Britain’s Last Pagan Ritual - DOCUMENTARY 🇬🇧

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  • Опубликовано: 30 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 403

  • @aadityapratap007
    @aadityapratap007 Год назад +149

    Every time I observe the Indo-European pagan tradition, I am amazed at how the same concept has evolved differently in various regions over time. It is truly fascinating to witness the diverse interpretations and adaptations that have emerged within this rich cultural tapestry.

  • @Esparthor
    @Esparthor Год назад +190

    Excellent. It is fantastic to see a community coming together and actually still having traditions.

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +25

      Couldn't agree more!

    • @clintonreisig
      @clintonreisig Год назад +12

      I discern several interesting human tendencies. People appreciate their ancestors and want to perpetuate traditions to honor them. There is a sense of humor in doing so. A feeling of community and a legacy of many generations simply feels good. I believe that they enjoy the collective awareness of matters which empowered their ancestors. Lastly, Globalism is actually driving them closer, which naturally would include the exploration of heritage

    • @Thomas-xd4cx
      @Thomas-xd4cx Год назад +1

      @@clintonreisigwtf does globalism have to do with this

    • @pygmy.
      @pygmy. 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Thomas-xd4cx Literally everything

    • @Thomas-xd4cx
      @Thomas-xd4cx 11 месяцев назад

      @@pygmy. as someone growing up in the old world - it’s just that you feel a closer connection to your own as compared to neighbors/foreigners/etc. Globalism waters it down - you get clueless Americans who have no idea where tradition stems from pitch in random nonsense which has no place in the culture the tradition was founded by - confusing what the tradition is about. Just look at Christmas and the abomination of a festivity they made of it. It has nothing to do with the tradition and before long it will be “trend-over” and it will be gone. Globalism is literal poison to regional cultures and tradition.

  • @sniedendepoes
    @sniedendepoes Год назад +27

    It’s rare to see genuine western culture nowadays. But God is it good for the soul. Wonderful landscape as well. Well done.

  • @arthurmake1947
    @arthurmake1947 Год назад +103

    Folklore gang rise up!

  • @catastrofista
    @catastrofista Год назад +58

    Here in the Basque Country we also have the fat guy (Ziripot) and the horse guy (Zaldiko). They are prominent carnival characters.

    • @candide311
      @candide311 Год назад +2

      The festival seems to be thematically different from the ones discussed in this video though. I wish Tom would do a video on Basque traditions and mythology as it's so unique and would be interesting to learn about the extent to which it survived or was absorbed into later, Indo-European cultures. It's a shame it was eroded so much by the Inquisition and Catholicism.

    • @tboy80z
      @tboy80z 7 месяцев назад

      Please stand up against the WEF who is pushing the replacement on us.

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain 4 месяца назад

      Iberian Celts, aka Phrygians aka Jews

  • @ayublack9445
    @ayublack9445 Год назад +91

    I had no idea there were traditions like this in England, really cool. Very much enjoyed this video, thank you Tom!

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +33

      Yes and there are many others. Please see the playlist of British folk traditions to learn more

    • @Butchbuchsnan
      @Butchbuchsnan Год назад +8

      We have a VAST amount of these traditions all over the country.

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 6 месяцев назад

      ​​@@Butchbuchsnan
      None of them 'pagan'.

  • @MrFredstt
    @MrFredstt Год назад +52

    In an age where we are separated from our roots and traditional cultures I love your videos that seek to keep them alive and inform us. It's also so cool to see people still participating in many of our traditional rituals. Would love to someday travel to the mother land (Europe) and participate myself

    • @denverrsouthers5531
      @denverrsouthers5531 Год назад

      Your roots are Christianity, our ancestors saw the light of the Lord Jesus Christ over a thousand years ago, Britain was Christian before Germany was, Ango-Saxons returned to Germany to convert their brothers

    • @murderfaery5715
      @murderfaery5715 10 месяцев назад

      ​@denverrsouthers5531 no they didn't. Charlemagne is the reason for Germany becoming Christian.

    • @tboy80z
      @tboy80z 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@denverrsouthers5531 Not true. Pagan roots are much much older than Abrahamic ideas in religion.

