Survive the Jive: All-feed
All StJ activity updates here on the All feed. ᛝ🐗 🌐 Website: https://survivethejive.blogspot.com 👕 Merch: https://survivethejive-shop.fourthwall.com ▶️ Main YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/Survivethejive/ 🔗 Other links: https://linktr.ee/SurvivetheJive
Больше📈 Аналитический обзор Telegram-канала Survive the Jive: All-feed
Канал Survive the Jive: All-feed (@survivethejive) языкового сегмента Английский является активным участником. Сейчас сообщество объединяет 14 369 подписчиков, занимая 14 025 место в категории Образование и 779 место в регионе Великобритания.
📊 Показатели аудитории и динамика
С момента создания невідомо проект демонстрирует стремительный рост, собрав аудиторию из 14 369 подписчиков.
Согласно последним данным от 17 июля, 2026, канал показывает стабильную активность. За последние 30 дней изменение числа участников составило -79, а за последние 24 часа — -3, при этом общий охват остаётся высоким.
- Статус верификации: Не верифицирован
- Уровень вовлечённости (ER): Средний показатель вовлечённости аудитории составляет 17.21%. В первые 24 часа после публикации контент обычно набирает 8.40% реакций от общего числа подписчиков.
- Охват публикаций: В среднем каждый пост получает 2 474 просмотров. В течение первых суток публикация набирает 1 208 просмотров.
- Реакции и взаимодействия: Аудитория активно поддерживает контент: среднее количество реакций на один пост — 88.
- Тематические интересы: Контент сосредоточен на ключевых темах, таких как century, yamnaya, ancestor, britain, heathen.
📝 Описание и контентная политика
Автор описывает ресурс как площадку для выражения субъективного мнения:
“All StJ activity updates here on the All feed. ᛝ🐗
🌐 Website: https://survivethejive.blogspot.com
👕 Merch: https://survivethejive-shop.fourthwall.com
▶️ Main YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/Survivethejive/
🔗 Other links: https://linktr.ee/Survi...”
Благодаря высокой частоте обновлений (последние данные получены 18 июля, 2026) канал поддерживает актуальность и высокий уровень охвата публикаций. Аналитика показывает, что аудитория активно взаимодействует с контентом, что делает его важной точкой влияния в категории Образование.
Загрузка данных...
| Дата | Привлечение подписчиков | Упоминания | Каналы | |
| 18 июля | +1 | |||
| 17 июля | +2 | |||
| 16 июля | +7 | |||
| 15 июля | +4 | |||
| 14 июля | +7 | |||
| 13 июля | +2 | |||
| 12 июля | +2 | |||
| 11 июля | 0 | |||
| 10 июля | +8 | |||
| 09 июля | +6 | |||
| 08 июля | +3 | |||
| 07 июля | +4 | |||
| 06 июля | +6 | |||
| 05 июля | +17 | |||
| 04 июля | +1 | |||
| 03 июля | +2 | |||
| 02 июля | +2 | |||
| 01 июля | +2 |
| 2 | Colorised 19th century sketch of the Roundway Down Bell Beaker burial. An archer who was buried with jadeite wrist bracers, an arrowhead, a bell beaker and a copper dagger.
