https://youtu.be/BGQL1AEibps?t=6493
pic rel
>>523997988>Bathoryhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gj1Fc1TqrMo
>>523998502>tiles behind him
>>523998502>tomato sauceWHOA.dude.i've been trying to decode that movie ever since i saw it.
>>523997988> Bathory> vampirismAnything but Epstein and Trump amirite.
>>523998586https://youtu.be/re4IKBTv0xE?t=111
>>523998675i'm posting this because it's apropos. now is the time. people want to know when and why and how this came to be. can't blame you for being skeptical on this board, but aim downrange.
>>523998727Look at how he's holding that baby.
>>523998675Trump isn't the only pedo, pointing out there are lots of pedos is not a distraction from trump, its a reminder that orange man has an entire network behind him and this is what it looks like
Remember they tried to spin this as "Festive Soups"
>>523998785>hotel shaped like a pyramid>303
>>523998578Pathetic
>>523999223Huh, that's actually a good one to append to the bottom.Thanks.
bump
>>523999438In case anyone doesn't know what we're talking about:https://youtu.be/z-nvhCgXr3Y?t=302
>>523999438>>523999223I don't get it.
on ritual child sextraffic
>>523998823Fair enough, but - historically speaking, Betka Báthory was very likely a patzi.Seeing your nonexistent summary greentext, I actually hoped for a historical discussion about the Nádasdy conspiracy, or about the false film crew, or anything related, really.Pity.>>523998921Preach on, anon.
>>523997988Reported the YouTube channel and the video itself for antisemitism (I’m not joking).Good luck making money my guy. Piece of shit.
>>523997988I was schizoing out hard and got tons of messages about dragons and vampires that were consistent.This album is awesome: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLJ1DYhjI2MLots of references in it. First line is about an eclipse. Goes on to talk about holy blood and immortality and fighting the "evil one".The next album is full of dark lyrics like "I sold my soul to the devil..." Total inversion from this first album. Makes me think they were taken over but I dont know.Francis Ford Coppola's movie Dracula has the templar theme at the start, the dragon bloodlines thing, and also vampirism. And in Peggy Sue got Married, she wakes up at a blood drive with Nicholas Cage pretending to be a vampire. The high school is named after a freemason, and they get into a car and drive past a freemason lodge. Then at the end of the movie they straight up go to a mason lodge. Both directed by Coppola>>523998832"spit roasted chicken" on the poster
>>524000854Why?
hey i made this thread:>>524000061but i should have posted it here.basically all i could glean is that this is related to Slavic / Eastern Euro religion and folklore. this could tie in with being Khazarite
>>524001211> digits of beginning Not much in your thread is true. There's very little we know about Old Gods from written and aural traditions, and when it comes to the former, most of it is bullshit.Abramovic is a kike. Kikes are outwardly monotheistic, pagans are at best henotheistic.The Veleš/Perún duality is a magian misconception.Blood rituals aren't meant to be done for a benefit of an individual, spilling innocent blood is an offence to Gods.Symbols and sygils aren't a jewish invention, nor are inherently bad, unclean or immoral.Etc.
>>524001211read your thread. from your description, Perun and Veles are exact analogues of Enlil and Enki
The Khazars (or Khazarites) were primarily a Turkic-speaking people, not Slavic. They originated from Central Asia and established a powerful multi-ethnic empire, known as the Khazar Khaganate, in southeastern Europe and the Caucasus between the 7th and 10th centuries. While they were not ethnically Slavic themselves, the relationship between Khazars and Slavs was significant:Vassalage and Tribute: For centuries, several early East Slavic tribes (such as the Polians and Severians) were vassals of the Khazar Khaganate and paid them tribute.Multi-Ethnic Empire: The Khaganate was highly diverse and included large populations of Slavs, Iranians, Alans, and various Caucasian groups within its borders.Cultural Exchange: Recent archaeological evidence from contact zones (like the Donets basin) shows that Slavic and Khazar groups lived peacefully in some areas, influencing each other’s farming, pottery, and house-building techniques.The Fall of Khazaria: The Khazar Empire was eventually destroyed in the mid-10th century by Sviatoslav I of Kiev, a Slavic prince of the Kievan Rus'. Note on the "Khazar Hypothesis": There is a controversial and largely debunked historical theory suggesting that Ashkenazi Jews are primarily descendants of Khazars rather than the ancient Israelites. While the Khazar ruling elite did convert to Judaism in the 8th or 9th century, modern genetic and linguistic studies find no substantive evidence of a significant Khazar or Turkic contribution to the Ashkenazi gene pool.
