godsipclub, to poland
@godsipclub@thefolklore.cafe avatar

In 2023, in , yet another grave was discovered¹ with several common anti-vampire tracts:

  • The body was placed downward
  • A sickle was placed on the body's neck
  • A lock was placed on its feet

In that case, if the buried one was a , or tried to come back among the living, those gimmicks hopefully would have stopped it.

It wasn't uncommon, in Eastern Europe, to have legends and beliefs about vampires. In mythology:

  • The strzyga, not to be confused with the worshippers of Morana or Striga (Stribog's² female counterpart), was believed some kind of vampire or demon
  • Strigoi³ were vampiric spirits and witches
  • A kresnik⁴ (not the homonymous god) was a shamanic worker who was said to hunt vampires and protect villages form malicious spirits
  • It was common to put some "extra precautions" in some tombs, as copper coins in the mouth of the deceased as expedient against evil

¹ https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/anti-vampire-graves-poland
² https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stribog
³ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strigoi
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krsnik_(vampire_hunter)

@mythology

shekinahcancook, to 13thFloor
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

Why your keys are not where you know good and well you left them, lol:

How to Appease Household Spirits Across the World

Quit playing games with my hearth.
by Eric Grundhauser December 14, 2016

"...From ancient Greece’s goddess of the hearth, Hestia, to the hobs of Northern England, household spirits have been around for centuries. But most such mythical creatures double as gods of fire and agents of chaos, so failing to tend to their needs can lead to missing items, broken dishes, and calamitous fortune..."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/how-to-appease-household-spirits-across-the-world

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

: King Cathaír Mór had a dream, in which a woman was pregnant for eight hundred years, finally giving birth to a son near a fragrant, singing fruit tree. His #druid explained to Cathaír that the lady was the River Slaney that ran near Tara, her child the harbor at its mouth, and the singing tree the king himself.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and Folklore

GaymerGeek, to 13thFloor
@GaymerGeek@mstdn.games avatar

The flower and herb I have been studying over the last week has been St.Johns wort so made a pixel art of it.

In European folklore St.Johns wort (AKA Hypericum perforatum) has strong connections to protecting against spirits and St.John’s Eve was the day that the herb was the most potent. June 23rd.

It has strong associations with midsummer. It was also used in love spells as well.

TarkabarkaHolgy, to philosophy
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

Today's is celebrating with talk about mythological art in museums :)

One of my favorite museums in the world is the Villa Giulia in Rome. It houses the National Etruscan Museum. It falls outside most quick tour routes, and it is a lovely, peaceful, elegant museum with a very rich collection.

See the pretty vases below, with various mythological scenes :) Recongize them?

mythologymonday, (edited ) to greece
@mythologymonday@thefolklore.cafe avatar

Hello, Myth Lovers! To celebrate International , we'd love to see your posts about ! Which museums have great mythological art? Which are your favourite artifacts? Do you have a favourite ? Where have you seen an amazing work of art related to mythology? Use the hashtag for boosts!

🎨 Kos Archaeological Museum,
📸 Dionysis Kouris

@archaeodons @mythology @folklore @TarkabarkaHolgy @juergen_hubert @curiousordinary @wihtlore @FairytalesFood @bevanthomas @FinnFolklorist @Godyssey @GaymerGeek @starrytimepod

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

Each Fenian warrior was equipped by the smiths working in the caves of Keshcorran with a sword and spear of superlative quality. „Each sword had a different name, details of which were related in the tale. Fionn’s sword was called Mac an Luin. The happy warriors were also provided with accommodation and when they awoke next morning,
they found themselves back on Slieve Luachra still bearing their new weapons.“
Source: Antiquarian Research in Co. Sligo as a Background to the #Mythology and Archaeology of Moytura by Eamonn P. Kelly #Celtic

WhyNotZoidberg, to random
@WhyNotZoidberg@topspicy.social avatar

The classic Greek Pantheon is just extra dysfunctional.

But then as Red from OSP puts it (paraphrasing): The Greek gods were representatives of what was true, not what was good; Classical Greece was absolutely horrible to women so therefore the gods were, too.

