• One day I decided to seek wisdom. Not the wisdom whispered in sunlit halls, but that deeper knowledge.

    There was a place I knew, a place I’d once been but never truly rested. A place I’d left, not by choice, but out of fear. As I approached it again, the door opened without protest, as if it had been expecting me all along.
    Behind the door lay a…Read More

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    The Use of Sacred Trees in the Context of Removing Pain

    By H.E. All over the world, people have tied scraps of fabric, handkerchiefs, or even entire pieces of clothing to […]

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  • ⁉️After waiting a long time, I’m finally asking this question. The more I read, the more confused I get, because different sources say different things. I also can’t find a clear answer on Discord.

    Question:
    Is it correct that Sceafa, the son of Beowa, is the same as the Lombardic king who was found as a child floating in a small boa…Read More

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    • So there are different versions of this story, that move things around.

      Old English tradition
      • Sceaf — name literally means “sheaf” (grain sheaf). In later English chronicles (Æthelweard, William of Malmesbury), he’s the boat-foundling with a sheaf of grain under his head.
      • Scyld — name literally means “shield.” In Beowulf, he’s called Scyld…Read More

    • @thehoptimist I made a forum thread to hold more data, without it scrolling away. 🙂

      • That makes sense — so in the English line we get Sceaf as the foundling, Scyld as the warrior-king who brings order, and in some genealogies Beowa as Scyld’s son, whose name points back to barley and fertility. In the Norse tradition, the miraculous origin drops out and Skjöld becomes Odin’s son, while among the Lombards the roles merge in Agelmu…Read More

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