While Perun and Veles are not historically the same as the Sumerian Enlil and Enki, they share striking parallels as part of a recurring mythological archetype of sibling rivals representing "above" and "below". Comparative ParallelsScholars of comparative mythology often note these functional similarities between the two pairs:Feature Perun & Veles (Slavic) Enlil & Enki (Sumerian)The "Above" Deity Perun: God of the sky, thunder, and lightning. He represents divine law, order, and war. Enlil: God of air, wind, and storms. He is the stern executor of divine will and law.The "Below" Deity Veles: God of the underworld, earth, water, and magic. He is a trickster and patron of wisdom. Enki: God of freshwater, wisdom, magic, and creation. He dwells in the Abzu (the deep).Relationship Often depicted as brothers in conflict. They are half-brothers (sons of Anu) who frequently clash.Nature of Conflict A cosmic struggle for balance between order and chaos. A rivalry between justice/authority (Enlil) and mercy/humanity (Enki).Key DifferencesHistorical Origins: Perun and Veles are part of the Indo-European tradition (related to the Norse Thor and Vedic Indra), while Enlil and Enki are Sumerian and originate from the Near East.Depiction of Mankind: In Sumerian myth, Enki is the creator and protector of humans, often saving them from Enlil's wrath (as in the Great Flood). In Slavic myth, neither Perun nor Veles is primarily a "creator" of humans; they are forces of nature within a world already existing under the supreme creator Svarog.The "Trickster" Element: Veles is more clearly a chthonic serpent associated with death and livestock, whereas Enki is a civilizing god associated with technology, crafts, and the arts of civilization.
>>523997988Bathory did nothing wrong. Everything you know about her is in fact bullshits. Her castle was a tiny military one without underground, and we never found any evidences of her throwing people from her castle to kill them. She in fact protected nearby peasants when some army came in, but the castle failed and they all died or got raped.
In the historical eras and regions associated with Perun and Veles (Early Slavic) or Enlil and Enki (Ancient Mesopotamia), several lesser-known deities or spiritual entities were associated with human sacrifice, often documented through archaeological findings or medieval chronicles.Slavic Mythological ContextWhile Perun was the supreme deity, several other figures in the Slavic pantheon and folklore were historically linked to sacrificial rites:Radegost (Radigost): A god of hospitality, war, and honor among Western Slavic tribes. Medieval scribes recorded that in 1066, a captured bishop named John was sacrificed to Radegost in the city of Rethra, where his severed head was offered to the deity.Svantevit (Svetovid): A four-headed god of war and abundance. Rituals in his temple on Rugen Island often involved complex sacrifices to ensure success in battle or a good harvest, including the sacrifice of war prisoners.The "Sea Tsar" (Morskoi Tsar): In Slavic folklore (such as the legend of Sadko), this underwater ruler demanded human tributes to allow ships to pass. Sailors would draw straws to decide who would be cast overboard as a sacrifice to appease the Tsar's "hunger".Chthonic Spirits & Rusalky: Folklore speaks of "impure" chthonic beings to whom humans were offered—sometimes by being buried alive—to protect villages from epidemics. Additionally, Rusalky (water spirits) were believed to lure young men and children to their deaths through drowning or "tickling them to death," which functioned as a folk explanation for accidental deaths viewed as spirit-claiming.
Ancient Mesopotamian ContextIn the Sumerian and Akkadian spheres, sacrifice was typically animal-based (like the storm god Adad, who received bulls), but specific "lesser" ritual contexts involved humans: Deified Kings/Queens (Retainer Sacrifice): In the Royal Cemetery of Ur, dozens of "retainers" (guards and handmaidens) were sacrificed to accompany high-status figures into the afterlife. For example, 74 bodies were found in the "Great Death Pit" (tomb PG1237), some showing signs of violent trauma to the skull.Basur Höyük Sacrifices: Archaeological discoveries in southeastern Turkey (dated to 3100–2800 BCE) revealed a tomb containing eight sacrificed individuals, mostly adolescents, buried at the feet of two high-status 12-year-olds. This is considered one of the earliest examples of institutionalized human sacrifice in the Mesopotamian periphery.Substitute Kings (Shar Puhi): In rare, extreme circumstances (such as an eclipse), a commoner was designated as a "substitute king" to take on the ill-fated destiny intended for the actual ruler. After a period of ritual reign, the substitute was often executed to "fulfill" the omen.