He was one of the first wave of Indo-European invaders in Britain, and was buried on the crest of Roundway Down soon after Stonehenge was completed and while Silbury Hill was being raised. | 1 220 |
| 3 | The man behind the "haaail haaiil" StJ theme tune was good enough to grace my podcast with an interview. Dan Capp of Wolcensmen discusses the pagan themes in the lyrics of some of my favourite selections from his discography in this musical podcast....https://survivethejive.blogspot.com/2021/04/pagan-english-folk-music-with-dan-capp.html | 1 172 |
| 4 | This interview with @thefyrgen is now available on YouTube too https://youtu.be/KS-qU-JXgis?si=x3k0YkN2jwSm1POw | 1 103 |
| 5 | -Be 14th century itinerant barber-surgeon in England
-Wander into random village in Wiltshire called Avebury
-Locals are all scared shitless of ancient heathen stones
-Force me to help them pull a cursed stone down
-Stone falls on me smashing my pelvis and breaking my neck
-Locals too scared to retrieve my body for Christian burial
-leave me under the stone and cover me with rubble
-Other heathen stones remain untoppled, but at least we got one
-Locals still remembered me in 1712
-Archaeologists dig me up in 1938
-They donate my body to College of Surgeons in London
-Nazis bomb the college and obliterate what remains of me forever
-Locals put the stone back up and call it “the barber stone” | 1 139 |
| 6 | Nigel Pennick made this artwork based on the so called Bath Gorgon, a face carved on the pediment of the ruined Temple of Sulis Minerva in Somerset. In reality it is probably the head of a water god like Oceanus. | 1 182 |
| 7 | Ian Read of Fire+Ice and the Rune-gild interview now on YouTube
https://youtu.be/GHS8vN4LVhQ?si=m3SxC8kjm8XsbZJF | 1 388 |
| 8 | Photos from Wiltshire museum are all my own (Tom Rowsell)
1. Me in front of the grave goods
2. The stone axe head
3. Bone point necklace
4. boar tusks
5. More bone points
6. alleged tattooing kit | 1 441 |
| 9 | A Guardian article on the dna findings is predictably concerned with a false narrative of science overturning prejudiced assumptions.
It quotes David Dawson, director of the Wiltshire Museum, which holds the remains. “We’re so used to the assumption of men do everything, men are the leaders, men are the metalworkers. Here we have smoking gun evidence of a female metalworker. And metalworking was the space science of its day.”
Are we really used to the idea that witches are all men? Also "metalworker" is misleading as this was not a smith - the grave contained what are interpreted as "burnishing stones" for polishing gold or other metal. Is it unheard of for a woman to polish something? Seems normal to me.
The article finishes with a quote from the irritatingly woke Mary Beard who says "So often we have assigned the sex of an ancient skeleton partly on the basis of our own assumptions about sex and gender roles – if it is buried with a sword, it’s male, with a necklace, it’s female,”
But this grave didn't contain a sword and it did contain a necklace. By Beard's own claim, our sexist assumptions would lead to identifying the grave as female. It did contain a possibly ceremonial stone axe placed on the shaman’s chest, as well as boar tusks - both of which are seen as conventionally male. But the pointed bone necklace isn’t. The actual reason the bones were thought to belong to a male is because the skeleton was “stout”.
They twist every find to support a left wing narrative when in reality it’s pure fiction. This has been going on for decades and is the subject of my forthcoming book. | 1 346 |
| 10 | More WOKE archaeology: a Bronze Age barrow near Stonehenge contained two skeletons, initially thought to be a male shaman with a female added on top later on. They lost the female skeleton. The “male” one was never tested until now and it turns out it was genetically female.
The barrow of the so called “Upton Lovell shaman”contained unusual bone jewellery and some tools possibly associated with testing metals. Some even think it contains tattooing equipment. Anyway, this person clearly had specialist roles in the culture and was important enough to receive a barrow burial. The fact it was a woman is not as shocking as the media is claiming, nor does this “challenge” a sexist, patriarchal assumption. The gender was missasigned because morphological assessment and metric analysis are fallible methods. Genetic testing is more reliable. That’s the only story here. | 1 322 |
| 11 | I delivered this talk about national origin myths in Seattle, USA in 2018
https://youtu.be/tI0VcGGVogk?si=gTqAqORoDkCcta-i | 1 640 |
| 12 | There are at least four podcasts that were never uploaded to YouTube. I will try to put them all up on Jive Talk this summer for those who weirdly prefer to listen to podcasts on a video streaming site | 1 690 |
| 13 | I have uploaded this podcast interview with the priest of England's Odinist temple, Ralph Harrison, to YouTube.
