β„œπ”’π”«π”žπ”¦π”°π”°π”žπ”«π” π”’ π”ˆπ”¦π”―π”’
1.64K subscribers
1.63K photos
147 videos
20 files
501 links
Irish mythology and European ethos, with a hint of news coverage.
Download Telegram
Son of Muirne (daughter of the druid Tadg Mac Nuadat) and Cumhaill, Fionn was a great warrior of ancient Ireland.
After his mother gave him birth, she left him under the care of the Fiacal, and a warmaiden named Liath Luachra, who taught him the way of war and the Fianna.
As an adult Fionn traveled to Tara, seat of the High Kings of Ireland. For 23 years the fairy Aillen razed the site to the ground every Samhain having first lulled its guards into slumber with her music. Fionn managed to defeat Aileen however, by keeping himself awake by piercing his own skin with the point of his spear, and lay awake all night by leaning on it thus.
Fionn was, also, tutored by the druid Finnegas, searching for the salmon of knowledge (a mystical creature that holds the knowledge of the world).
Proving his loyalty, over the years, Fionn inherits the leadership of the Fianna, as its leader Goll MacMorna steps down.
With his most famous wife Sadb, who once, was turned to a deer, he has a son, Oisin.
(To be continued)
(Following ☝️)
Sadb is turned to a deer, again, by the druid Fer Doiric, and she vanishes into the woods.
Later on, the high king Cormac MacAirt offers Fionn the hand of his daufhter Grainne. She was also desired by another member of the Fianna, Diarmuid Ua Duibhne, to whom, the princess shared the feelings.
Fionn allowed them to be, but seeks revenge, by not healing the man, as he was mauled by a boar.
Fionn is credited with creating the Giants Causeway as stepping stones from the North of Ireland to Scotland. Another legend tells how he threw a large piece of the land into the sea at an enemy, that piece of land becoming the Isle of Man. The hole left behind by the clump of land he threw became Lough Neagh.
The legends say that Fionn is only sleeping, not dead, and is resting in a cave, under Dublin, preparing to strike against the enemies of Ireland.


May this tale never be forgotten.
An argument that i often have, with christians.
"See what we accomplished", or "we had the biggest empires", etc..
1) christian armies fought for Jesus, not their people. Pagans never had qualms in challenging people in power (see how many Caesars have been taken down by the people)?
2) empires are too difficult to rule, and whoever you conquer becomes your responsability. See where it led us.
3) how much poverty, disease, and persecussion did the church bring? Never had such issue, before that time. And people were a lot freeer.
These are the points on top of my head. And, the nightmare we see, today, would be short lived, if it even came to pass. The bible says to love your neighbour as yourself. The Havamal speaks of not overstaying your welcome (think about the migrants, today.. ).
If you disagree, drop a comment.
Forwarded from πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡ΈAmerican Scotch🏴󠁧󠁒󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
To finish my rant: all nationalists talk about "anti white this"/ anti white that". What killed more whites than the European crusades, and the following religious wars?
Forwarded from Wandering SpΞ›rtan
"How long are you going to wait before you demand the best for yourself?"

β€” Epictetus
Forwarded from Mimir's Brunnr
Injustice cries the slave, as he rattles his chains a little louder.

With every demand, his chains get tighter.

With every plea, his case weaker.

His Suffering, his consent.
The tragedy of the French revolution was not how the monarchy was dismantled, or the separation of the church (those were good sides). It stopped a spreading renaissance of pagan traditions, and people were returning to their roots. This way, people separated from the church under the therms the elites decided. They kept their army of (((patriotic))) slaves under a secular world view, rather than under the cross.
A question i would have, for many: How much child abuse was there, before the church invaded?
Forwarded from The Old Aryan Ways Old Channel
This is the first full page I have ever used to write in Scots after 10 years of not doing so. It is now no longer simply used by me only in speech.
Forwarded from Tribal.Europa
Part 1.) Mushroom Magic & Folklore,

Irish folks have long thought of the mushroom β€œfruit” as a connection to the much larger organism underground. Because the huge tracts of subterranean mushroom can be thousands of years old, many of the ancients believed that its wisdom could be passed to humans via consumption of the fruit.

Druids were said to have prepared fly-agaric for consumption and eaten it for its hallucinogenic properties because the hallucinations conferred great knowledge and enlightenment.

"The druids trained for 20 years in subjects such as law, astronomy, philosophy, poetry, medicine, music, geometry divination, and magic. It is probable that specific substances were used to induce high trance states to receive poetic inspiration and messages from the gods.”

The ancient peoples called the fly agaric mushroom the β€œflesh of the gods” The druids would consume mushrooms and then sit in sweat houses, which appear all over Ireland.

Follow @TribalEuropa πŸ‘ˆπŸ»

To be continued ⬇️