Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
HALLOWEEN 🎃 SPECIAL 👻 in which Dave Martel and I discuss the history of horror and our favourite Halloween films 🍿
https://youtu.be/WjMkr9Ra8OI?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/WjMkr9Ra8OI?feature=shared
YouTube
Horror in History - with @DaveMartel
Halloween is a time for horror films but when did horror start? I am joined by Dave Martel on tonight’s Jive Talk in which we discuss how horror films have their precedents in early mythology and ghost stories.
Get exclusive Heathen content on https://…
Get exclusive Heathen content on https://…
❤20👍7👻6
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
This new artwork of a draugr by Joan Oliveras shows him wearing the helmet from grave 14 at Vendel. You can see a reconstruction in this video.
Listen to Dave Martel the Bog Lord go off about the undead in this stream
Listen to Dave Martel the Bog Lord go off about the undead in this stream
🔥30👻8
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
The Wild Hunt of Woden in Dartmoor
https://youtu.be/luyXW_kXlGs
https://youtu.be/luyXW_kXlGs
YouTube
The Wild Hunt and Wistman's Wood
The legend of The Wild Hunt is found across Europe in different forms; Originally led by Odin (Woden), in Britain it was said to be led by King Arthur or Herne the Hunter, but always it remained fearsome, and nowhere more than Dartmoor has the dread of the…
⚡31👻3
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Robin Redbreast (1970) is a real folk horror classic. Anglo-Saxon paganism persists among a rural community in Worcestershire, and a middle class urbanite woman is entangled in a secret rite. These are my favourite clips
👍51❤8⚡2🔥2
Survive the Jive: All-feed
I object to Ingvifreyr being called a god of the crops or a fertility god. This ignores so much evidence to the contrary. In Ynglinga saga a euhemerised narrative reduces Freyr and his father Njörðr to mere mortals but associates the good harvest with Njörðr…
The idea that Vanir represent pre-Corded Ware agricultural gods is doing the rounds again.
Alvi makes nice videos but this old theory really doesn’t hold up. Vanir do not come from a pre IE religion:
-Thor and Odin were prayed to for good harvests
-Thor’s mother is literally Mother Earth
-Freyja is not a harvest goddess
-Frey is the god of the barrow which is the most Indo-European thing in existence
-All the Vanir names have IE etymological roots
-Other IE religions such as Indo-Iranic also have two tribes of gods (asuras and devas) - evidently a feature of PIE religion
-The last merging of peoples in Scandinavia was not the IE battle axe with the EEF TBK, rather it was merging of different IE groups
Also this isn’t how religions really work. When a people is defeated and replaced, their gods don’t usually get incorporated into the religion of the invaders.
Much is made of Frey being described with a boner by Adam of Bremen. The logic is dick=sex, sex=fertility, fertility=crops. But erect dicks in many cultures have completely different symbolic meanings eg. Romans used them as charms against evil. We know that erections were associated with virile masculinity and war in the context of Nordic Bronze Age petroglyphs so we could just as easily argue Frey is a war god as a fertility god based on his boner alone.
It just isn’t a good theory.
Alvi makes nice videos but this old theory really doesn’t hold up. Vanir do not come from a pre IE religion:
-Thor and Odin were prayed to for good harvests
-Thor’s mother is literally Mother Earth
-Freyja is not a harvest goddess
-Frey is the god of the barrow which is the most Indo-European thing in existence
-All the Vanir names have IE etymological roots
-Other IE religions such as Indo-Iranic also have two tribes of gods (asuras and devas) - evidently a feature of PIE religion
-The last merging of peoples in Scandinavia was not the IE battle axe with the EEF TBK, rather it was merging of different IE groups
Also this isn’t how religions really work. When a people is defeated and replaced, their gods don’t usually get incorporated into the religion of the invaders.
Much is made of Frey being described with a boner by Adam of Bremen. The logic is dick=sex, sex=fertility, fertility=crops. But erect dicks in many cultures have completely different symbolic meanings eg. Romans used them as charms against evil. We know that erections were associated with virile masculinity and war in the context of Nordic Bronze Age petroglyphs so we could just as easily argue Frey is a war god as a fertility god based on his boner alone.
It just isn’t a good theory.
⚡56👍11❤9💯7🤓2🔥1🤔1🗿1
I like the altar the Ansuz society have made, althought Celts and Germanics did not actually observe the start of Winter at teh equinox, rather at the full moon which is next week. We call this Winterfylleth in English paganism.