WhyNotZoidberg,
@WhyNotZoidberg@topspicy.social avatar
NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

Each Fenian warrior was equipped by the smiths working in the caves of Keshcorran with a sword and spear of superlative quality. „Each sword had a different name, details of which were related in the tale. Fionn’s sword was called Mac an Luin. The happy warriors were also provided with accommodation and when they awoke next morning,
they found themselves back on Slieve Luachra still bearing their new weapons.“
Source: Antiquarian Research in Co. Sligo as a Background to the #Mythology and Archaeology of Moytura by Eamonn P. Kelly #Celtic

evelynefoerster, to Cat
@evelynefoerster@swiss.social avatar


RIP Mars, 2010 - 2024
This morning I found Mars run over by a car. I miss him very much. We got him from the shelter and he showed his gratitude every day. He was cuddly, playful, a rascal and very curious. Wherever I was, Mars wasn't far away and he spent many cuddly hours on my lap. I am stunned and incredibly sad. My heart is broken and I am crushed 🖤
Goodbye Mars, miss you, Thank you for love 😭 😿

Mars, black cat, sitting on Paving stones, looking curious left
Mars, black cat, sitting on Paving stones, licking one of his front paws

paulfoerster,
@paulfoerster@swiss.social avatar

@evelynefoerster It turned out yesterday, that there was a to be given away. She is very friendly and calm. We instantly decided to take her.

Her name was something like Nanya or some gibberish. Since we name or cats either after candy bars or ancient gods, we decided to call her Hera (the wife of Zeus). Mars was both a candy bar and the god of war. 🤣

Below is the first shot I could take of her.

lorddimwit, to 13thFloor
@lorddimwit@mastodon.social avatar

9yo: Dad, when you cut off a hydra’s head and two more grow back, is it two more consciousnesses or just one new one or is there just one for the whole thing?

Me: I…am not prepared for this question.

#mythology

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

Like other unusual traits, second sight was not necessarily believed to be a gift. It was rarely envied, and seers often wished to be rid of it. It was generally hereditary but could make its appearance in anyone who suffered a trauma or spiritual awakening.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

65dBnoise, (edited ) to space
@65dBnoise@mastodon.social avatar

Βαυβούς ανάσυρμα.
Baubo, Eleusinian Mysteries, ancient Greece.

Baubo: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baubo#Orphic_fragment_52
Anasyrma: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anasyrma

and the eye of the beholder

Processed, cropped MCZ_LEFT, FL: 63mm
looking S (172°) from RMC 52.0870
Sol 1139, LMST: 12:53:15

Original: https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020-raw-images/pub/ods/surface/sol/01139/ids/edr/browse/zcam/ZL0_1139_0768056018_519EBY_N0520870ZCAM09168_0630LMJ02.png
Credit: /JPL-Caltech/ASU/65dBnoise

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#FairyTaleTuesday: The sons of Conall, son of Eochaid, were turned into badgers by the goddess Grian after they attacked her fort on the mountain of Knockgraney.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

: Like the seal, the badger was sometimes seen as a shape-shifting person; the #Irish hero #Tadg found their meat revolting, unconsciously aware that they were really his cousins.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

AdamMakesTTRPG, to 13thFloor
@AdamMakesTTRPG@dice.camp avatar

Now 100% Funded! Thank you, backers!

Future backers, check this out. There's a free 10-page preview--link in the banner of the crowdfunding page.

https://www.backerkit.com/c/projects/gnome-made-games/playing-god-a-ttrpg-of-gods-creation-titans-and-deicide?ref=mastodon

NeuKelte, to 13thFloor German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#MythologyMonday: The #TuathaDéDanann refined the art of brewing until the ale of their smith and brewer #Goibniu was strong enough to endow the drinker with immortality. #Irish epics connect ale with the festival of #Samhain, when the boundaries between this world and the #Otherworld were blurred.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore

TarkabarkaHolgy, to 13thFloor
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

Just hit SEND on my Forgotten Greek Myths manuscript 😊

mythologymonday, to 13thFloor
@mythologymonday@thefolklore.cafe avatar

Hello, Myth Lovers! Join us for Monday's theme: Brews and Potions. Write out a story that talks about brewing beverages or potion making of special liquids and use the tag for boosts!

🎨 FreeFunArt


@mythology @folklore @TarkabarkaHolgy @juergen_hubert @curiousordinary @wihtlore @FairytalesFood @bevanthomas @FinnFolklorist @Godyssey @GaymerGeek @starrytimepod

TarkabarkaHolgy, to 13thFloor
@TarkabarkaHolgy@ohai.social avatar

I did a half-hour long telling of the myth of Palamedes at Floralia today. It still felt rushed. I'm going to have to turn this into a full hour show. I think Palamedes deserves it.

