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Vampires

 

Supernatural Undead

Culture: Romanian, Baltic, Slavic, Eastern European, Greek

The undead on Slavic Folklore

 

The Central theme of Vampirism include, the transference of life essence. Aversion to sun light, aversion to silver, sexuality.

A vampire is a creature from folklore that subsists by feeding on the vital essence (generally in the form of blood) of the living. In European folklore, vampires are undead creatures that often visited loved ones and caused mischief or deaths in the neighborhoods they inhabited while they were alive.

 

Vampire

Succubus

Chupacabra

 

Vampires have been featured in folklore and fiction of various cultures for hundreds of years, predominantly in Europe.

 

Central to vampire myth, however, is the consumption of human blood or other essence (such as bodily fluids or psychic energy), followed closely by the possession of sharp teeth or fangs with which to facilitate this task. In most depictions, vampires are “undead”—that is to say, having been somehow revived after death—and many are said to rise nightly from their graves or coffins, often necessarily containing their native soil.

 

Vampires are typically said to be of pale skin and range in appearance from grotesque to preternaturally beautiful, depending on the tale. Another frequently cited physical characteristic is the inability to cast a reflection or shadow, which often translates into an inability to be photographed or recorded on film.

 

A person may become a vampire in a variety of ways, the most common of which is to be bitten by a vampire. Other methods include sorcery, committing suicide, contagion, or having a cat jump over a person’s corpse.  

 

The are many tools in the vampire hunters cache of weapons. The most popular of those include a wooden stake through the heart, fire, decapitation, and exposure to sunlight. Vampires are often depicted as being repelled by garlic, running water, or Christian implements such as crucifixes and holy water. In some stories vampires may enter a home only if they have been invited, and in others they may be distracted by the scattering of objects such as seeds or grains that they are compelled to count, thereby enabling potential victims to escape.

 

 

Dracula is arguably the most important work of vampire fiction. The tale of the Transylvanian count who uses supernatural abilities, including mind control and shape-shifting, to prey upon innocent victims inspired countless works thereafter.

 

The pillars of vampirism

 

Transference of blood.

Blood a symbol of life force believed in many cultures to contain a share of divine energy or more commonly the spirit of an individual creature.

 

the oldest ancient deity who consumed blood was probably Lilith. She is also described as the first demon, or a female spirit which exemplified all of the darkest attributes of the world.

Persian folklore also speaks of some spirits who consumed blood. The most famous of these was Estries. She was a demon - specifically a shapeshifter.

 

 

 Usually she was believed to have appeared as a beautiful woman who looked for men to drink their blood. , She was also well-known in Jewish legends.

 

Silver is a precious metal with  well documented history with mankind

 

 

 

Silver

 

Silver is a chemical element with the symbol Ag (and atomic number 47. A soft, white, lustrous transition metal, it exhibits the highest electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, and reflectivity of any metal.

 

It is associated with purity, chastity and eloquence

 

Eastern Europeans believed that silver protected against demonic entities such as vampires and werewolves.

 

Aversion to sunlight

one of the more important theme. It places the vampire as anti nature.

 

The ultimate creature of the night. Depended on the absent of the primarly life giver and thus anti life.

Photophobia, or light sensitivity, is an intolerance of light.

 

Photophobia often accompanies albinism (lack of eye pigment), total color deficiency (seeing only in shades of gray), botulism, rabies, mercury poisoning, conjunctivitis, inflammation of the cornea and iritis.

People who have an extreme sensitivity to sunlight are born with a rare disease known as xeroderma pigmentosum (XP).

 

Sexualization

The act of vampire feeding is sexual in its nature. Involving the exposed neck and the lips and tongue. So the  concept of seduction has always been an important element of Vampires.

 

Modern mythology of the vampire has progressed to necrophilia and necromancy where the undead is not a mystical seducer but a comforting lover. They are the love interest.