👍21🤓2
Forwarded from Ansuz Society
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The Autumn Equinox is the turning point in the year when daylight and darkness become even once again, tipping the scales towards the darkest period of the year when the nights grow longer than the days and the weather gets colder. Traditionally, harvests would be reaped during this time and various rituals were conducted for the gods and spirits residing over abundance. Attention was given to the spirits and ancestors as it was believed that this time was liminal and other realms were accessible. At the cusp of the Equinox, the dark half of the year begins to slowly gain dominance once again.
- The Celto-Germanic Wheel of the Year
Full article on our website at ansuzsociety.com
- The Celto-Germanic Wheel of the Year
Full article on our website at ansuzsociety.com
⚡34🔥8🥰5🙏2
Forwarded from ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ
The reconstructed replica of the Uppåkra temple, with a statue of Odin based on the Odin figure found at the site of the original temple. ᚬ
⚡30🙏1
Forwarded from The Chad Pastoralist
The Uppåkra complex in southern Sweden is one of the largest sites of cult activity dedicated to Wōden/Óðinn from the Iron Age. It is believed to have been the former site of a chieftain that was both a marketplace and a place of worship as evidence of other structures surrounding the temple were found.
Close to the buildings were deposits of spears and shields, and a right-side ocular and eyebrow from a helmet, similar to the types found at Sutton Hoo, Valsgärde and Vendel. A bronze horned figure was also discovered with the right eye on his face purposely struck out.
Close to the buildings were deposits of spears and shields, and a right-side ocular and eyebrow from a helmet, similar to the types found at Sutton Hoo, Valsgärde and Vendel. A bronze horned figure was also discovered with the right eye on his face purposely struck out.
⚡30🙏2🏆2👍1
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
Some people WRONGLY dismiss Halloween as a commercial American custom. Others think the origin of pumpkin jack-o'-lanterns is exclusively Irish or at least “Celtic”. In reality these lanterns are as much British as Irish, and the tradition is found in other Germanic nations such as Germany and Sweden too.
Prior to the American pumpkin tradition, people in Ireland, Scotland and England used turnips, swedes and mangelwurzels. The lanterns were associated with the Catholic holiday of All Hallow’s Eve in Ireland, but protestants in Britain sometimes moved the festival, such as in Somerset where it was held on the last Thursday of October and was called “punkie night”. Punkie means ‘jack-o-lantern’ in West Country dialect and these were carried about in a tradition much like trick or treating in America. They didn’t always have faces carved on them, but they were always intended to scare away evil.
The word punkie probably comes from Old English Pūcan or pūclas which were evil spirits in Anglo-Saxon folklore, cognate to Swedish and Norwegian puke “evil spirit”. The Irish word púca”spirit” is probably a loan from Old English as the p sound didn’t exist in primitive Gaelic.
The earliest attestations of carving such lanterns are from Worcestershire in England in 1840, Hampshire, England in 1838, and Scotland in 1808. So there is no reason to think it originated in Ireland. Various traditions of bonfires and carrying root lanterns or blazing fagots while going door to door for food existed across the British isles but the switch to pumpkins instead of turnips occurred in the USA.
The tradition of using turnip lanterns was still extant as far East as Sussex in 1973 when it was recorded among children there by Jacqueline Simpson in the Folklore of Sussex. Therefore, the introduction of the American pumpkin jack-o-lantern in Britain occurred while the native turnip tradition still existed, so there has never been a time when British people DIDNT make jack-o-lanterns for this season.
The same kind of tradition is attested in the 19th century among Germanic people on the continent who made vegetable lanterns between late October and early November. This tradition still survives in places and the lanterns are sometimes mounted on poles as they are carried about. Their names include:
German: Rübengeister ('turnip spirits')
German (Swabia): Schreckgesichter ('horror faces')
Swiss: Bochseltieren ('rumble animals')
South Germany and Lorraine, France: Rummelbooze ('turnip disguise')
German (Hesse): Gliihnische Deijwel ('glowing devil')
Swedish: rovgubbe ('turnip man')
As in the British Isles, the lanterns are often said to represent spirits and the children who carry them receive treats. Other times they are placed outside the house to protect the home from evil.
