A closer look at the Gaia card in the Ancient Wisdom Oracle deck, along with my instincts/interpretations of the imagery and other associated European Gottesses.. #2022 #WhiteCulture #Oracle #Divination #Gottess #Irish #Greek #Slavic #Norse #Egytian #Aryan #Roman #Welsh #AncientFeminineWisdomOracle #Gaia #Mnemosyne #Eos #Selene #Metis #Themis #Amphitrite # Nemesis #Frigg #Freya #Nut #Danu #Terra #Don #Elle #Mokosh A closer look at the Gaia oracle card from the ancient feminine wisdom oracle deck. Gaia is listed within the first goddesses via the ethnic Greek interpretation showcased by Kays artwork. I take a closer look at the symbolic or imagery within the card and align the imagry with my ethnic wyrdcrafting interpretations. From the chapter 'Ancient feminine wisdom'
Gaia by another name or Gaia a personification of another name This is by no means a complete list in order to keep this write up short, but to follow is other interpretations of Gaia or Gai from that I personally use and identify with, beyond the Crone Aspect or Timings. Important to note is that the Gottesses are also implied when someone says the Gotts and that no Gotts of the European Ethnos are interchangeable with those not of the Aryan or White race/ethnos for these beings are ancestral spirits of the ethnic group. Frigg (Norse) (/frɪɡ/; Old Norse: [ˈfriɡː]) is a gottess in Germanic mythology. In Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about her, she is associated with marriage, prophecy, clairvoyance and motherhood, and dwells in the wetland halls of Fensalir. In wider Germanic mythology, she is known in Old High German as Frīja, in Langobardic as Frēa, in Old English as Frīg, in Old Frisian as Frīa, and in Old Saxon as Frī, all ultimately stemming from the Proto-Germanic theonym *Frijjō, meaning '(the) Beloved' or '(the) Free'. Nearly all sources portray her as the wife of the god Odin. In Old High German and Old Norse sources, she is specifically connected with Fulla, but she is also associated with the gottesses Lofn, Hlín, Gná, and ambiguously with the Earth, otherwise personified as an apparently separate entity Jörð (Old Norse: 'Earth'). The children of Frigg and Odin include the gleaming god Baldr. Due to significant thematic overlap, scholars have proposed a connection to the gottess Freyja. I personally have come to know Frigg is actually also Freya (Name comes from the Norse word for lady or mistress) herself but in a crone or older woman form. Freya is associated with love, beauty, fertility, war, wealth, divination and magic. There are variations of the spellings of this Goddess name including: Freyja, Freyr and Freyja. The English weekday name Friday (ultimately meaning 'Frigg's Day') bears her name. After Christianization, the mention of Frigg continued to occur in Scandinavian folklore. During modern times, Frigg has appeared in popular culture, has been the subject of art and receives veneration in Germanic folk. Etymology speaking the theonyms Frigg (Old Norse), Frīja (Old High German), Frīg (Old English), Frīa (Old Frisian), and Frī (Old Saxon) are cognates—linguistic siblings of the same origin. They stem from the Proto-Germanic feminine noun *Frijjō ('Beloved', or 'Free'), which emerged as a substantivized feminine of the adjective *frijaz ('free') via Holtzmann's law. In a clan-based societal system, the meaning 'free' arose from the meaning 'related'. The name is indeed etymologically close to the Sanskrit priyā and the Avestan fryā ('own, dear, beloved'), all ultimately descending from the Proto-Indo-European stem *priH-o-, denoting 'one's own, beloved'. The Proto-Germanic verb *frijōnan ('to love'), as well as the nouns *frijōndz ('friend') and *friþuz or *frijađwō ('friendship, peace') are also related. A suffix has been sometimes applied by modern editors to denote femininity, resulting in the form Frigga. This spelling also serves the purpose of distancing the goddess from the English word frig. Several place names refer to Frigg in what are now Norway and Sweden, although her name is altogether absent in recorded place names in Denmark. Elle/Elli (Norse) The giantess and crone Gottess who, despite the appearance of an old woman, defeated Thor in a wrestling match. She is the symbol of old age that no one could ever defeat. Od age has frightens both humans and gods according to Norse beliefs, but Elli, the Norse goddess of Old Age reminds us about it and to embrace the cycle of life when we enter those rivers. Mokosh, or