📖 Ancient Restoration
Red hair was admired in ancient Europe - It was associated with courage & honour; a mark of divinity, beauty, vitality, & fierceness of war.
This red-haired Indian lady is a fine example of resurgence in ancestral phenotypes (i.e. atavism). It might surprise you just how many blue eyed, fair-haired Indians still exist. And yes - the headline is definitely sensationalist.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-5178549/amp/The-Indian-feels-like-foreigner-country.html?__twitter_impression=true
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-5178549/amp/The-Indian-feels-like-foreigner-country.html?__twitter_impression=true
Mail Online
Indian woman, 24, who was shunned and bullied because she has white skin, ginger hair, emerald eyes and FRECKLES now wants a DNA…
Pooja Ganatra, 24, who was born in Mumbai, has flaming ginger hair, deep emerald eyes and white skin - like that of a stereotypical Gaelic woman.
A flock of sheep making their way through heavy snow, Northern #Ireland
📖 Ancient Restoration
#Glendalough, Co Wicklow, early 1900's.
St Kevin's Kitchen in the low sun, Glendalough, Ireland.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Photo
"Irish will scarcely be our language in this generation, not even perhaps in the next. But until we have it again on our tongues and in our minds we are not free"
~
Path to Freedom (Chapter 7: Distinctive Culture) - Michael Collins, August 1922
~
Path to Freedom (Chapter 7: Distinctive Culture) - Michael Collins, August 1922
Forwarded from United Celts
"Welcome" to the channel!
Scots Gaelic: Fàilte!
Irish: Fáilte!
Manx: Failt ort!
Welsh: Croeso!
Cornish: Dynnargh!
Breton: Degemer mat!
Scots Gaelic: Fàilte!
Irish: Fáilte!
Manx: Failt ort!
Welsh: Croeso!
Cornish: Dynnargh!
Breton: Degemer mat!
📖 Ancient Restoration
Classiebawn Castle at the foot of a cloudy Ben Bulben, Co Sligo, Ireland.
A picturesque winter's evening at Castleconnor, Co Sligo.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Nollaig/Mí na Nollag, is the Irish month of December. The term 'Nollaig'(Irish word for Christmas) derives from the Latin 'natalicius', meaning 'birth' or 'birthday', & refers to the Birth of Christ.
The greeting for 'Happy Christmas' in Irish is Nollaig Shona Duit or Nollaig Shona Daoibh (plural), word for word, it means “Christmas, happy, to you”.
Grafton Street, Dublin.
Grafton Street, Dublin.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Photo
In Celtic nations winter is traditionally a time of honouring the dead. Masses are offered for the deceased & wreaths of evergreen lain on graves. The Scottish Gaelic word for this part of the year is 'an Dùbhlachd' - the great dark.
📖 Ancient Restoration
In Celtic nations winter is traditionally a time of honouring the dead. Masses are offered for the deceased & wreaths of evergreen lain on graves. The Scottish Gaelic word for this part of the year is 'an Dùbhlachd' - the great dark.
Irish postal stamps celebrating Nollaig from 1970-80's.
They did a fine job of honouring our Christian heritage with native images.
They did a fine job of honouring our Christian heritage with native images.
📖 Ancient Restoration
Irish postal stamps celebrating Nollaig from 1970-80's. They did a fine job of honouring our Christian heritage with native images.
Bringing evergreens into the home at Christmas is a custom of great antiquity. Holly, ivy and mistletoe were seen as life symbols and hugely symbolic for the well-being of the home for the coming year
📖 Ancient Restoration
Bringing evergreens into the home at Christmas is a custom of great antiquity. Holly, ivy and mistletoe were seen as life symbols and hugely symbolic for the well-being of the home for the coming year
Mistletoe's one of the most magical & sacred plants of European folklore - The druids viewed it as a symbol of virility/healing & associated the tall oaks on which it grew with the thunder-god Taranis