In my own video essay on the pagan origins of Halloween, I demonstrate that just as Halloween has a pagan precedent of Samhain in Ireland, it has other pagan precedents across Europe including Slavic Dziady, Baltic Mārtiņi or Mārtiņdiena, and the Germanic pagan festival which marked the start of Winter and was known in Old English as Winterfylleth, in Old Norse as Vetrnætr, and included a sacrifice made to elves (ancestral spirits) known as Álfablót.
Therefore this season has always been associated with spirits of the dead in many European cultures and Halloween is highly traditional and far from a merely commercial American innovation.
Prior to the American pumpkin tradition, people in Ireland, Scotland and England used turnips, swedes and mangelwurzels. The lanterns were associated with the Catholic holiday of All Hallow’s Eve in Ireland, but protestants in Britain sometimes moved the festival, such as in Somerset where it was held on the last Thursday of October and was called “punkie night”. Punkie means ‘jack-o-lantern’ in West Country dialect and these were carried about in a tradition much like trick or treating in America. They didn’t always have faces carved on them, but they were always intended to scare away evil.
The word punkie probably comes from Old English Pūcan or pūclas which were evil spirits in Anglo-Saxon folklore, cognate to Swedish and Norwegian puke “evil spirit”. The Irish word púca”spirit” is probably a loan from Old English as the p sound didn’t exist in primitive Gaelic.
The earliest attestations of carving such lanterns are from Worcestershire in England in 1840, Hampshire, England in 1838, and Scotland in 1808. So there is no reason to think it originated in Ireland. Various traditions of bonfires and carrying root lanterns or blazing fagots while going door to door for food existed across the British isles but the switch to pumpkins instead of turnips occurred in the USA.
The tradition of using turnip lanterns was still extant as far East as Sussex in 1973 when it was recorded among children there by Jacqueline Simpson in the Folklore of Sussex. Therefore, the introduction of the American pumpkin jack-o-lantern in Britain occurred while the native turnip tradition still existed, so there has never been a time when British people DIDNT make jack-o-lanterns for this season.
The same kind of tradition is attested in the 19th century among Germanic people on the continent who made vegetable lanterns between late October and early November. This tradition still survives in places and the lanterns are sometimes mounted on poles as they are carried about. Their names include:
German: Rübengeister ('turnip spirits')
German (Swabia): Schreckgesichter ('horror faces')
Swiss: Bochseltieren ('rumble animals')
South Germany and Lorraine, France: Rummelbooze ('turnip disguise')
German (Hesse): Gliihnische Deijwel ('glowing devil')
Swedish: rovgubbe ('turnip man')
As in the British Isles, the lanterns are often said to represent spirits and the children who carry them receive treats. Other times they are placed outside the house to protect the home from evil.
In my own video essay on the pagan origins of Halloween, I demonstrate that just as Halloween has a pagan precedent of Samhain in Ireland, it has other pagan precedents across Europe including Slavic Dziady, Baltic Mārtiņi or Mārtiņdiena, and the Germanic pagan festival which marked the start of Winter and was known in Old English as Winterfylleth, in Old Norse as Vetrnætr, and included a sacrifice made to elves (ancestral spirits) known as Álfablót.
Therefore this season has always been associated with spirits of the dead in many European cultures and Halloween is highly traditional and far from a merely commercial American innovation.
❤32👻3
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
My article for WhyNow explains the potential pagan influences on the 5th November UK Bonfire night
https://whynow.co.uk/read/bonfire-night-is-an-orgy-of-religious-hatred-older-than-we-think
https://whynow.co.uk/read/bonfire-night-is-an-orgy-of-religious-hatred-older-than-we-think
whynow
Bonfire Night is an orgy of religious hatred older than we think
Bonfire Night has violent and explosive origins known to all, but we might be able to trace the infernal festival's roots much further back.
❤20🔥3
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
Autumnal traditions: One of the maddest, most spectacular folk traditions of the British Isles is the annual burning of the tar barrels in Ottery St Mary in Devon. The chaps who lift the flaming barrels are called barrellers; they have to be local, born and bred, and they begin lifting running the tar barrels at the age of seven! https://youtu.be/qnXx6jvsQto
YouTube
Running with Flaming Tar Barrels - Crazy English Folk Tradition
One of the maddest, most spectacular folk traditions of the British Isles is the annual burning of the tar barrels in Ottery St Mary in Devon. They burn barrels from 4pm to midnight, starting with small ones for kids, and progressing to larger and larger…
❤23🔥7
