Pagan Image Vault
Artworks/history of Pagan culture with focus on Europe and the Steppe. Sources on PaganImageVault on blogger (which is banned from FB).
19/09/2024
She was right, time to seek Them out again. Last last post, I promise 🙂
Hey all, I think I'm going to be taking an extensive break from the blog. Not sure how long, let's shoot for a year. I often think about when I started this blog back in 2018 and how happy I was to do so, how eager I was to research and post stuff after I got off work. Tbh this blog has become a headache. From being banned by FB from posting links to my blog on day one, receiving periodic random violations for no reason, I can't properly link my sources on here (I like being transparent and giving credit where it is due). I feel pretty much 'walled in' as far as expanding too. My followers haven't increased much in the last 4 years and typically I only have a few dozen views per post anyway. I'm not savvy in navigating social media environs.
It's hard for me to get my posts shared to other groups (I'm not sure why...), but I notice people from those groups sometimes swiping my posts afterward lol😆. I ignore this 99% of the time but what really frustrates me is that many times I see them using parts of my post and fusing it with incorrect info then disseminating it. It just irks me to see something I posted fused with historically incorrect info. I know I shouldn't care, but I do, sue me. I know my posts aren't perfect either, but I do push myself to try and be accurate.
I want to take some time and try to find a way to go back to that feeling I had in 2018, when this felt like a fun hobby and not work, and I know I won't find that on social media. I got hundreds (yeah...I know 😅) of posts in queue so maybe I'll be back at some point to post them.
First stop seems to be playing some TMNT with friends, hence the gif. Good luck all and maybe I'll see you in a year!
13/09/2024
Four images of Thor 'The Wind Raiser' 8th-11th C. CE.
"Perkins provides numerous written examples of Norse sailors attempting to conjure up wind magic, often through the invocation of the God Thor, who is charged with special responsibility for the weather. Perkins relies on a detailed explication of a passage from the little known Icelandic þáttr (tale) to argue that, as with his better-known hammer-wielding influence over thunder, the God's control of the wind is instrumental. Perkins interprets the terms skeggrödd and skeggraust (each meaning 'beard-voice') as the act of Thor blowing out the wind. The central argument of this work is that the Eyrarland image is a plastic representation of Thor carrying out this process, using his beard in the manner of a wind instrument. Perkins is an accomplished philologist and his reading of the passage is convincing. However it is a limitation that the text is provided only in Old Norse, though passages in Latin and Russian are translated. Old Norse texts will continue to be marginalized in medieval studies if they are not made accessible to those outside the rather narrow discipline of Norse studies. An engaging and technical discussion of Scandinavian artefacts and texts will always find an audience there but other scholars are prevented from fully appreciating this argument if they cannot understand the critical texts. The argument that Thor was visualized as blowing out the wind, and that he was invoked to influence the wind leads to the conclusion that the Eyrarland image and other similar artefacts can be identified as amulets carried by those, presumably sailors, who most wanted to control the wind. Perkins briefly mentions a strikingly similar image to the Eyrarland image, the bronze Rällinge image. As this small figure is in rather an excited condition, he is usually identified with the fertility God Freyr, an identification with which Perkins concurs. However the Rällinge image too is stroking his beard, in the gesture which Perkins repeatedly characterizes as Thor's wind-raising ritual. Frustratingly, this parallel is not explored. The remaining sections of the book follow this conclusion into archaeological territory. Perkins focuses specifically on four small figures, including the Eyrarland image. The figurines were found as far apart as Iceland and the Ukraine, and made from media ranging from carved amber to cast bronze but Perkins identifies in them distinctive characteristics which, he argues, type them all as representative of Thor in his wind-raising capacity. These symbolic qualities range from the general observation that they tend to have the glaring eyes and muscular physique appropriate for textual accounts of the 'bruiser' God (p. 70), to the very specific feature that each of them appears to be holding his beard like a wind instrument and blowing into it."
-Thor the Wind-Raiser and the Eyrarland Image (review) by Katrina Burge, University of Melbourne 2005. The 3 bottom images are from the GermanicMythology website.
Kattints ide a szponzorált hirdetés igényléséhez.
Kategória
Weboldal
Cím
Budapest