    • @denverrsouthers5531
      @denverrsouthers5531 7 месяцев назад

      @@tboy80z I pity anyone who puts mythology above the love and sacrifice of Jesus

    • @tboy80z
      @tboy80z 7 месяцев назад

      @denverrsouthers5531 Mythology? Why do you call much more older and ancient religions that? Christianity could be seen as that too. 🤔

  • @arathergrumpyturtle
    @arathergrumpyturtle Год назад +24

    The ritual sacrifice and ressurection of the Earl of Rone reminded me very much of the folk character John Barleycorn and his eponymous folk song of which there are many renditions throughout the british isles. I've heard he has potential anglo-saxon origins. You should do a video about him!

    • @twilightmoongames
      @twilightmoongames 7 месяцев назад

      That was my first thought too, but this sounds more disturbing..

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@twilightmoongames
      The song John Barleycorn does not have Anglo-Saxon origins.
      It was written in the early 1600's and radically re-written in the 1700's.
      As the Penguin Book of English Folk Songs notes - it is simply a very clever allegory.

  • @lindasolomon4235
    @lindasolomon4235 Год назад +9

    Keeping the old traditions alive, very important. Love to see it.

  • @drraoulmclaughlin7423
    @drraoulmclaughlin7423 Год назад +41

    My father's folk are from Tyrone 😮 . . . 😊Brilliant to see a strong community preserve their ancestral customs! I have been collecting all the ancient Greek and Roman accounts of North European sacrifice customs...

    • @Esparthor
      @Esparthor Год назад +4

      A fascinating endeavor, no doubt!

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +19

      I hope you will present them in a video?

  • @candylandi5351
    @candylandi5351 Год назад +27

    Let the tradition survive this time of crisis, it will be the base for the building of a better future for our wounded and tired but still alive Europe.
    I visited London once and I barely saw some British people, while look at those folk festivals... it's where real England is.

    • @L333gok
      @L333gok 2 месяца назад

      “Barely saw British people.” Y’know just because someone wasn’t born in Britain or doesn’t have a British passport or isn’t white, doesn’t mean they’re not British…? Britain has nothing to do with that stuff. Get lost with your racism and xenophobia

    • @candylandi5351
      @candylandi5351 Месяц назад

      @@L333gok Continue with your delusions but the truth is another: they are not British or European in any way, they will never be and their descendants will never be.

  • @Seofolwulf
    @Seofolwulf Год назад +8

    Combe Martin has got to be one of the most beautiful villages I’ve ever seen!

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +4

      there are many more pretty villages nearby

    • @Seofolwulf
      @Seofolwulf Год назад +2

      @@Survivethejive I am planning my first trip to England and Wales for next year, gods be praised!

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +2

      @@Seofolwulf have a wonderful time

  • @TheWizardOfTheFens
    @TheWizardOfTheFens Год назад +7

    Thank you Tom. Your efforts are greatly appreciated by so many.

  • @Howlingmoon80
    @Howlingmoon80 Год назад +10

    It's kinda interesting that in Iran, 13 days after Norouz(Persian new year with some rituals similar to Easter in the west), young men and women tie knots in their Sabzeh(green sprouts grown in a dish) and single ones pray for a husband/wife and married couples for a child, then throw the Sabzeh into a river or a spring like some sort of offering. Kinda similar to the Slavic ritual you mentioned. Anyways, amazing documentary. Thank you Tom for showing us this beautiful event.

    • @Howlingmoon80
      @Howlingmoon80 Год назад +5

      @@extemporaneous4545 Not necessarily. Practicing Muslims believe these rituals to be superstitious nonsense from pre-Islamic Iran so they refuse to do these thing entirely. Those who actually practice it(which are the majority of people) are not practicing Muslims. By the way the same could he said about Jesus worshipers in the West.

    • @Howlingmoon80
      @Howlingmoon80 Год назад +8

      @@extemporaneous4545 I understand your point but this Christianity we see is not what it used to be. I wasn't as flexible as it is nowadays(which is too flexible and this unbounded flexibility is driving many people away). Yes you can't officially change your religion in Iran but that's a legal matter and it can't be said about Iranian culture necessarily. Many patriotic Iranians resent Islam because of the Muslim Invasion in 7th century. Islam isn't flexible but human spirit is.

  • @guts9964
    @guts9964 Год назад +27

    Very interesting tradition. It's so important to keep these alive. Thanks for your work on this as always!

