Thread: When I was a little kid, this was "the rude gesture" before I learned the other ruder gestures 🙂. It turns out this gesture has been used at least since the Roman time...
Apparently in Roman times it was known as manu fica (fig sign) "for the resemblance to female genitalia" (???) Does this remind you of a female genitalia?
Also, this sign "was made by the pater familias to ward off the evil spirits of the evil dead" (???) during Lemuria, the festival of "cleansing the home from the evil dead" (???)
Are the dead really afraid of the female genitalia?
I actually think that the Romans had actually forgotten the original meaning of this sign. This sign represents male genitalia. Which is why it is pater familias (the father of the family) who is making it.
Here is the origin of the sign
So not a female genitalia, right?
Also the whole "evil spirits of the dead" is another sign that the Romans had forgotten the "old ways"...The dead, the ancestors, were not god or bad...They were good to the living if they respected them, remembered them and bad if they didn't
It is the dead, the ancestors who brought all the good things to the living...In return for regular mention, food and drink...
And originally this sign was probably not made "to ward off the evil spirits of the dead"...The pater familias was making it to remind the ancestors that they are all part of the the same family...Paternal family...Symbolised by the...
What most people do when looking for comfort (left), what we are talking about (right)
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While reading about the sudden collapse of the Balkan Neolithic cultures, like Vinča culture (pic) at the end of the 5th mill BC, I came across a proposition that maybe it was an epidemic of some sort which could have caused it...
By the way this thread is a long awaited 🙂 continuation of this thread I wrote 2 days ago
Thread (longish but hopefully interesting): This is Dolmen of Pierre-Alot, France...I would here like to talk about three interesting articles I read this week, which together, might shed some new light on the origin, spread and reason for megalithic culture...Or not...
There are over 35,000 currently accounted megaliths in Europe, including megalithic tombs, standing stones, stone circles, alignments, and megalithic buildings or temples...
Most of these were constructed during the Neolithic and the Copper Ages (5th - 3rd millennium BC) and are located in coastal areas...
Thread: This is one of the most amazing things I have seen...Neolithic en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yangshao_… burial, discovered in Puyang, Henan Province, Northwestern China and dated to 4000BC...
A person was buried between a dragon (on the east side) and tiger (on the west side) of the body made of clam shells...His body was surrounded by three other smaller bodies, probably sacrificial victims...
Dragon and Tiger are two most important symbols in Chinese culture.
The Tiger is the ruler of the earth, in contrast to the Dragon who is the ruler of the sky...
The Dragon, a symbol of Spring, stands for the East while the Tiger, a symbol of Autumn, rules the West...
Thread: Rock carvings, dated to the 2nd mill. BC from Parco di Seradina-Bedolina (parcoseradinabedolina.it/indexe.html), located near Capo di Ponte is an Italian comune in Val Camonica, province of Brescia, in Lombardy.
To me the most interesting bit is on the back: fire-steel in the center of a cross made of four branches radiating fire which looks like burning sun...The fire-steel positioned to look like a crown...What could this mean? How is this related to the same fire behind Mary?