Sunday, September 30, 2018

General Erich Ludendorff on Christianity

42573052_265857040725162_5227222146966618112_n

In Faith and Mysticism

990764fcf9d6f28d262cf1b7502c8c01

"A Culture begins in Faith and Mysticism, with its thought-world and its action-world both subject to self-evident order and authority. It develops along the path of increasing intellectuality until it reaches the caesura of Rationalism, when intellect frees itself entirely from faith and instinct, analyzes, disintegrates, and mobilizes everything. In its very last stage, that of Late Civilization, it gathers itself once more together, asserts its unity by impressing all forms of its life with a final form which returns once more to the symbolic Authority and Mysticism of its origins."

Francis Parker Yockey - Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics

Saturday, September 29, 2018

The last of a dying breed

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x-D33GlUfyw

There's a grey horse standin' still
As a soldier climbs in the saddle for one last ride
As the rain pours off his hat
You can see the shadows of the past written in his eyes

Now the cannons are silent
His friends are all gone
Gotta put it all behind him
If he ever wants to find his way home
He's the last rebel on the road

Just a boy with his old guitar
Keeps to himself but everybody takes him wrong
But he carries on
Got a dream that will never die
Can't change him, no use in stayin' where you don't belong

Now he's rollin' down the highway
Gone too far too fast
No one will ever find him, he'll never look back

'Cause he's the last rebel
And he's all alone
He's the last rebel
His friends are all gone
He's the last rebel
The last rebel on the road

There'll never be another like him
He's the last of a dying breed
Ain't no use in tryin' to tame him
'Cause he's the last rebel

Lynyrd Skynyrd Last Rebel magnet both

 

A womanised generation

tumblr_p5046ttru01vraa47o1_540

Nowadays more relevant than ever.


 

The short lived Serbo-Greek Empire

The-Short-Lived-Serbo-Greek-Empire

The Serbo-Greek Empire is the name of a medieval Serb state that significantly expanded its territory and took most of Byzantine Balkan possessions in 1250-1355. It reached its end in 1355-1356.

Stephen Dushan, who took Adrianople, died suddenly. An important feature of the creation of the Serbian-Greek Empire was that the Serbian units created it virtually bloodlessly, that is, without a single historically important battle: the former Byzantine cities either voluntarily surrendered to the Serbian army that besieged them, or defected to the side of the Serbs during the chaotic Byzantine civil war, or were occupied by the Serbs after their population was devastated by a plague.

Pursuing the goal of conquering Byzantium and Constantinople, Dushan in 1345 proclaimed himself “the Emperor of Serbs and Greeks,” and divided his possessions into two parts: Serbia, which he handed over to his son Urosh, proclaimed the king; and the “Greek lands” of former Byzantium, which he ruled. The capitals of the Empire were Skopje and Prizren.

The period of the Empire was the culmination of the development of the political power of medieval Serbia, which for a time was the largest state in the southeast of Europe. It fell apart during the reign of King Urosh, who died in 1371. Historical legends tell of the death of the Serbian Empire was due to the battle of Kosovo Field in 1389. Meanwhile, the final conquest of feudally divided Serbia by the Turks occurred in 1459.

HISTORY


By the end of the 12th century, Byzantium, dependent on the Italian trading republics, weakened so much that the Serbian lands were able to free themselves from Byzantine rule and its taxes. The Serbian feudal lords, relying on support from the popular masses, gradually began to increase their power. The defeat of Byzantium by the Crusaders, the demographic decline of the Greek people and the formation of a vast geopolitical vacuum in the southern Balkans attracted the close attention of the Serbian feudal lords.

In 1299, Byzantium and Serbia concluded an important international treaty, generally beneficial for the Serbian side, which, among other things, confirmed the shift of the border to the south, but with some voluntary concessions in favor of Byzantium in exchange for recognizing the international authority of Serbia. The peace treaty with the Serbs was extremely important for Byzantium, since it was no longer possible to wage war on two fronts.

CONQUEST


Becoming a king at the age of about 23, Stefan already had a clearly defined program for the conquest of Byzantine lands and the creation of a new Serbian-Greek Empire. Taking advantage of the turmoil in Byzantium, in 1334 Stephen moved his troops to Macedonia. Emperor Andronicus III concluded peace with Dushan, giving him the cities of Prilep and Ohrid. When in 1341 Andronicus III died, Dushan resumed hostilities and occupied new cities. He conquered almost all of Albania, and in 1345 completely controlled Macedonia, with the exception of the city of Thessaloniki.

