Podcast

We are joined again by researcher Jocke Haggstrom to further explore the ancient Bock Saga. We discuss how Finnish mythology influenced the ancient and modern world. What motifs and traditions were appropriated by Christians and Europe’s nobility? Other subjects include the root language, the sacred letters, origin of the magical arts, Scandinavian heraldry, the prehistoric visitation of Nordic-Finnish tribes to England and Ireland, the fall of the Ringlands, the genocide of the Bock families by the Christian Church, Christmas symbolism, the importance of Crete, the purpose and significance of ancient megaliths, the original Arctic Homeland, the original Paradise or Garden of Eden, the symbolism of the Major Arcana. This and more…

Program References
History of Scandinavia
Kevin Woods Channel
Order of the Polar Star
Papal Invasion of the North

Johannes Magnus
Hel (Goddess)
Akhet

Fra Holle
Hertha
Valhalla
Hellenes
Heliogoland
Halicarnsasis
Hyperborea
Ultima Thule
Kalevala
Helsinki
Ragnarok
Yggdrasil
Runestones
Balder
Odin
Freyr
Freyja
Edda
Volva
Runes
Priapus
Rome/Sexuality
Sacred King
Uroboros
Picts
Gustav Vasa
Olaf I
Leo IX
Atum
Teutonic Order

Suggested Reading
The Bock Saga
Arctic Homeland in the Vedas
Paradise Found
The Voyage of Pythias the Greek
Arktos
Irish Origins of Civilization

Related Presentations
Bock Saga 1

Mysteries of the Sun
The Arctic Homeland
Priesthood of the Illes
From Heaven to Earth
The Little People

The whole duty of man was thus conceived of as an utterance of ‘true words’ or a continual singing of a song of harmony of thought and word and deed, whereby man grew like unto the Gods, and so at last becoming a God was with the Great God in the “Boat of the millions of Years,” or “Barque of the Aeons,” in other words, was safe for eternity – G. R. S. Mead (Fragments of a Faith Forgotten)

This god is worshiped where goats and sheep pasture or there are swarms of bees; but by the people of Lampsacus he is more revered than any other god, being called by them a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite – Pausanius (on Priapus)

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