Working titles:
"The hero that Homer forgot"

"Palamedes and the Invention of Everything"

#mythology #storytelling #GreekMythology

SteveMcCarty, to academia
@SteveMcCarty@hcommons.social avatar

Surprised at over 23,000 downloads of my publications at Humanities Commons, with something for everyone, such as:

"Understanding Intelligence and Genius" (1,214 downloads)
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:50812/CONTENT/intelligence_and_genius.pdf

"Taxonomy of Bilingualism series" (1,748 downloads)
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:26570/CONTENT/taxonomy_of_bilingualism_series.pdf

"Symbolism of Fire and Air in Greco-Roman and Japanese Creation Myths" (1,427 downloads)
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:43446/CONTENT/fusion_essays.pdf

"Bilingual Haiku Scroll" (838 downloads)
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:24806/CONTENT/bilingual_haiku_scroll.pdf

"Series on What is the Academic Life?" (955)
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:26460/CONTENT/academic_life_series.pdf

"Newspaper articles in Japanese" (1526 downloads):
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:25230/CONTENT/newspaper_articles_in_japanese.pdf

"Web 2.0 Technologies for Research and Mobility" (2,141 downloads):
https://hcommons.org/deposits/download/hc:25296/CONTENT/wireless_ready_keynote_address_proceedings.pdf

#academia #bilingualism #Japan #Japanese #technology #intelligence #mythology #haiku
@hello @mythology @academicchatter

MarginalViking, to 13thFloor
@MarginalViking@mastodon.world avatar

Does anyone here know where the -as-Valkyrie-armor thing came from? I have never come across it in any primary texts. Did Edith Hamilton make it up?

eivind, to 13thFloor
@eivind@fribygda.no avatar

According to Northern Finnish folklore, the northern lights are caused by the mythological firefox running around flinging sparks when its tail brushes against the vegetation. The Finnish name for northern lights, revontulet, literally translates to "fox fires".

livus, to asklemmy in What some Lemmy communities that are dead or very low number of new posts that you would like to get more active?
livus avatar

Hey, neat! Thank you! It's an "imagination engine" - the original mod @Arotrios kbin.social wrote a detailed description here.

I never really fully got my head around it but it seems to be a combination of art, poetry, music, cinema, mythology, etc and a lot of the posts in it bounce off other posts in it.

I don't think Lemmy uses hashtags but it still gives you an idea:

NeuKelte, to ireland German
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

: Geali Dianvir was the eldest son of the king of the Fir Bolg, invaders who may be mythological memories of early arrivals; his people were defeated by Balor, king of the evil Fomorians, who similarly may reflect historical indigenous peoples. After the battle, the defeated Fir Bolg sailed away from , returning to the mysterious land of Gallowna, where they attempted to recoup their strength.
From Gallowna, Geali Dianvir was sent back to repair the damage to his people’s reputation that Balor had dealt. When he arrived in Bantry, in western Co. Cork in the southwestern province of Munster, Geali Dianvir found the Formorian queen surrounded by Balor’s men, who every night applied venom to their swords so that they were unbeatable in battle. The venom was obtained from a well into which the warriors plunged their weapons; the Fir Bolg hero decided to eliminate their advantage by turning it from poison to clear water. To do this, he poured 20 measures of the milk of the magical cow of abundance, the glas ghaibhleann, into the well. The Fir Bolg hero was then able to gain the advantage over Balor’s men and drive them to the outer reaches of the land.
Source: P. Monaghan Encyclopedia of #Celtic #Mythology and #Folklore
https://x.com/dublinmacker/status/1271541748863508480?t=VlZCYYhpw-KLu22YntMnsw&s=09

NeuKelte,
@NeuKelte@todon.eu avatar

#Celtic #MythologyMonday for #MuseumDay: „In #Irish #mythology, the #TuathaDéDanann were said to have played hurling with their enemies, the Fir Bolg, before the Battle of Moytura commenced.
According to Lady Gregory in her book, Of Gods and Fighting Men, this is what happened:
“It was on a Midsummer day they began the battle. Three times nine hurlers of the Tuatha de Danaan went out against three times nine hurlers of the Firbolgs, and they were beaten, and every one of them was killed.”
So the Fir Bolg won the game, but unfortunately for them, went on to lose the battle. In some versions, they actually played with the heads of their enemies, instead of a ball.“
Source: Ali Isaac

Cluiche iománaíochta (hurling match), The National Museum of Ireland - Country Life, Turlough, photocredit 1. Neu-Kelte

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