 

Necrophilia, is sexual attraction towards or a sexual act involving corpses. It is classified as a paraphilia by the World Health Organization (WHO) in its International Classification of Diseases (ICD) diagnostic manual, as well as by the American Psychiatric Association.

 

Necrophilia is a very disturbing component of human behavior. Herodotus suggested that the Greek tyrant Periander defiled his wife. Using the phrase “Periander baked his bread in cold ovens.”

 

Acts of necrophilia are depicted on ceramics from the Moche culture, which reigned in northern Peru from the first to eighth century CE.

 

Hittite law from the 16th century BC through to the 13th century BC explicitly permitted sex with the dead.

 

In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  necrophilia) is  marked by  distress or impairment in important areas of functioning.

 

Sergeant François Bertrand), known as the Vampire of Montparnasse, was a sergeant in the French Army. He was arrested in 1841 for necrophilia and jailed.

 

He stated that his necrophilic impulses began in 1846, and were accompanied by headaches and heart palpitations. He progressed to exhuming the corpses of both women and men from graveyards, whereupon he would eviscerate and dismember them before masturbating. Bertrand would later describe his experience with the corpse of a 16-year-old girl.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Abgal are seven Sumerian wise men who attend to the god Enki who emerged from Apsu. The Abgal are portrayed as fishlike men.

 

The Sumerian people of Mesopotamia believed in the seven wise deities that attended to the god Enki. They were also called the Apkallu by the Akkadian people. Some ancient texts mentioned them as the Ummanu. They were often described as being upright like mankind, but having fish heads. (Some say they even had bird heads.) They represented wisdom and knowledge. Here are the names of the seven sages:

Uanna, "who finished the plans for heaven and earth",

Uannedugga, "who was endowed with comprehensive intelligence",

Enmedugga, "who was allotted a good fate",

Enmegalamma, "who was born in a house",

Enmebulugga, "who grew up on pasture land",

An-Enlilda, "the conjurer of the city of Eridu",

Utuabzu, "who ascended to heaven".



Abgal – the dream maker

Culture Pre Islamic north Arabian

 

Classification: Jinn

Associated: the deserted 

 

Sacred Place; Temple at Khirbet Semrin

 

Known from the Palmyrian Desert regions as a tutelary god of the Bedouins and Nomads.

 

Representations of him are of a youth with long hair and a moustache, wearing local garb, and holding a lance.

He was venerated in the temple at Khirbet Semrin where he is portrayed on a relief riding a horse, equipped with bow and quiver attached to the saddle.

 

A stele with imagery of Abgal and Ashar, and earlier inscriptions at Kirbet-Semrin dates the active 'worship' of this jinn to between 154 and 270 AD – references to the deity appear in the Palmyrene Empire.

 

 

 

 

The Sumerian people of Mesopotamia believed in the seven wise deities that attended to the god Enki. They were also called the Apkallu by the Akkadian people. Some ancient texts mentioned them as the Ummanu. They were often described as being upright like mankind, but having fish heads. (Some say they even had bird heads.) They represented wisdom and knowledge. Here are the names of the seven sages:

Uanna, "who finished the plans for heaven and earth",

Uannedugga, "who was endowed with comprehensive intelligence",

Enmedugga, "who was allotted a good fate",

Enmegalamma, "who was born in a house",

Enmebulugga, "who grew up on pasture land",

An-Enlilda, "the conjurer of the city of Eridu",

Utuabzu, "who ascended to heaven".

It also appears that the Sumerian people believed in divine right to rule, which many ancient civilizations did. To support this, there would be an Abgal sage to attend to each king.


Fertility is defined as the natural capacity to conceive a child. However, fertility does not come easily to everyone. About 11% of couples will face infertility—the inability to conceive naturally after one year of unprotected sexual intercourse.