https://youtu.be/oRLV_isISSk?si=L-S3IRTGXN_K5irt | 1 899 |
| 14 | Aswynn aging gracefully and still telling it as it is. | 1 651 |
| 15 | Reconstructing a West-Germanic Anthropogonic Myth from Medieval Ecclesiastical Sources
This proposed anthropogony is based on Old English and Middle High German additions to the Biblical creation of Adam. These fragments are so remarkably similar and provide a non-Christian folkloric background to the creation of Adam that we may propose a reconstructed mythic narrative as follows:
"When Weden shaped Man,
he made him whole from eight things -
the bones from the stone,
the flesh from the earth,
the blood from the sea,
the sweat from the dew,
the tears from the salt,
the hair from the grass,
the mood from the clouds,
the eyes from the sun.
Then he gave him his breath, so that he may keep it for him."
During this reconstruction, choices naturally had to be made, for example the Biblical deity was exchanged for Weden, whom we know shaped Man as attested in other Germanic sources and also details peculiar to each of the sources that weren't shared in common had to be omitted, as we believe these are additions by their respective authors. What is presented here is a very basic version of the narrative that preserves the physical and cosmological beliefs particular to the high Middle Ages. Note that the total number of things that Man is shaped from is nine. You can find the sources for the fragments that are compiled here in the comments of this post. | 1 555 |
| 16 | The average Englishman is more Germanic than anything else.
43% Continental North European (CNE) – the component maximised in early medieval Anglo-Saxon-derived populations and coming from Denmark and Lower Saxony.
31% Western British & Irish (WBI) – the component associated with pre-Anglo-Saxon Brythonic or "Celtic" ancestry.
26% Continental Western European (CWE) – representing the third ancestral axis in the model deriving first from Alemannic-like Germanic tribes such as the Franks who arrived in the 6th-7th century (Silva et al 2026) but also partly from French speaking migrants in the 11th-12th centuries.
This data was calculated by chat GPT taking the regional data from Gretzinger et al 2022, and comparing it with ONS data on regional population density of native whites in England.
I am constantly told by people who don't understand what a weighted average is, that England is more "Celtic" (Brythonic) than Germanic (Early English aka Anglo-Saxon). This simply is not true. | 1 847 |
| 17 | This pendant figurine from aska Östergötland, Sweden 457610 HST
Historiska Museet. Photo by Tom Rowsel | 1 577 |
| 18 | Viking Age ilded bridle mounts in the Broa style | 1 574 |
| 19 | The famous Odinist and Icelandic poet Egill Skallagrímsson served as a poet in the court of Æthelstan (Aðalsteinn).
He composed a drápa (laudatory skaldic poem) for the first King of a united England.
ú hefr foldgnárr fellda
— fellr jǫrð und nið Ellu —
hjaldrsnerrandi harra
hǫfuðbaðmr þría jǫfra.
Aðalsteinn of vann annat;
allts lægra kynfrægjum
— hér sverjum þess, hyrjar
hrannbrjótr — konungmanni.
‘Now the battle-quickener towering over the land [WARRIOR = Aðalsteinn], chief descendant of rulers [KING], has felled three princes; the land comes under the kinsman of Ella <English king> [ENGLISH KING = Aðalsteinn]. Aðalsteinn achieved more; everything is lower than the kin-famous royal personage; here we [I] swear to this, breaker of the fire of the wave [(lit. ‘wave-breaker of fire’) GOLD > GENEROUS MAN = Aðalsteinn].’
Nú liggr hæst und hraustum
hreinbraut Aðalsteini.
‘Now the highest reindeer road [MOUNTAIN] lies under bold Aðalsteinn.’
Aðalsteinn’s dominance is emphasised both through the choice of four kennings and other epithets for him as ruler, and by the contrast between terms that unambiguously refer to his royal and superior status and those that designate the lowlier position of his subjected opponents. | 1 462 |
| 20 | On this day in 927 AD, near Eamont in Cumbria, King Æthelstan united the English people and became the first Rex Anglorum.
Prior to this, the land was already called England and the people had been called English for centuries but this was the start of England as a single kingdom 1099 years ago | 2 012 |
