Three videos in which I visit the ancient temples of the Greeks in Athens and the surrounding area.
Showing posts with label pagan temple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pagan temple. Show all posts
Thursday, 2 November 2023
Thursday, 1 April 2021
Anglo-Saxon Paganism: Elves, ents, orcs
Art:
Thomas Cormack - Elf blot
Christian Sloan Hall - Hel, orcs, Odin, draugr
Christopher Steininger - Idunn, boat animation, mead-hall
Robert Molyneaux - Yeavering temple animation
Christopher Steininger - Idunn, boat animation, mead-hall
Robert Molyneaux - Yeavering temple animation
Sources:
Abram, C. ‘In Search of Lost Time: Aldhelm and The Ruin’, Quaestio (Selected Proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium in Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic), vol. 1, 2000.
Dowden, Ken (2000). European Paganism: The Realities of Cult from Antiquity to the Middle Ages.
Doyle, Conan. (2018). Dweorg in Old English: Aspects of Disease Terminology.
Gunnel, T., ‘How Elvish were the Elves?’ 2007.
Hall, A., 'Are there any Elves in Anglo-Saxon Place-Names?', Nomina: Journal of the Society for Name Studies in Britain and Ireland, 29 (2006), 61-80.
Hall, A., (2004). The Meanings of Elf, and Elves, in Medieval England. 2007.
Lund, J., "At the Water's Edge" in "Signals of Belief in Early England"
Lysaght, P. ‘the banshee: the irish supernatural death messenger’
North, R. 1997 Heathen gods in Old English literature.
Pollington, S. 2011. The Elder Gods: The Otherworld of Early England.
Price, Neil & Mortimer, Paul. (2014). An Eye for Odin? Divine Role-Playing in the Age of Sutton Hoo. European Journal of Archaeology.
Semple. S., A Fear of the Past: The Place of the Prehistoric Burial Mound in the Ideology of Middle and Later Anglo-Saxon England. (1998)
Friday, 14 February 2020
Podcast: Interview with Ralph Harrison of the Odinist Fellowship
This Podcast is also available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Podbean, Player FM and all good podcasting apps and platforms.
Ralph Harrison has been an Odinist for 40 years. He is the Director of the Odinist Fellowship, the UK’s only registered charity for the indigenous faith of the English people. They acquired a 16th century chapel in Newark which was consecrated on Midsummer's Day 2014 as the first heathen Temple in England for well over a thousand years. You can donate to the charity or the temple using the links below. Ralph and I had a nice chat about the Heathen religion, its rise in popularity in recent years due to the success of TV programs like Vikings, and also the dangers the faith faces from new age influences like Wicca and naturalism.
Contact the Odinist Fellowship
Email OF website
Address:
ODINIST FELLOWSHIP,
B.M. EDDA,
LONDON WC1N 3XX.
Newark Temple website
Newark Temple Facebook page
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)