Temple of the Oracle – Telegram
Temple of the Oracle
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"labyrinth of audacious insights"
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To all my followers in active service or retired from service - I salute you and appreciate you.

Happy Memorial Day.
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Forwarded from Fortress of Avalon (Appalachia Chief)
“Life springs from death; and from the graves of patriot men and women spring living nations.”
—Patrick Pearse

📚📖 from: "The Cause Of Ireland" by Liz Curtis, pg.224
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Intellect ties people in knots and risks nothing, but love dissolves all tangles and risks everything.

Intellect does not easily break down, whereas love can effortlessly reduce itself to rubble.
But treasures are hidden among ruins.

– Shams of Tabriz
“The 40 Rules of Love”
The Grey God (Odin), located in Michael's Fantasy and Mythological Art Comic Art Gallery
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Forwarded from Celtic Europe
Page from a late 16th century manunoscript, depicting an armored cavalryman of the Anglo-Irish Burke clan of northwest Connacht (i.e. Mayo). 🇮🇪

The Burke family were descended from William de Burgh, who was the brother of Hubert de Burgh, the English Earl of Kent. William participated in the Norman invasions of Ireland, arriving in the island in the year 1185 and conquering the greater part of Connacht before his death in 1206. De Burgh took the noscript Lord of Connacht, and his descendants eventually also obtained the noscript of Earl of Ulster, but they eventually lost a great many of their holdings in Connacht to the resurgent native dynasties of the province. From the very beginning, the De Burgh’s intermarried with the native Irish, eventually becoming thoroughly assimilated to Gaelic culture, so much so that there are documented cases of Burke lords who didn’t even speak English.

Celtic Europe - channel link (please share!): https://news.1rj.ru/str/CelticEurope
Forwarded from Æhtemen
The sun shining through a Kaun shaped Oak tree this Sunstede morning.

Happy Solstice~Sunstede to you all.
Forwarded from Pagan Revivalism
There is something magical and special about venturing into an old growth forest. When you cross the threshold into its depths, the sounds change as the familiar drifts away. The colours more vibrant as your eyes adjust. The wind is different, the smells are equally primal and calming.

As Midsummer and solstice approach, let us not neglect to venture into places such as these, where mighty and ancient spirits await within.

Gods love you
Forwarded from IMPERIVM
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Song Of Summer Solstice: Kulning & Nyckelharpa.

IMPERIVM
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Brigid was the Celtic Goddess of knowledge, healing, poetry, agriculture and protection. She was the daughter of the Dagda (see previous entry) and the wife of a king of the Tuatha De Danann, Bres.

According to ‘Sanas Chormaic’, an Irish glossary from 1868, Bridgid was well known for her ‘Protecting care’. The glossary also describes her as a ‘Woman of wisdom’ and a ‘Goddess of poets’.
Queen Medb of Connacht was one of the most famous figures from Irish folklore. There are many references to Medbh in ‘The Metrical Dindshenchas’ (‘Lore of places’) which is a text from early Irish literature.

Medb is described as a woman that was ‘great and glorious’ with ‘pure beauty’. Medbh had several husbands, including Ailill mac Máta. She was said to be cunning and ambitious and she had the power to gather all the men of Connacht in one day.
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“Return to Itaka”
by Rafał Olbinski (2021)
Humility is a virtue that contrasts pride. Being able to admit fault, one’s willingness to remain teachable, is a vitally important part of one’s character.