    • @MrRourk
      @MrRourk Год назад

      You gotta get out to the countryside away from the big McBox Cities

  • @thomashartmann7317
    @thomashartmann7317 Год назад +16

    Hey Tom, Tommy Hartmann here! Just wanted to say thank you for your outstanding work and for keeping our traditions alive through your journalism!!!! I have deep roots here in New York where I live and my family has lived since they left Germany and England in the 1700s. I long for the day I get to lay mine own eyes on some of these traditions in England and Germany. Thank you for allowing me to experience without having to make the trip! Be well and keep surviving the jive, no matter how much they try to keep us quiet

  • @Bjornlovesjazz
    @Bjornlovesjazz Год назад +11

    thank you for another banger Tom

  • @rnrbishop
    @rnrbishop Год назад +6

    I’m Minehead born and raised. Very interesting to get some background on these old traditions.

  • @JimMaguireMusic
    @JimMaguireMusic Год назад +16

    Another consistent reminder of the importance of culture.

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain 4 месяца назад

      Lmfao
      It's Greek and Phoenician in Origin

    • @L333gok
      @L333gok 2 месяца назад

      ⁠​⁠@@Uncanny_Mountain Are you implying that Paganism originated from the Phoenicians…? Lol. How is it Greek in origin.

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain 2 месяца назад

      @@L333gokbecause Phoenicians were Jews and Greeks started as a Phoenician Colony, ergo Thebes and Athens. This is known in Academia.
      Pagan is a non sequitur
      No true Scotsman fallacy

    • @Uncanny_Mountain
      @Uncanny_Mountain 2 месяца назад

      @@L333gok because guess who wrote your Pagan Byblos Baal Einstein

  • @jakeburgess6101
    @jakeburgess6101 Год назад +8

    Excellent vid - Some heroic live coverage of the event ! Thank you Tom .

  • @cecilialarsdotter2233
    @cecilialarsdotter2233 Год назад +9

    Beautiful tradition and very encouraging to see so many young people participating.

  • @WarriorFromV4LH4LL4
    @WarriorFromV4LH4LL4 Год назад +10

    Big fan of the shorter documentary. I can be daunting to sit down for an hour, but these shorter episodes are much easier to fit in with my busy schedule. Fantastic as always, Tom!

  • @DanDavisHistory
    @DanDavisHistory Год назад +4

    How wonderful. Thank you for documenting this custom, absolutely fascinating stuff.

  • @Soliloquium2112
    @Soliloquium2112 Год назад +8

    I was raised in Minehead. Hobby Horse is very important to the town, they go round the town streets and bash drums at sunrise - i remember being woken up by it as a child on summer solstice. There are now several different Hobby Horses who claim to be the "authentic" one!

    • @Wotsitorlabart
      @Wotsitorlabart 6 месяцев назад

      Earliest reference to the Minehead hobby horse - 1830.

  • @kingelvis7035
    @kingelvis7035 Год назад +8

    Thank you so much for the effort you put in these videos!

  • @adamoneil5317
    @adamoneil5317 Год назад +5

    Very awesome video. Perhaps among my favorite you have done. Makes me excited to backpack through Europe next year. While I am in England, I may just have to visit this village and witness this celebration for myself.

  • @raystargazer7468
    @raystargazer7468 Год назад +12

    And then he ends it while casually walking in the woods. xD
    Such authenticity.
    Valuable guy right here.

  • @bobby_bretwalda
    @bobby_bretwalda Год назад +18

    I'm so happy to see what looks like pretty much a whole community striving to keep their tradition alive! A real white pill, thanks Tom!
    The closest thing to this in my parts that I'm aware of is St Wilfrid's Procession in Ripon which is still going strong today and is a great excuse for a summer piss-up! I used to love watching it as a kid.

  • @kevinlawler3252
    @kevinlawler3252 Год назад +12

    I’ve been needing more STJ.
    I need to get buried in my cultural heritage again, I absolutely love it so much, so satisfying, it’s the closest I ever get to feeling at home.
    The politics and erosion of modern day existence is killing me inside. I have to step away and just get lost. Thanks Tom. Hope all is well, hope you and the wife are enjoying that new baby.

