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The Aryan Seer

Sharing knowledge and wisdom about 'myth'ology, faeries and beyond.

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Repost from Pagan Revivalism
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Repost from Celtic Europe
Daboecia Cantabrica, known colloquially as “Irish heath”. Daboecia is a type of heather that is common in the Atlantic parts of Europe, particularly the British Isles, northern Spain (hence the “Cantabrica” part of its scientific name), Portugal, the Azores islands, and western France. The plant takes its name not only from the Cantabrian mountains of northern Spain, but also from the early medieval Irish monk known as St. Dabheog. Dabheog is believed to have been a contemporary of St. Patrick (so 5th century) and to have founded an important monastery on Lough Derg, in county Donegal, Ireland. To this day, the monastery is an important pilgrimage site. Dabheog was said to have been born in Wales, a son of king Brychan, the founder of the Kingdom of Brycheiniog in south Wales. Brychan was himself of Irish extraction, having acquired the kingship of Garthmadrun through his marriage to the only heiress, princess Marchel. The kingdom then had its name changed to Brycheiniog in his honor. Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticEurope
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Repost from Celtic Europe
Artistic reconstruction of Din Lligwy village in Anglesey, Wales. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Illustration by Cadw Wales: https://cadw.gov.wales. Based on finds of glass, pottery, and coins, Din Lligwy appears to have been inhabited during the late Roman period, as the finds mostly dated to the 3rd and 4th centuries. Still, the possibility of an earlier occupation cannot be discounted. The site yielded much evidence of iron smelting, and the pentagonal enclosure seems to have been built mainly to protect livestock. Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticEurope
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Repost from Celtic Europe
Bronze bracelet, discovered at an unspecified location in northern France; 4th century B.C. 🇫🇷 Originally from a private collection, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, USA. Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticEurope
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Repost from Celtic Europe
Celtiberian bronze anular brooch, from an unspecified location in east-central Spain; 3rd century B.C. 🇪🇸 Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticEurope
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Repost from Celtic Europe
Traprain Law hill-fort, in East Lothian, Scotland. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Views of and from the hill. The name of Traprain Law derives from Brythonic Celtic words tref (farm) and pren (tree). An older name for the hill, still used by local farmers and fishermen, also reflects the area’s Brythonic past: Dunpelder, which is clearly a derivation of Din Pelydr (“Fort of Spear-shafts”). Archaeology shows that Traprain Law was initially built around 1,000 B.C. The hill-fort was protected by a 1.07km long stone rampart, enclosing an area of 12 hectares. It was densely occupied, and inhabited practically continuously up to around AD 142, when a Roman campaign of conquest forced natives to abandon many of their settlements. Roman occupation of the area didn’t last long, and the hill was reoccupied shortly after they left in AD 162, though no longer on such a large scale. A large 22kg hoard of Roman hack-silver dating to the late 4th century was also found at Traprain Law, which was most likely tribute paid to the local Votadini tribe in exchange for an alliance. Shortly after that time, the settlement was finally abandoned, perhaps due to frequent raids and warfare with the Picts from the north. According to folklore, Traprain Law was also the place from which princess Teneu, the daughter of king Lot of Lothian, was thrown as punishment for being found pregnant by prince Owain, son of king Urien of the nearby (enemy) Kingdom of Rheged. The princess survived miraculously, being taken to the monastery of Culross, where she gave birth to the future missionary Saint Kentigern, a.k.a. Mungo. Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://t.me/CelticEurope
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There is officially a scientific theory which reflects animism; panpsychism. Because complex electromagnetic fields, which can be observed in the sun, but also in plants, fungi, landscapes, etc. which are strikingly similar to the electromagnetic impulses that are produced by the human brain, the theory proposes that this is evidence that all of these things are also conscious, and that life emerges from consciousness. Recently, it’s been shown that trees and fungi communicate with each other through mycorrhizal networks…with electrical impulses. Once again…scientists are just now catching up with our ancestral wisdom. ⴲ
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Repost from Red Ice TV
May Day bonfires and Walpurgis Night (Valborg) bonfires are now against the law in the EU Not a joke. Burning leaves and branches and debris from your yard/garden is no longer allowed and since January 1 of this year, all garden waste need to be "recycled." We are going to have to dismantle the EU. Source
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Repost from Christcuck Pastors
This is funny
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