4 results for "5f6f260fd2a992da91f9b36e5272cfcf"
>>41095220
>On Mount Hermon, fallen angels make a pact
>Mount Hermon was associated with the Anunnaki in Sumerian-Akkadian mythology
>Olympias, the mother of Alexander the Great, was an ardent participant in the orgies in honor of Sabazius; this gave rise to the legend that Zeus himself, in the form of a serpent, had intercourse with Olympias and that Alexander was the fruit of this relationship; there was even a story that King Philip lost an eye for spying through a keyhole as the deity in the form of a serpent lay with his wife
>The fusion of Sabazius with other Eastern deities, Syrian, Persian, even with the Jewish Sabaoth, belongs to the first centuries of Christianity, although the beginning of this mixture dates back to the 2nd century BC: in 139, the Jews were expelled from Rome for proselytizing among Roman citizens by virtue of a law that condemned to exile those who spread the worship of Jupiter-Sabazius. Blavatsky also identified Dionysus-Sabazius and Jehovah-Sabaoth
>>515153671
>"Once upon a time, they say, a serpent lived in the sky and flew all over the world; everyone was afraid of him, and some even bowed to him. When God learned that he was being worshiped, he took his wings away, and he fell from the sky into the Dnieper and swam away. The idolaters ran along the shore and shouted: "Perun, Perun, swim to the shore." He swam to an island, and a deep hole opened up for him; he disappeared there. From that time on, the island was called Perun." >That is why the people who were then in paganism called that accursed one a god, and called him "thunder" or "Perun"; in Belarusian, "thunder" means "Perun." That accursed sorcerer built a small town for nightly sorcery at demonic gatherings in one place, called Perunya, where the idol of Perun stood. And the foolish tell tales about this Volkhv, saying: "Instead of the god he sat down, replacing the damned one." In connection with this role of Fevronia as a healer-sorcerer, a Novgorod legend comes to mind, recorded in the 19th century by P. Yakushkin about the "Volkhov cowherd", to whom the "snake beast Perun" came. Her connection with him, most likely, testifies to the fact that she was not a simple cowherd living on the Volkhov, but a sorceress.
negraya sorceress is a play on words, there is a connection with bulls (cows) vol and wolves. In any case, I studied this myth and the sorcerers knew that Perun was a dragon (this is not surprising. After all, all the gods in the Greek-Hellenic mysteries acquired the features of snakes, sometimes horned), the Sumerian gods had epithets of great snakes and dragons. There is much to say on this topic. In Ireland there are many stories about how an unusual ruler is born after his mother drank water with worms floating in it on the advice of a druid
>>41044638
>>41044675
>>41043491