Mat Zemlya (Slavic) A Slavic Gottess (Old East Slavic: Мóкошь) mentioned in the Primary Chronicle, protector of women's work and women's destiny. She watches over spinning and weaving, shearing of sheep, and protects women in childbirth. Mokosh is the Mother Gottess. Mokoš was the only female deity whose idol was erected by Vladimir the Great in his Kiev sanctuary along with statues of other major gods (Perun, Hors, Dažbog, Stribog, and Simargl). Mokosh probably means moisture. According to Max Vasmer, her name is derived from the same root as Slavic words mokry, 'wet', and moknut(i), 'get wet', or 'to dive deeply into something'. She may have originated among the northern Finnic peoples of the Vogul, who worship the divinity Moksha. Mokosh is a consort of Perun. Danu (Irish) Irish Gottess, whom name means “knowledge.” and from her flowed all of life. She is also linked to fairy hills and a tribe of ancient deities known as Tuatha de Danaan. In Irish mythology, Danu ([ˈdanu]) is a mother gottess of the Tuatha Dé Danann (Old Irish: "The peoples of the gottess Danu"). Though primarily seen as an ancestral figure, some Victorian sources also associate her with the land. The hypothetical nominative form of the name, *Danu, is not found in any medieval Irish text, but is rather a reconstruction by modern scholars based on the genitive Danann (also spelled Donand or Danand), which is the only form attested in the primary sources (e.g. in the collective name of the Irish gotts, Tuatha Dé Danann "Tribe of the Gotts of Danu"). In Irish mythology, Anu (sometimes given as Anann or Anand) is a gottess, whom may be a gottess in her own right or an alternate name for Danu. One in the same much alike Frigg and Freya within Norse interpretations. The etymology of the name has been a matter of much debate since the 19th century, with some earlier scholars favoring a link with the Vedic water goddess Danu, whose name is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰenh₂- "to run, to flow", which may also lie behind the ancient name for the river Danube, Danuuius – perhaps of Celtic origin, though it is also possible that it is an early Scythian loanword in Celtic. Linguist Eric Hamp rejects the traditional etymologies in his 2002 examination of the name Danu and proposes instead that *Danu is derived from the same root as Latin bonus (Old Latin duenos), from Proto-Indo-European *dueno- "good", via a Proto-Celtic nominative singular n-stem *Duonū ("aristocrat"). Dôn (Welsh) A Welsh Gottess (Welsh pronunciation: [ˈdoːn]) of whom is an ancestor figure and or Gottess in Welsh legend and literature. She is typically given as the mother of a group known as the "Children of Dôn", including Gwydion, Arianrhod, and Gilfaethwy, among many others. However, antiquarians of the early modern era generally considered Dôn a male figure. Llys Dôn (literally "The Court of Dôn") is the traditional Welsh name for the constellation Cassiopeia. At least three of Dôn's children also have astronomical associations: Caer Gwydion ("The fortress of Gwydion") is the traditional Welsh name for the Milky Way, and Caer Arianrhod ("The Fortress of Arianrhod") being the constellation of Corona Borealis. Caers are forts/castles and also the origin of chakras before the interpretation made their own version. European chakras or caers are symbolic of colors red, black and white and infinint masculin and femine dances of energetic wheels of creations. Terra (Roman) A Roman Gottess. Tellus Mater or Terra Mater ("Mother Earth") The two words terra and tellus are thought to derive from the formulaic phrase tersa tellus, meaning "dry land". The etymology of tellus is uncertain; it is perhaps related to Sanskrit talam, "plain ground". The 4th century AD Latin commentator Servius distinguishes between use of tellus and terra. Terra, he says, is properly used of the elementum, earth as one of the four classical elements with air (Ventus), water (Aqua), and fire (Ignis). Tellus is the gottess, whose name can be substituted (ponimus ... pro) for her functional sphere the earth, just as the name Vulcanus is used for fire, Ceres for produce, and Liber for wine. Tellus thus refers to the guardian deity of Earth and by extension the globe itself. Tellus may be an aspect of the spirit called Dea Dia by the Arval priests, or at least a close collaborator with her as "divinity of the clear sky." Varro identifies Terra Mater with Ceres: Not without cause was the Earth (Terra) called Mater