Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 654642798171258897
No more public cleaners.
They did respect foreign deities considering them real, which is why Rome took foreign prophecies very seriously.
Whatever, it's a thing that was and is no more, and was never related to my people, so I have no love or care for it tbh
Rome, that is
When the Romans disturbed a Brittanic sacred site, a lot of odd things happened pre-Boudica uprising, such as the Thames "turning Red with blood", and a "lost civilisation being revealed underneath the waves", Roman citizens took these things as a serious sign that the foreign Gods are giving them a warning, for their disturbance of that holy site.
They sincerely believed, Boudica's uprising was a punishment from their Gods against Rome.
Do you not share the same DNA as the Angles and Jutes? @Halindir
the last part is the best part.
You know how every area has that "place" that has a weirdly specific nationality living in it?
My hometown I am back in has alot of Vietnamese.
my uncle killed alot of them
Oh yeah within the pagan frame the abrahamic concept of MY GOD OR NO GOD AT ALL wasn't there, the idea of what a god was was also very much different
Anyway, doesn't mean they "respected" respected foreign gods, but I agree they did acknowledge the power behind the foreign pagan gods. They still sought to quench them out of existence lol
Christian Rome was utter shit through and through
Pagan Rome not great, but the choices of pagan Rome did lead to christian Rome, so it can't have been that great
Or something, I'm in the middle of washing my clothes, eating breakfast and satiating my nicotine addiction
So sorry about the incoherent reply m8
Why have either. from the 23rd to new years eve I can't really smoke the tobacco anyway, so I might go for a full stop. But I do that every year, then I get drunk and smoke cigarettes like a furnace
Maybe a rare dry new years 🤔
@Halindir Yeah I agree Christian Rome was a major douchebag half the time, especially with eradication of European Paganism, the endless civil strife and etc but religion wasn't the heart of late Rome's issues; Pagan Rome is much different of a story.
My only focual point is that the Latin Romans did consider foreign deities as real, and their powers as intimidating, enough to where they considered warnings as serious including the feel of necessity to eradicate the holy sites and followers.
Yeah I think I must have read what you wrote a little too lazily since I was a bit busy
Where's your nissehue friend?
I'll shoop one on you if you'd like
Hell dm me your pfps and I'll shoop some hats on you all - unless I get flooded in the dms then fuck all of you
Huh
GG @Deleted User, you just advanced to level 21!
You make hats?
No, but I can photoshop hats on people
Oh
I always liked the architectural art on structures, like on the pillar you sent.
I don't know whether that pillar ever existed. It's a painting by Nils Blommer, norwegian painter from the last century or rather two centuries back I suppose
If it was real, it would have been made of wood and long gone by his time
Since wood was more practical and abundant as building material here in those times. And I don't think they put as much weight on buildings as they did on other things - but that's just my own guess with no fact to back it up
It's pretty though
Reminds me of the interface of the original Baldur's Gate 2 in a way. Fluid in a natural way, like it grew to be like this, rather than shaped.
We don't see this beautiful sort of aesthetic anymore sadly
Unfortunately not.