Message from @devolved

Discord ID: 362737030293094402


2017-09-27 23:05:19 UTC  

Hagel what does the -az ending mean in these runic names

2017-09-27 23:05:22 UTC  

no

2017-09-27 23:05:25 UTC  

sometimes i see "Hagalaz"

2017-09-27 23:05:40 UTC  

this is what you have

2017-09-27 23:05:41 UTC  

There were different dialects. Also, a newer Fulthark and the older one

2017-09-27 23:05:46 UTC  

💀 🐴

2017-09-27 23:05:46 UTC  

My image is from the newer one

2017-09-27 23:05:49 UTC  

Ansuz, Isaz, etc

2017-09-27 23:05:57 UTC  

I think that the older one has az, the newer one doesn't

2017-09-27 23:06:10 UTC  

i see

2017-09-27 23:06:12 UTC  

thanks

2017-09-27 23:06:13 UTC  

"the older one" is the runic stuff

2017-09-27 23:06:14 UTC  

What is its actual meaning? I don't know yet

2017-09-27 23:06:18 UTC  

the new one is western occultism

2017-09-27 23:06:22 UTC  

in this clothing

2017-09-27 23:06:30 UTC  

The newer one was used in western occultism

2017-09-27 23:07:10 UTC  

But the younger futhark was also a real alphabet.

2017-09-27 23:07:14 UTC  

"Derived from" lol

2017-09-27 23:07:19 UTC  

What a load of shit

2017-09-27 23:07:27 UTC  

Looks nothing like it

2017-09-27 23:07:33 UTC  

no it does

2017-09-27 23:07:34 UTC  

It was used by people in Scandinavia

2017-09-27 23:07:44 UTC  

Am I looking at the wrong thing

2017-09-27 23:07:46 UTC  

it is the younger futhark Hagall or whatever

2017-09-27 23:08:01 UTC  

COLIN KAPERNICK: 1/4 IRISH -- http://ethnicelebs.com/colin-kaepernick

2017-09-27 23:08:02 UTC  

Their writing can be found on runestones

2017-09-27 23:08:02 UTC  

however this particular picture, white on black

2017-09-27 23:08:09 UTC  

is occult

2017-09-27 23:08:18 UTC  

Oh I was looking at elder futhark

2017-09-27 23:08:40 UTC  

Plus the as above so below theme

2017-09-27 23:08:44 UTC  

The elder futhark was also, I believe, used on rune stones

2017-09-27 23:08:44 UTC  

anyway, von List is the progenitor of this stuff @Hagel so that's him

2017-09-27 23:09:15 UTC  

modern "neopagan" or pagan stuff

2017-09-27 23:09:19 UTC  

generally borrows heavily from his works

2017-09-27 23:09:25 UTC  

not heavily

2017-09-27 23:09:26 UTC  

100%

2017-09-27 23:09:38 UTC  

its all him and his contemporaries

2017-09-27 23:09:49 UTC  

how else could it be, there was no living remnant of paganism

2017-09-27 23:10:28 UTC  

During an 11-month period of blindness in 1902, List became increasingly interested in occultism, in particular coming under the influence of the Theosophical Society, resulting in an expansion of his Wotanic beliefs to incorporate Runology and the Armanen Futharkh. The popularity of his work among the völkisch and nationalist communities resulted in the establishment of a List Society in 1908; attracting significant middle and upper-class support, the Society published List's writings and included an Ariosophist inner group, the High Armanen Order, over whom List presided as Grand Master. Through these ventures he promoted the millenarian view that modern society was degenerate, but that it would be cleansed through an apocalyptic event resulting in the establishment of a new Pan-German Empire that would embrace Wotanism. Having erroneously prophesied that this empire would be established by victory for the Central Powers in World War I, List died on a visit to Berlin in 1919.

During his lifetime, List became a well-known figure among the nationalist and völkisch subcultures of Austria and Germany, influencing the work of many others operating in this milieu. His work, propagated through the List Society, influenced later völkisch groups such as the Reichshammerbund and Germanenorden, and through those exerted an influence on both the burgeoning Nazi Party and the SS. After World War II his work continued to influence an array of Ariosophic and Heathen practitioners in Europe, Australia, and North America.