 

Ala, Igbo goddess of fertility

Asase Ya, Ashanti earth goddess of fertility

Denka, Dinka god of the sky, rain and fertility

Mbaba Mwana Waresa, Zulu goddess of fertility, rainbows, agriculture, rain, and bees

Oshun (known as Ochún or Oxúm in Latin America) also spelled Ọṣun, is an orisha, a spirit, a deity, or a goddess that reflects one of the manifestations of God in the Ifá and Yoruba religions.

 

Min, ancient Kemetic  god of fertility and lettuce

Amun, creator-god, associated with fertility

Bastet, cat goddess sometimes associated with fertility

Hathor, goddess of music, beauty, love, sexuality and fertility

Heqet, frog-goddess of fertility

Heryshaf, god of creation and fertility

Isis, goddess of motherhood, magic and fertility

Mesenet, goddess of childbirth

Min, god of fertility, reproduction, and lettuce

Osiris, god of the afterlife, the dead, and the underworld agency that granted all life, including sprouting vegetation and the fertile flooding of the Nile River

Renenutet, goddess of the true name, the harvest and fertile fields

Sobek, god of the river, warfare and fertility

Sopdet, goddess of the fertility of the soil

Tawaret, goddess of fertility and childbirth

Tefnut, goddess of water and fertility

Yoruba

Eshu

Oya

 

 Kokopelli, Hopi trickster god associated with fertility, childbirth and agriculture

Hanhepi Wi, Lakota goddess associated with the moon, motherhood, family and femininity

 

Astoreth, Canaanite version of Inanna/Ishtar.

Hadad, storm (and thus rain) god responsible for crops growing, also known as Adad and Ba'al

Nikkal, goddess of fruits

Tanit, consort of Baʿal Hammon at Carthage

 

Etruscan

Fufluns, god of plant life, happiness, health, and growth in all things, equivalent to the Greek Dionysus

Thesan, goddess of the dawn, associated with the generation of life

Turan, goddess of love, fertility and vitality

 

Fertility rites are religious rituals that are intended to stimulate reproduction in humans or in the natural world. Such rites may involve the sacrifice of "a primal animal, which must be sacrificed in the cause of fertility or even creation

In Japan the Shinto Kanamara Matsuri, the Festival of the Steel Phallus is held each spring.  The legend is that a jealous sharp-toothed demon hid inside the vagina of a young woman whom the demon fell in love with and bit off penises of two young men on their wedding nights.[6] After that the woman sought help from a blacksmith, who fashioned an iron phallus to break the demon's teeth, which led to the enshrinement of the item.[

 

Fertility Fest is the world’s first arts festival dedicated to fertility, infertility, the science of making babies and modern families.

Fertility rites may occur in calendric cycles, as rites of passage within the life cycle, or as ad hoc rituals....Commonly fertility rituals are embedded within larger-order religions or other social institutions.


Celestial is typically a term we use in conjunction with a body or a being. In terms of body we could substitute “heavenly”. Celestial is what I call a bridge term between belief systems. While there may be difficult to explain a NTR to in reference to an angel we all can understand a being of heaven or at least not of this world. In the biblical, Hellenistic (Greco-Roman cultural), the terrestrial realm was a world in which humans were limited by the factors of time, space, and cause and effect. The celestial realm, generally composed of level of more spiritual spheres. The subterrestrial realm was the area of chaos and the spiritual powers of darkness. At the highest level of the celestial sphere was the ultimate of the sacred or holy: e.g., Yahweh, the God of Judaism, whose name was so holy it should not even be spoken; Bythos, the unknowable beginning beyond beginnings of gnosticism; the heavenly Father of Christianity celestial ADJECTIVE positioned in or relating to the sky, or outer space as observed in astronomy. "a celestial body" #Genetics, #Vibration #Ragnarok @TheMelaninGoddessCult #StolenHistory #kemetic #kemet#AliensAmongUs #Aliens #Infowar #Magic
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The Bladder Festival (Bladder Feast)

Culture: Yup’ik Eskimo Shamanism

Associated: Renewal

Celebrated: The Winter ceremonial season

an important annual seal hunting harvest renewal ceremony and celebration held each year to honor and appease the souls of seals taken in the hunt during the past season.