EMPIRE


In 1345, the Serbian king took the title of Emperor of Serbs and Greeks. In April 1346, he was crowned by the head of the Serbian Church who was proclaimed the patriarch without the knowledge of the Church of Constantinople. This title of the Serbian ruler, as well as the new rank of the head of the Serbian church, were not recognized by the Byzantines.
Complete failure in the east encouraged the Byzantine Emperor to pay more attention to his European affairs. In 1340 Byzantium, at last, managed to annex considerable territory from Epirus. It would seem that now the empire had the potential to continue its existence as a compact but self-sufficient Greek state. But the civil war destroyed these plans. Dushan skillfully maneuvered among the various Byzantine lords who preferred to surrender their cities to him, rather than to the warring Greek side. Thus, he actually assumed the role of supreme judge over the smaller participants of the Byzantine conflict, becoming the winner of the conflict.

At the first opportunity, the Greek cities of Edessa and Vera sought to escape Serbian control. And in Constantinople, long-held disdain for the Serbs, by the former subjects of the empire, gave rise to the paradoxical desire for an alliance with the Turks. In 1348, Dusan conquered Thessaly, Epirus and from Byzantium and in 1355, Adrianople was conquered.

on1j7o7mq3yz

GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE


The distinction between the old Serbian and Greek lands, which became part of the Serbian state as a result of the conquest of Byzantium, was that allies of the king received land holdings of enormous size. The influence of Byzantine culture in the Serb lands was found in court ceremonies, legislation, art, and literature. The governors in the Byzantine lands received the titles of Caesars, despots, sevastokrators. The highest posts in the Greek possessions were given to the Greeks, who probably retained their feudal possessions. The Macedonian cities, whose populations were mostly Greek, retained their former privileges. Greek monasteries and priests received rich gifts from the Serbian king. Legislation was introduced in the Greek model, including the translation of the Code of Justinian into the Serbian language. The Serbian-Greek kingdom was the largest state in southeast Europe.

[caption id="attachment_7281" align="aligncenter" width="400"]75634_car-dusan_ff Stephen Dushan[/caption]

DISINTEGRATION OF THE EMPIRE


After Dusan, under the rule of Emperor Urosh, a rapid disintegration of the state occurred. The brother of the deceased Dushan, Simeon, intended to overthrow Urosh. In 1356, he proclaimed himself Emperor. However, Simeon’s dream was not destined to come true because of the struggle for power that began in the Greek lands. The old Serbian lands were torn apart by feudal internecine strife and intervention by Hungary.

The disintegration of power created by the death of Emperor Dusan was not the end of the Serbian state. Under Stefan Lazarevic, 1389-1427, Serbia was temporarily restored within its’ original borders. The Serbian Empire remains the most important part of Serbian medieval history and it laid the seeds for the future of Serbian state. After the fall of Serbia, the Balkans remained under Ottoman control for centuries.

Source

Friday, September 28, 2018

Divine night!

[caption id="attachment_7276" align="aligncenter" width="600"]a bonfire in the moonlight hermann herzog painting A bonfire in the moonlight - Hermann Herzog[/caption]

"The moon shines in the midst of the sky; the immeasurable vault of heaven seems to have expanded to infinity; the earth is bathed in silver light; the air is warm, voluptuous, and redolent of innumerable sweet scents. Divine night!"

Nikolai Gogol, Diary of a Madman - Part II: The Village Madman (trans. Claud Field)

Ernst Ziller - the German architect of the Hellenic Aryan aesthetics

zzileerrnste3a

Ernst Ziller was born on 22 June 1837 in Oberloessnitz in Saxony. In 1855 he was accepted by the Royal School of Architecture at Dresden Technical University from which he graduated in 1858. During his studies he worked for a period of time in Vienna in the office of the Danish architect, Theophilos Hansen. Their meeting would decide his career. A few years later, in 1861, Ziller came to Athens as Hansen's representative, and undertook to supervise the construction of the Athens Academy.

[caption id="attachment_7269" align="aligncenter" width="600"]IMG_2097 Academy of Athens[/caption]

IMG_2111

He soon became integrated into Athens society and settled in Greece. He married, had a family and remained here until his death in November 1923. During his first years in Greece, Ziller travelled throughout the country studying the archaeological treasures. After the expulsion of King Otto, work on the Athens Academy was interrupted and Ziller returned to Vienna for a short time.