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +2

      Yes we love both of our children, thank you

  • @tweedyoutdoors
    @tweedyoutdoors Год назад +5

    This was great! I sat watching this thinking I should quit my pointless job and spend my time touring the country going to events like this.

  • @MatthewDaoust
    @MatthewDaoust Год назад +12

    I really enjoyed this one. Great work again as always. Cheers From Canada! Thank you for all you do. Your work is very admired and appreciated, Sir.

  • @johancena2258
    @johancena2258 Год назад +3

    This is awesome man, love the on the ground reporting!

  • @opengnosis8555
    @opengnosis8555 Год назад +3

    Wow!, everyone from that little town has a very charming personality. Just pleasant people!

  • @baileywebb1
    @baileywebb1 Год назад +1

    What a marvelous lil video. Heartwarming to see folks still keeping the ancient traditions alive and having fun in the doing.

  • @christinaOmNamahShivayo
    @christinaOmNamahShivayo Год назад +6

    Amazing that people don’t know what pagan is… it’s their roots!
    Thank you for sharing the traditions that are part of the fabric of humanity

  • @SunGraal
    @SunGraal Год назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant work Tom, thank you for all you do to keep these customs of our blessed folk alive.

  • @drakedorosh9332
    @drakedorosh9332 Год назад +13

    Osiris floating in his coffin to sprout a tree also comes to mind.

  • @-Blackberry
    @-Blackberry Год назад +9

    When I hear people trying to deny the existence of the English ethnicity and say we have no culture of our own I think of traditions like this.

    • @mudra5114
      @mudra5114 Год назад +1

      England needs such traditions becoming more popular.

  • @imagseer
    @imagseer Год назад +1

    Thank you for creating this video. We must absolutely keep these traditions regardless of them being a pastiche. The roots are very deep in time and distance.

  • @Clemeaux_
    @Clemeaux_ Год назад +8

    So damn amazing. Thank you for sharing

  • @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464
    @scottt.shellcontinentalger2464 Год назад +7

    Amazing work, Tom. Thank you.

  • @jeffebdy
    @jeffebdy Год назад +2

    Slight aside but related, my cousin was in the original "Wickerman" (they used school children as extras)
    Towards the end, a young girl opens an upstairs window & speaks a line...
    Big up Janet!
    Another insightful & inspiring video

  • @echoven
    @echoven Год назад +8

    Great documentary as usual. I love to see all the examples of paganism alive and well in the modern day. One thing that really struck me in your Padstow may day video was how eager the young 20 something girls were to become pregnant as a result of the festival - The fertility ritual seemingly banishing modern reticence to have children.

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +7

      They were the most wholesome group of cackling drunk girls I ever met

    • @someblokecalleddave1
      @someblokecalleddave1 Год назад +1

      Yeah I loved their enthusiasm and embracing of the whole thing - awesome that the youth got so involved and I didn't see any phones!

    • @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905
      @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905 Год назад

      I’m sorry, but what you said in the last sentence is really stupid there is no banishing of not having children there’s just so many faxes that I can’t even answer that within this paragraph and the fact that you’re just shoving all of this down to all the modern world doesn’t want you to have kids is fucking stupid…

  • @thegrymwolf6360
    @thegrymwolf6360 Год назад +6

    I adore this! Thank you Tom for bringing this to our attention. We need to keep these traditions alive wherever they are still practiced. I shall certainly visit one day and see it in person.

  • @jacobhope6164
    @jacobhope6164 Год назад +4

    Amazing job on this documentary!
    Brilliant, absolutely brilliant!

  • @philjameson292
    @philjameson292 Год назад +37

    Love it, a great piece of English pagan anarchy. No wonder the authorities were worried about it in the 1800s

    • @YorkyOne
      @YorkyOne 5 месяцев назад

      There's nothing pagan about it.
      The authorities were concerned about the drunken riotous behaviour.

    • @greasybumpkin1661
      @greasybumpkin1661 Месяц назад

      @@YorkyOne the church suppresses the carnal nature of man too much so that when he's given an excuse, he becomes rabid. No surprise that when people can engage with their primal side in healthy ways, violence goes down in such cultures.

  • @raystargazer7468
    @raystargazer7468 Год назад +12

    Man, people have rich cultures we can't even imagine. Yet online all you see are the superficial stereotypes. And these are just a few villages. Imagine the amount of tradition that dies out every decade because people simply don't know.