>>524002430this feels like pilpul/deboonking.you don't say who the accusations were actually about, nor do you say why they were attributed to her if they were committed by someone else.
>>524001837Truth.> Slavic and Khazar groups lived peacefully in some areasMostly peacefully. Coastal regions are never peaceful.>>524002430> castle was tinySize doesn't matter, what you do with the castle counts.> without underground Ackshually, there was a cold pit and maybe some tunnels connecting storage spaces.
In the historical and mythological contexts of the deities previously discussed (roughly from the Early Slavic era back through Ancient Mesopotamia and the Levant), ritual bloodletting and the symbolic or literal consumption of blood were associated with several specific entities:Blood-Drinking Spirits and DeitiesLamashtu (Mesopotamian): A malevolent goddess/demoness from Sumerian and Akkadian tradition who was believed to feed on the blood of infants. Unlike lower demons, she acted with divine independence and was feared as a blood-consuming predator.Hecate (Greek): Often identified as a goddess of magic and the underworld, ancient followers were rumored to have practiced blood consumption in secret rituals within her temples. Her retinue included blood-drinking spirits like Empusa and Mormo.Anat (Levantine/Canaanite): A violent goddess of war and sister of Baal. In Ugaritic myths, she is famously depicted wading knee-deep in the blood of warriors and "drinking" the blood of her enemies in an ecstatic state of battle. Ritual Bloodletting and CollectionScythian "Ares": In the 1st millennium BCE, Scythian tribes (neighbors to the Early Slavs) sacrificed every hundredth prisoner to a god they equated with Ares. They cut the throats of victims to catch their blood in vessels, which was then poured over a sacred sword as a libation.Maya Deities (Mesoamerican): Though geographically distinct, this civilization operated in a similar timeframe (Classic period, c. 250–900 CE) to the Early Slavs. Maya nobility practiced ritual bloodletting by piercing their tongues, lips, and genitals to feed the gods a "sacred life force" and induce trances for divine communication.Huitzilopochtli (Aztec): In a later period, this sun god was believed to require a constant supply of human blood—referred to as "liquid essence" or chalchihuatl—to ensure the sun continued to rise.
Symbolic Blood ConsumptionDionysus/Bacchus (Greco-Roman): Some ancient mystery cults associated with this god performed rituals involving omophagia (the eating of raw flesh) and the drinking of blood (often animal, but rumored to be human in early ecstatic rites) as a way to achieve "divine madness" or union with the deity.Early Pagan-Christian Conflict: Early Christian sources often accused "pagan" groups of drinking human blood to "become gods on earth," though scholars frequently view these as polemical exaggerations rather than strictly historical accounts
>>523997988we found itLamashtu (Mesopotamian): A malevolent goddess/demoness from Sumerian and Akkadian tradition who was believed to feed on the blood of infants. Unlike lower demons, she acted with divine independence and was feared as a blood-consuming predator.
>>524002880>evil goddessesEvery time I hear about these, I see constant comparisons to consorts of Enlil and his downline, as well as serendipitous coincidences (LIL-ith), not to mention the general psychology matches them as well. Coupled with the general plotline that Enlil allowed the shrupu disease and demanded that humans be wiped out, it's impossible for me *not* to see Enki and his offspring as the more moral of the two -- or at least more human-friendly.
>>524003243Congratulations.And the Slavic counterpart is what, Poludnica?