In 1868 he returned to Greece and in 1872 was appointed Professor at the School of Arts, the predecessor of the National Technical University of Athens. Orders for work came pouring in. Ziller had finally achieved success. The patronage of the king and the fact that he had been employed to draw up the plans for the summer palaces at Tatoi, at Petalious and later the Crown Prince's Palace attracted a large number of the wealthy bourgeoisie to employ him for the building of their mansions and summer houses. The Schliemann, Stathatou, and Pesmatzoglou mansions and the villas of Thon, Sygrou, and others are works of his. At the same time he designed a series of public and municipal buildings and churches. The National (Royal) Theatre of Athens, the theatres of Patras and Zakynthos (now demolished), the museum at Olympia, the market at Pyrgos, and the church of St. Luke constitute only a small part of his achievements. Up to the present day the full scale of his work is not yet known.

[gallery ids="7270,7271" type="rectangular"]

Iliou Melathron


Not only did Ziller design more than six hundred buildings, but his work constitutes a milestone in contemporary greek architecture. His architectural work, which extends from the second half of the nineteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century, is marked by its creativity and its sense of artistic freedom. His initially classicist style, which was characteristic of the period of mature Athenian neoclassicism, changed to eclecticism and romanticism especially in the architecture of private homes. In State buildings though, the classicist Greek spirit was preserved, while at the same time in church architecture, an attempt was made to maintain the Byzantine tradition.

Ziller is undoubtedly the architect who represents the period of King George I, and his work had an enormous influence on his time.

[gallery ids="7266,7267,7265,7264,7263,7272" type="slideshow"]

source

Note: all the pictures are taken by me 

Thursday, September 27, 2018

Total War

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7pwcjx0oaAI

The Sunday Dungeon: Lamentation - "Grabens Symphonie" Tape Box Set Review (dungeon synth)

Adolf Hitler the Mystic

tmp751525162502848514

“There is no question but that Hitler belongs in the category of the truly mystic medicine man. As somebody commented about him at the last Nürnberg party congress, since the time of Mohammed nothing like it has been seen in this world. His body does not suggest strength. The outstanding characteristic of his physiognomy is its dreamy look. I was especially struck by that when I saw pictures taken of him in the Czechoslovakian crisis; there was in his eyes the look of a seer. This markedly mystic characteristic of Hitler’s is what makes him do things which seem to us illogical, inexplicable, and unreasonable. … So you see, Hitler is a medicine man, a spiritual vessel, a demi-deity or, even better, a myth.”

-Carl Jung, interview with H. R Knickerbocker in Hearst’s International Cosmopolitan (January 1939)

The Aeonic Cycle of Time

tumblr_ok5lnu4Ubm1rkowsfo1_1280

“Like the generations of leaves, the lives of mortal men. Now the wind scatters the old leaves across the earth, now the living timber bursts with the new buds and spring comes round again. And so with men: as one generation comes to life, another dies away.”

Homer, The Iliad

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Death from the Forest

938117_900

"I could have killed 'em all, I could kill you. In town you're the law, out here it's me. Don't push it. Don't push it or I'll give you a war you won't believe."

Rambo - The First Blood

Order of the Death's Head new official shirt

42447176_2164824640427149_6022134032685334528_n

About the lie of "international culture"

tumblr_pfen6y9g441rqyt5t_540

Against the Jewish conception of nature

32824890_234266037125626_5912188371760840704_n

"It is obviously high time that the Jewish conception of nature, at any rate in regard to animals, should come to an end in Europe, and that the eternal being which, as it lives in us, also lives in every animal should be recognized as such, and as such treated with care and consideration. One must be blind, deaf and dumb, or completely chloroformed by the foetor judaicus, not to see that the animal is in essence absolutely the same thing that we are, and that the difference lies merely in the accident, the intellect, and not in the substance, which is the will."

Arthur Schopenhauer

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Kali Yuga Noise / Massacre Anti Musica split LP

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SgcmEQGmxM

Discipline Through Distortion, two noisecore bands from Finland. Hundreds of "songs". Offensive on all levels, not for the sensitive PC flock. Limited to 250 copies.

A-4895153-1530285155-6156.jpegA-6563491-1530293935-5660.jpeg

02LP972532400

https://www.bestialburst.com/

Pilgrimage - part 1

 Wewelsburg - Externsteine -  Hermannsdenkmal - Ordensburg Vogelsang - Worms War Memorial - Heidelberg Thingstätte / Heiligenberg - Weinheim War Memorial  - Windeck Castle (Weinheim) - Mannheim 


February 2010 (all pictures are taken by me)






German War Cemetery Büren-Böddeken


IMG_5947IMG_5948IMG_5951IMG_5953IMG_5955IMG_5958

In total 472 German dead, of which 13 from the First World War and 469 from the Second World War, have been interred in this German cemetery. Of the dead 469 are from Germany and 3 are of Dutch origin.