 

This occurred at the winter solstice by the Yup'ik of western and southwestern Alaska.

 

In the Yup'ik Eskimo shamanism, while the hunter kills the body of the animal, he does not kill the yua (spirit or soul), which resides in the animal's bladder (nakacuk in Yup'ik).

The animal ultimately will be reincarnated in a new body. The collected inflated bladders of sea mammals taken by hunters during the previous year are honored.

 

The celebration of the Bladder Festival marked the opening of the winter ceremonial season. At the time of the winter solstice, when the sun "sat down" on the horizon, families inflated the bladders of seals killed that year and brought them into the qasgiq sacred house. The bladder festival is said to increase sexual activity and thus women or prohibited from entering the sacred house. After several days the bladders are returned to the sea.

 


Black is the darkest color, complete absorption of visible light. It is an achromatic color, a color without hue, like white and gray.

Black is associated with fertility, magic and elegance.

Black ink is the most common color used for printing books, newspapers and documents, as it provides the highest contrast with white paper and thus the easiest color to read.

 

Black was one of the first colors used in art. The Lascaux Cave in France contains drawings of bulls and other animals drawn by paleolithic artists between 18,000 and 17,000 years ago.

 

For the ancient Egyptians, black had a special meaning, being the color of fertility and the rich black soil flooded by the Nile. It was the color of Anubis, the god of the underworld, who took the form of a black jackal, and offered protection against evil to the dead.

 

Ausar, who is credited with spreading sacred knowledge, is call the perfect black.

 

The word Khem, meant black or blackness. AS the root word of Chemistry, we understand this to mean the black arts or black study.

 

It has been argued that the Khemites were thus calling themselves the Black People.

 

 

 

Black symbolized both power and secrecy in the medieval world. The emblem of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany was a black eagle. The black knight in the poetry of the Middle Ages was an enigmatic figure, hiding his identity, usually wrapped in secrecy.

 

A black pigment can, however, result from a combination of several pigments that collectively absorb all colors. Black is the absorption of all colors of light, or an exhaustive combination of multiple colors of pigment.

 

In elementary science, far ultraviolet light is called "black light" because, while itself unseen, it causes many minerals and other substances to fluoresce.

 

As of September 2019, the darkest material is made from vertically aligned carbon nanotubes. The material was grown by MIT engineers and was reported to have a 99.995% absorption rate of any incoming light. This surpasses any former darkest materials including Vantablack, which has an peak absorption rate of 99.965% in the visible spectrum

 

A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity prevents anything, including light, from escaping. The theory of general relativity predicts that when a star runs of out gas and begins to collapse  a sufficiently compact mass will deform spacetime to form a black hole. It is called "black" because it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon, reflecting nothing, just like a perfect black body in thermodynamics.

 

After a black hole has formed it can continue to grow by absorbing mass from its surroundings. By absorbing other stars and merging with other black holes, supermassive black holes of millions of solar masses may form. There is general consensus that supermassive black holes exist in the centers of most galaxies.

 

In China, the color black is associated with water, one of the five fundamental elements believed to compose all things.

In Japan black can also symbolize experience, as opposed to white, which symbolizes naiveté. The black belt in martial arts symbolizes experience.

 

In Christian theology, black was the color of the universe before God created light. In many religious cultures, from Mesoamerica to Oceania to India and Japan, the world was created out of a primordial darkness.

 

In Hinduism, the goddess Kali, goddess of time and change, is portrayed with black or dark blue skin. wearing a necklace adorned with severed heads and hands. Her name means "The black one". She destroys anger and passion according to Hindu mythology and her devotees are supposed to abstain from meat or intoxication.

 

In Paganism, black represents dignity, force, stability, and protection. The color is often used to banish and release negative energies.

