the other bodies?

Well... we dunno.

There is also evidence of excarnation platforms for exposing bodies (in the form of post holes and human remains).

There were also cremations with the burnt remains buried.

These activities also leave evidence in the ground and although it's harder to find than megalithic tombs of course that still doesn't account for all the dead people.

There is some evidence from Britain suggesting some excarnation platforms may have been on or beside rivers, with the remains being washed downstream.

Whatever traditions were used, only a select few were ever interred in those magnificent tombs.

So who were those people? Why were they so special?

🤔
Detail shots of the Vendel era draugr of the barrow in The Northman (2022) - taken from "The Northman: a call to the gods" which is a book about the film's production. You can learn more about the pagan details of the film in this comprehensive film about its esoteric heathen lore.
I was surprised to see the village of Boxford, a place I used to get drunk with friends as a youth, is in the news. An oak Mesolithic "totem pole" used by WHG in their rituals was found in peat. Dated between 4640BC and 4605BC, it is the oldest decoratively carved timber found in Britain. These timbers were set in post holes much like the Megalithic monuments that the first farmers would build when they arrived later, and they are sometimes found on the same sites, hinting that monuments like Stonehenge may have been a continuation of a WHG custom.