The piece of land where this cemetery has been established, has been donated to the Deutsche Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräber, of County Nordrhein Westfalen, in order to serve as a graveyard. The dead that have been laid to rest have been transferred from the various places where they had been buried alongside the road or in gardens and in the fields where they had fallen. In 1953 these tasks had been completed.



Wewelsburg Castle 


IMG_5959IMG_5963IMG_5964IMG_5966IMG_5967IMG_5968IMG_5969IMG_5970IMG_5971IMG_5973IMG_5974IMG_5975IMG_5977IMG_5979IMG_5983IMG_5988IMG_5997

IMG_6068

“Wewelsburg Castle by day intimidated, by night it had all the charm of a Transylvanian keep under a full moon.”
― James Douglas, The Doomsday Testament



Ottens Hof


IMG_6055IMG_6061IMG_6059IMG_6056IMG_6057IMG_6058

Near the Wewelsburg Castle is the Ottens Hof guesthouse (built in 1937), called the Dorfgemeinschaftshaus (village community house) or or the SS Kameradschaftshaus during the Third Reich period. The Ottens Hof maintains almost its entire period rustic appearance today.  (Gerdy Troost, "Das Bauen im neuen Reich" (Vol. 2, 1943) 



Externsteine


IMG_6012IMG_6016IMG_6017IMG_6019IMG_6020IMG_6021IMG_6023IMG_6028IMG_6031IMG_6033IMG_6036

The Rocks of the Sun




by Savitri Devi


An extract from Chapter 9 of Pilgrimage, edited with illustrations and captions by Irmin.
Originally published at Irminsul’s Racial Nationalist Library.


The Externsteine, 23rd of October 1953, in the evening.


We rolled through and past Horn, without stopping, turned to our right as we reached the outskirts of the town and then, after another five hundred yards, to our left, and followed a beautiful asphalted road bordered with trees and meadows beyond which more trees—that same, unending Teutoburg Forest in autumn garb, that I was never tired of admiring—could be seen. I looked right and left, and ahead, and did not speak. I was watching the approach of evening upon the fiery red and yellow and brown of the leaves ready to fall, and thinking of the captive eagles and of enslaved Germany, and longing for the Day of Revenge—“der Tag der Rache”—as steadily as I had been, as a matter of fact, for the last eight and half years.


Read more: here






Hermannsdenkmal


IMG_6037IMG_6039IMG_6040IMG_6041IMG_6043IMG_6048


The Hermannsdenkmal (German for "Hermann Monument") is a monument located southwest of Detmold in the district of Lippe, (North Rhine-Westphalia) in Germany. It stands on the densely forested Grotenburg, sometimes also called the Teutberg or Teut, a hill (elevation 386 m) in the Teutoburger Wald (Teutoburg Forest) range. The monument is located inside the remains of a circular rampart.

The monument was constructed between 1838 and 1875 to commemorate the Cherusci war chief Arminius (in German, Hermann) and his victory over Rome at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD. When the statue was built, its location was believed to be near the original battle site, although experts now consider it more likely that the battle took place near Kalkriese, about 100 km to the north-west. (Wikipedia) 



Kaiser-Wilhelm-Denkmal (Hohensyburg)


IMG_6076IMG_6079IMG_6083IMG_6085IMG_6086IMG_6087

The Kaiser Memorial, was constructed in the period from 1893 to 1902 in honour of Wilhelm the First in a historical style and adapted to the classicist influenced style of the Nazis in the years 1935/36. Dedicated to the unification of Germany into a politically and administratively integrated nation state officially occurred on 18 January 1871, in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in France.



Ordensburg Vogelsang


IMG_6094IMG_6095IMG_6099IMG_6101IMG_6104IMG_6106IMG_6107IMG_6108IMG_6114IMG_6115IMG_6119IMG_6122IMG_6128IMG_6130IMG_6135IMG_6136IMG_6137IMG_6139

In 1934 work began on three construction projects to build "Order Castles" or "School Castles" where the future leadership of the Nazi Party would be trained. These projects were under the direction of Dr. Robert Ley, head of the Deutsche Arbeitsfront (Labor Front). These Ordensburgen were built at Sonthofen in the Allgäu (Bavaria), Crössinsee in Pomerania (now in Poland), and Vogelsang in the Eifel (North Rhein - Westfalia).

