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PathWalkers.Net Interactive :: Helping you along your path<br />

of the Holy Roman Empire or the side of Heathen guerrillas? One of the heathen tribes that are Arthur's<br />

enemy is the Angles. They were a Germanic tribe who possibly took their name from the Germanic<br />

god-hero Ing. The rune Inguz, a rune of fertility and growth, represents the god Ang, Ing or Ingvi-Frey.<br />

Tacitus mentions the Angli as one of the tribes who worship the goddess Nerthus. Both Frey and Nerthus<br />

through her masculinized form Njord, are associated with the Vanir. The Vanir are the gods of the elves,<br />

crop fertility and love.<br />

Compare the Germanic Ing or Frey to the Irish Celtic love-god Anghas. Both Anghas and Frey suffer<br />

from sickness when they yearn for a woman they love. Anghas and Ing might share a common archetype<br />

demonstrating the similarities and exchange between Celtic and Germanic heathen beliefs. There are<br />

many other examples. Not all Anglo-Saxons came as warriors. In fact archaeological evidence does not<br />

show the burning and destruction normally associated with battle and razing. Instead there may have<br />

been more of an abandonment of Roman villas as they became increasingly run down. This created a<br />

void that was later filled by warriors and farmers migrating because of the population pressures on the<br />

continent. There is even evidence that Saxon and Briton settlements may have coexisted peacefully. Even<br />

after Arthur's death at the Battle of Badon, there were still alliances made between Christian British kings<br />

and Pagan Saxon kings in Northumbria. If Arthur does come reincarnate he is going to have a hard time<br />

sorting out the Britons from the others. Many of the Anglo-Saxons would have taken Celtic wives<br />

creating a genetic nightmare for the rightful king. Similarly the Welsh have mixed with Irish and Viking<br />

colonists. The Saxons lost control of Britain in 1066 C.E. so Arthur will have to face those of Norman<br />

and other European cultures as well. Then again what is Arthur's policy going to be toward multinational<br />

companies?<br />

England's Celtic neighbours remember the injustices done to them by the Old Anglo-Saxons but fail to<br />

acknowledge their own invasions and the population flow westward from the continent toward the<br />

British Isles. England is not made up of Saxons or Sassenach, anymore than it is Norman, Dane or Celtic.<br />

The Industrialised North of England has suffered the same treatment as other unfortunate victims of the<br />

Southern dominated Empire. Although there is a history of violence in some areas, people should realise<br />

there is a longer history of an alliance between Gael, Pict and Saxon against the outside forces of the<br />

Rome and Christianity. This sort of cultural imperialism should be resisted, as it is the common enemy<br />

against free thought and reason. The political forces of Rome are still with us today, they have just taken<br />

different forms and are no longer limited to one culture.<br />

(19 Reads) comments?<br />

General information: What is Paganism?<br />

Posted by: Mysteron on Thursday, March 25, 2004 - 05:55 PM<br />

What is Paganism?<br />

by Nyx Wolfwalker<br />

History of Paganism<br />

The term Pagan has numerous common definitions. Many dictionaries define a Pagan as<br />

anyone not of the Judeo-Islamic-Christian religions. Some people consider anyone who does not share<br />

their religion to be a Pagan. Still others believe that a Pagan is a person who is anti-religion. None of<br />

these "definitions" manage to capture the true meaning of the term.<br />

To discover the core meaning of Pagan, we look back to ancient times when the word Pagan referred to a<br />

person of the country, or a peasant.<br />

{deletia... in summary, several paragraphs relating the history of the Catholic Church and the poor<br />

peasants' inability to relate. Brief description of the "glory of the Goddess and God in each starry night"<br />

and note of the inconsistancies of the original Pagan beliefs with the Catholic church. Also, several<br />

paragraphs detailing the development of of the Church's campaign to expunge Paganism, some of the<br />

methods employed and the subsequent Witch Hunts. Finally, an overall summary of the persecution.}<br />

Paganism in Modern Times<br />

http://www.pathwalkers.net/interactive/modules....ame=News&file=index&catid=&topic=1&allstories=1 (191 of 284) [12/25/2005 12:22:22 AM]

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