and Ceres. It was believed that those who cultivated her led a pious and useful life (piam et utilem ... vitam), and that they were the sole survivors from the line of King Saturn. Ovid distinguishes between Tellus as the locus ("site, location") of growth, and Ceres as its causa ("cause, agent"). Mater, the Latin word for "mother," is often used as an honorific for goddesses, including Vesta, who was represented as a virgin. "Mother" therefore is an honorific that expresses the respect one would owe any good mother. Tellus and Terra are both regarded as mothers in both the literal and honorific sense; Vesta in the honorific only. Tailtiu or Tailltiu In reference to Terra I also add the Irish Gottess Tailtiu (Old Irish pronunciation: [ˈtalʲtʲu]; modern spelling: Tailte) (also known as Talti) is the name of a presumed goddess from Irish mythology. The goddess's name is linked to Teltown (< OI Óenach Tailten) in Co. Meath, site of the Óenach Tailten. A legendary dindsenchas "lore of places" poem relates a myth connecting the presumed goddess Tailtiu with the site. However, linguistic analysis of the name reveals that Tailtiu as a place-name derives from a loan word of Brythonic origin represented by the Welsh telediw "well formed, beautiful." The mythological character of Tailtiu likely derives her name from the place-name. According to the Book of Invasions, Tailtiu was the wife of Eochaid mac Eirc, last Fir Bolg High King of Ireland, who named his capital after her (Teltown, between Navan and Kells). She survived the invasion of the Tuatha Dé Danann and became the foster mother of Lugh. Tailtiu is said to have died of exhaustion after clearing the plains of Ireland for agriculture. Lugh established a harvest festival and funeral games, Áenach Tailteann, in her honour, which continued to be celebrated as late as the 18th century. I personally veiw Tailtiu in much the same way as the many guises of the Morrigan or even Terra more acurately as likened to the many guises of the Morigan. It is in this same understanding I disregard the therom which seems (typical) from non native or ethnic European interpretation. The Gotts of Europa are not mortal, they shape shift and exist within different form/s and even with differing veils/worlds and sometimes simutaneously. When their deaths are spoken off past or future, the telling is simply of the process of shapeshifting and or rebirth into their next guise and or conduit. Net/Nut (Egyptian) Egyptian Gottess whom is a personification of the heavens/cosmos (Kaos) It is an Egyptians folk belief that night is dark because Geb and Nut were coupling, whilst during the day, the air gott Shu had physically separate the two so that the sun chariot could go across the sky. Nut /ˈnʊt/ (Ancient Egyptian: Nwt), also known by various other transcriptions, is the gottess of the sky, stars, cosmos, mothers, astronomy, and the universe in the ancient Egyptian folk. She was seen as a star-covered nude woman arching over the Earth, or as a cow. She was depicted wearing the water-pot sign (nw) that identifies her. The Egyptian Gottess Nut, overcomes Ra's curse and gives birth to the main Egyptian Gotts and Gottesses. She also saves her son Osiris and protects and nurtures the souls of the dead. Geb arose toward the tail end of the Egyptian empire as he used to be associated with snakes and crops before he became a personification of the earth. The pronunciation of ancient Egyptian is uncertain because vowels were long omitted from its writing, although her name often includes the unpronounced determinative hieroglyph for "sky". Her name Nwt, itself also meaning "Sky", is usually transcribed as "Nut" but also sometimes appears in older sources as Nunut, Nent, and Nuit. She also appears in the hieroglyphic record by a number of epithets, not all of which are understood. By Druid & Witch of the old ways, And Priestess of the Morrigan, Ravenmor Fox Thank-you, don’t forget to save and share. Some more related post links are below; Don’t miss a vlog post on youtube by signing up to the channel. Vlogs from all of the sister sights are posted there; © Bohemefit Originally published February 19th 2022-02-19 All Tags:
#2022 #WhiteCulture #Oracle #Divination #Gottess #Greek #Slavic #Norse #Egytian #Irish #Aryan #Roman #Welsh #AncientFeminineWisdomOracle #Gaia #Mnemosyne #Eos #Selene #Metis #Themis #Amphitrite # Nemesis #Frigg #Freya #Nut #Danu #Terra #Don #Elle #Mokosh
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