The Vogelsang Ordensburg was designed by architect Clemens Klotz, built on a hillside overlooking a large lake valley. The school was completed in 1936 and the first class of "Junker" (cadets) began training immediately. The overall project as planned was never completed, with a large "House of Knowledge" hall, a 2000-bed hotel, and other buildings being omitted. During World War II the site was used for military purposes and to house refugees from bombed German cities. The U.S. Army overran the area in February 1945 and briefly occupied Vogelsang, before turning it over to the British military. In 1950 Vogelsang and the adjacent military training area were turned over to the Belgian Army, who controlled the area until 1 January 2006. Since then the Ordensburg Vogelsang has been open to the public. (http://www.thirdreichruins.com)

*** Unfortunately, in another attempt to desecrate sacred Third Reich-related places, Vogelsang Ordensburg was recently turned by the ZOG of "Germany" to a "refugee" camp...



1930's War Memorial in Worms, Germany


IMG_6142IMG_6143IMG_6144IMG_6145IMG_6147IMG_6148

Unfortunately I visited the monument during the night and the quality is not good (but makes it look more haunting). Here is a picture of the monument in the daylight (picture found on line):

[caption id="attachment_7166" align="aligncenter" width="600"]8228110766_2fc2d7ac00_b https://www.flickr.com/photos/14705489@N03[/caption]



Heidelberg Thingstätte / Heiligenberg


Heidelberg - Thingstätte on the Heiligenberg - started in 1934, finished in 1935, still in existence - click here for info and photos.

IMG_6162IMG_6170IMG_6176IMG_6177IMG_6178IMG_6183IMG_6184IMG_6186IMG_6189IMG_6190IMG_6191IMG_6193IMG_6194IMG_6196IMG_6197IMG_6201IMG_6205IMG_6208IMG_6209IMG_6214IMG_6216IMG_6217IMG_6204

There are numerous reasons to visit the Heidelberg area – few, however, are more remarkable than the layers of time and memory still visible on the Heiligenberg or “Holy Mountain”, rising some 439 meters above the river Neckar across from the Old Town itself.

There, archaeologists have found  remains dating back to Neolithic times, as well as a Celtic fort and burial grounds. Nearby, the ancient ruins of St.Michael’s Abbey contain the foundations of a Roman temple to Mercury, a god identified with the Norse/Germanic Odin or Wotan.There was also a second monastery here, St Stephen’s, given to the University after the Reformation, which then razed it to sell the stones. Many of the remaining stones were reused in the 19th century to build a lookout tower on the same spot as the original monastery and in 1905 a beacon dedicated to Prince Bismarck was also erected nearby.

Today, however, the most complete of the structures on the mountain is the Freilichtbühne-Thingstätte, a dramatic amphitheatre/stadium designed by Nazi master-builder Albert Speer and realized by architect Hermann Akker in 1935, built following  a period when rightwing student groups organized the notorious burning of “prohibited” books on the Universitätsplatz in 1933.

Read more: here

Some fascinating tidbits of information exist regarding the various activities that have taken place on Heiligenberg; a particularly gruesome example being the sacrificial shaft built by the Celts into which, apparently, human sacrifices tied to logs were dropped as offerings to the gods. If you want to experience a shiver down the spine, try thinking about this while looking down the Heidenloch (heathen-hole), a large well that disappears into the unlit depths 55 meters below its covered entrance near the Monastery of St Stephen. Archaeological findings of stones engraved with Latin phrases also suggest that during the Roman era, worship of the god Wotan (the Germanic form of the famous Norse god Odin) took place on the mountain. Source

***This blog doesn't necessarily agree with everything written in these articles but shared the links for informational reasons



Weinheim War Memorial 


IMG_6220IMG_6222IMG_6226IMG_6227



Windeck Castle (Weinheim)


IMG_6230IMG_6232IMG_6233IMG_6235IMG_6238IMG_6239


Windeck Castle (German: Windeck) stands on a small hill in Weinheim on the Bergstraße. It was built around 1100 to protect the inhabitants of the Lorsch monastery.

It was hugely damaged in 1674 by the troops of King Louis XIV of France. In 1960, the ruins were restored, the palace walls newly erected and the donjon safeguarded. It was acquired in 1978 by the city of Weinheim. In the 1980s, archaeological examinations and conservation works were carried out, and the ground plan was found, which gave an idea of the dimensions of the fortress. Today, the ruins of a fortress Windeck are classified as a historical monument. (Wikipedia) 



Mannheim


IMG_6245IMG_6246IMG_6247IMG_6248IMG_6250


IMG_6251


To be continued...