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| Actor Jeremy Irons lights a huge effigy of the "Borgia Bull" in a Pagan inspired celebration in season two of The Borgias |
22 November 2015
How Many Polytheists / Pagans Are There?
18 November 2015
Incense – Offerings to the Gods
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| Italic incense burner, 4th century BCE Source: liveauctioneers.com |
08 November 2015
Pagan Funeral Rites
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| Source: www.hbo.com/game-of-thrones |
I’ve heard it said that there is a spiritual lesson to be learnt in
contemplating death, thus I attempt to summarise traditional Germanic, Celtic and Roman funerary practices below.
Germanic funerary customs
Germanic funerary customs
The numerous Germanic burial mounds scattered across Europe appear to be connected to the worship of Vanir Deities (associated with fertility); they are the kinds of Gods that farmers and fishermen would have particularly revered, or indeed anyone to whom fertility was important. It seems that those inhumed in burial mounds were thought to live after death as spirits connected with the land. Davidson notes that there “seems to be some link between elves and the dead within the earth” (Scandinavian Mythology at 117).
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