Lamashtu is known by several other names and has many counterparts across different ancient cultures, primarily linked by her role as a child-snatching, blood-drinking entity.Other Names for LamashtuDimme: This is her original Sumerian name.Kamadme: Another Sumerian name used in early incantations.The Seven Names: In ancient rituals, she was invoked as the "Bearer of Seven Names" or "Seven Witches". These specific ceremonial titles included:Daughter of Anu (her most common epithet).Sister of the Gods of the Streets.Sword that Splits the Head.She Who Lights the Fire.Goddess whose Face is Wild.Entrusted One, Adopted Daughter of Irnina.By the Spell of the Great Gods may You be Bound. Culturally Similar DeitiesMany scholars believe Lamashtu served as the direct mythological ancestor for later "vampiric" and child-threatening figures:Lilith (Jewish Folklore): The most direct descendant. Like Lamashtu, Lilith is a night demoness with bird-like talons who steals infants and threatens mothers. She is sometimes called Lilitu in her earlier Babylonian form.Lamia (Greek Mythology): A queen turned monster who, after her own children were killed, began hunting the children of others. She is often considered the Greek evolution of the Lamashtu myth.Abyzou (Near Eastern/Byzantine): A female demon blamed for miscarriages and infant mortality. Like Lamashtu, she was often depicted on protective amulets to ward off her influence.Gello (Greco-Byzantine): A child-killing spirit whose name is believed to have evolved from the Mesopotamian Gallu demons, who were frequent associates of Lamashtu.Lamas (Mandaean/Central Asian): Later variations of the name appear in folklore across Central Asia, often retaining her role as a spirit that plagues pregnant women and newborns.
>>523997988What kind of fucked up shit did ben Stiller do?
>>524003500https://youtube.com/watch?v=WCuuKhjLB0Qask not what diddy didask what will spacey do
>>524003331>>524003347I'm also inevitably reminded of Inana vs Enki, where she got him drunk, led him on, and stole the ME:https://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/section1/tr131.htmWe're given contradicting stories of Inana. Sometimes, she's the daughter of Enlil - shockingly "wild and beautiful" and Enki lusted after her, but in the story above she seems to lament that he won't seduce her as he does other women. Yet in other stories, we're told that Enlil or Anu forbade Enki and Inana to be together... In any case, I can see a theme where she's headstrong and ambitious, (she demanded her own city, lands, vassals) and perhaps felt tormented and held-back by the meddling in her love-affairs by the men in her life; this would explain the thread of the murderous-woman-demon-feminist-lilith-mystery trope throughout mythology. Ultimately, I suspect that the Sphinx might have been Inana's tomb
>>524004733also, of course, Inana - Ishtar - Ostara - Eostre(gen) - Easter... !https://blogs.loc.gov/folklife/2016/04/ostara-and-the-hare/It's all shades of "the vexatious woman", and who do we have publishing a magazine titled Ostara? I feel like /pol/ of all places should be able to make this make sense.
>>524005599> numbersAre you connecting Isthar with Abramović, or with Báthory?
>>523997988I could fix her.
>>524005994Every time I see "the rebellious occultic misandryist seductress" trope, I tend to suspect it's directly or indirectly inspired by Inana, wether they realize it or not.
>>524006182The mere act of noticing might have been influenced by the noticer i.e., you. We both know about the hypergamy and the effects of unbridled female sexuality on the society.These stereotypes, tropes, or games people play are inherent to humanity, manifesting as archetypical personifications in every culture.What matters are interactions - are there accepted rituals for these archetypes? Are those protective or quasisymbiotic? There's your difference between semitic religions and modern human interpretations.
>>524005994>>524006182We're also given conflicting stories of Inana and Dimuzi. Sometimes she's furious that he occupied her throne, but in other versions she mourns his death and vows to find his body and punish all those responsible, with elements of the Osiris/Isis myth.Either way, I see all the makings of the vengeful scorned woman archetype, later represented as the three witches, coven of prostitutes, temptresses etc. time and time again. Of course, Bathory is linked here given claims she had orgies with women / jealously killed women. And Abramović is chanelling this stereotype as well, surrounding herself with witches. Big wartnosed khazarmilker witches.>>524006737C'mon... Monty Python... Danu... Look at the sun cross all over the templars. All over the Nazis. Rose Croix... No, I refuse to believe there isn't an intentional connection.> There's your difference between semitic religions and modern human interpretations.What do you mean?
>>524007119As Jordan P. said "there's an anima and she's scary".What can Timmy do?a. Worship, venerate and offer. Self castrate, simp, plead, obey.b. Avoid, repulse, self protect, exclude.c. Cooperate, accept, integrate with self, coexist.Classify religions by these three categories, correlate with ethnicity. Abramović worships. Slavs avoid. Wizards accept.
>>524002430>Her castle was a tiny military one without undergroundWhere have I heard this before?
> Of course, Bathory is linked here given claims she had orgies with women / jealously killed women.Erszébet, please don't get angry at OP, he's a sensational faggot.Requiescat in pace & good night.