 

Black is frequently used as a color of power, law and authority. In many countries judges and magistrates wear black robes

 

Black formal attire is still worn at many solemn occasions or ceremonies, from graduations to formal balls. Graduation gowns are copied from the gowns worn by university professors in the Middle Ages, which in turn were copied from the robes worn by judges and priests, who often taught at the early universities. The mortarboard hat worn by graduates is adapted from a square cap called a biretta worn by Medieval professors and clerics.

Black Panther symbolism is inevitably linked to a protector, a guardian, or a savior.

 

The names cougar, puma, panther, Black Panther, leopard, and mountain lion are often used interchangeably as they all belong to the class of animals grouped under the term ‘Panthera.’

 

The Black Panther is a melanistic leopard found in the moist, dense forests.

 

The Egyptian Goddess Mafdel took on the appearance of a panther and is invoked even today as the destroyer of snakes and scorpions. Thus, much of the Black Panther symbolism is linked to protection and guardianship.

 

Egyptian priests supposedly wore leopard and panther skins when performing funerary rites.

The symbolism of the black panther was used by the American Political Party of the 1960

In India, the caste system used the Black Panther Movement in America to form the Dalit Panthers –

 

The Dahomey God Agassu is a product of union between a panther and a Tado princess. Agassu became the founder of the royal line of Abomey.

 

Panther and leopard symbolism is also found in conjunction with the rulers of Cameroon Grasslands and Kongo. In fact, one of the many symbols of the power of the ruling Obas of Benin is a panther.

 

In the Iroquois mythology of North American Indians, the God of the West Wind is Dajoji – a panther or jaguar. When he snarls, even the sun hides his face.

 

Onyx, raven , ebony, melanoid, infinite, obsidian, sable,

 

The African Diaspora identifies itself with the term black.

 

Black is beautiful.

 

Black is infinite.

 

It is black culture, black awareness and black love.

 

Black is a color, a cosmological event and ideology, a people and a state of begin.

 

It is both the combination of all others and the absence of them.

 

 


Dendera Temple Complex

Located Nabta Playa in the Saharan desert

Sacred Places

Significance

Of Nabta Playa in general pushes the foundation of the Kemetic Civilization to 10 to 15 thousand years bce.

Size

The whole complex covers some 40,000 square meters and is surrounded by a hefty mudbrick enclosed wall.

 

Well Preserved

 It is one of the best-preserved temple complexes in Egypt. The area was used as the sixth nome of Upper Egypt, south of Abydos.

 

 

Hathor temple

Who was highly venerated by the Kemetic people as a supreme goddess and the Eye of Ra.

Shrine of Auset

Shrine of Sokar

Shrine of Harsomtus

Shrine of Hathor's Sistrum

Shrine of gods of Lower Egypt

Shrine of Hathor

Shrine of the throne of Rê

Shrine of Rê

Shrine of Menat collar

Shrine of Ihy

Shrine to Ausar

 

Dendera zodiac

 

The sculptured Dendera zodiac (or Denderah zodiac) is a widely known Egyptian bas-relief from the ceiling of the pronaos (or portico) of a chapel dedicated to Ausar in the Hathor temple at Dendera, containing images of Taurus (the bull) and Libra (the scales).

 

The first representation of the solar systems and the concept of the Zodiac

The Calendar Circle, which actuarily tracked the movements of the stars of a several thousand year period.

 

 


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Thebes

Location               Luxor, Luxor Governorate, Egypt

Region  Upper Egypt

Type      Settlement

UNESCO World Heritage Site

Official name     Ancient Thebes with its Necropolis

Type      Cultural

Criteria I, III, VI

Designated         1979 (3rd session)

Reference no.   87

Region  Arab States

Thebes known to the ancient Egyptians as Waset, was an ancient Egyptian city located along the Nile about 800 kilometers (500 mi) south of the Mediterranean. Its ruins lie within the modern Egyptian city of Luxor. Thebes was the main city of the fourth Upper Egyptian nome (Sceptre nome) and was the capital of Egypt for long periods during the Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom eras. 

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