  • @michaelpresley1337
    @michaelpresley1337 Год назад +2

    Great film man. Keep up the interesting videos.

  • @harrycallaghan22
    @harrycallaghan22 Год назад +1

    As usual, another truly fascinating film from Tom and always really well produced. Great stuff.

  • @ManCalledD
    @ManCalledD Год назад +2

    Great content as usual! I love the traditions of our Island.

  • @bonechip01
    @bonechip01 Год назад +6

    Amazing work.

  • @craigsurette3438
    @craigsurette3438 Год назад +1

    Sir, I just also wanted to add, thankyou for what you do !
    I am a pagan, and an aspiring academic interested in Pagan cultural survivals in Europe.Your videos are always super well researched and inspiring, and represent ACTUAL pagan traditions ,unlike so much of the fluffy Pomo Neopagan fluff that is out there, and I am hugely grateful for everything that you do.
    Never doubt that your work is having a good effect on people
    One of my friends, a Secular Humanist/ Atheist, who is interested in Welsh traditional culture and linguistic survival, saw a video of yours, where you are speaking at a Traditional Pagan conference.
    My otherwise Atheist friend was so moved by your words, he HAD to show me your video, and ask me a bunch of questions about this thing he always thought was silly. This turned into a long conversation about Perennialism and Traditionalism , and its place in the modern world, and why we Pagans still do this "weird superstitious stuff"today
    .All of this, because your speech showed him what it means to hold a torch against Modernity to preserve our Ancestral indigenous cultural traditions.

    • @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905
      @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905 Год назад

      I’m sorry, but I’m also secular and somewhat of a humanist, and if your friend fell for that again, I’m not gonna lie Tom did have some good points in his essay, but if he fell for all of that and thought that whole thing was gold, I’m sorry, but your friend is really stupid and fell for a trap…..

  • @Cmc.1984.
    @Cmc.1984. Год назад +13

    This channel has been instrumental in my switch to paganism. Thank you

  • @jackbenny4458
    @jackbenny4458 Год назад +10

    Great video! I really liked the add in of the Ukrainian/Slavic paganism. There is not many videos about their Paganism even though interesting practices survived. Hopak ritual dance and Vyshyvanka are examples that does not get much attention.

  • @drakedorosh9332
    @drakedorosh9332 Год назад +18

    My maternal Grandfather was from Devon and he was related to William Frise whose wife was not allowed to be buried in the church yard because the Minister did not respect his marriage. The Minister said they were not married in the church. Bill Frise of old told the Minister that he had married her properly according to the common law. He paid a fair price for his bride determined at auction in the market, I think a shilling and a mule. He put a bridle loosely around her neck and was able to walk her all the way home without her running off. Then he carried her over the threshold.
    The problem for me is that his wife was not buried in the churchyard because it is likely holy ground that predates christianity. They were made outsiders in their own land. I'm glad so many other traditions survive. Divorce by auction has never been discussed by anyone in recent times as far as I know. I don't know if I can find that old book that tells the story of pagan devon and Bill and his wife.

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +5

      What a fascinating custom. I have never heard of it

    • @drakedorosh9332
      @drakedorosh9332 Год назад +3

      My memory has butchered the story a fair bit -Henry rather than Bill was quoted as saying; "Henry Frise maintained that Anne was his legitimate wife, for "he had not only bought her in the market, but had led her home, with the halter in his hand, and he'd take his Bible oath that he never took the halter off her till she had crossed his doorstep and he had shut the door."

    • @solank7620
      @solank7620 Год назад

      @@drakedorosh9332Sorry, I am confused.
      Is this story a humorous tale about a man marrying an animal from an auction…?
      Are you saying there once was some tradition of putting halters on women??
      My apologies, I don’t quite follow what is going on here…

    • @drakedorosh9332
      @drakedorosh9332 Год назад +1

      @@solank7620 As far as the story. it comes from chapter on "wife-sales". Sometimes I think livestock was traded as payment for wives. My great aunt was sold for half a crown and made a loyal and patient wife. I'm not saying women were or are animals or should be slaves. I truly believe that marriage is an institution based in slavery and that the words "bridle" and "bride" are related to the wedding vow "to have and to hold". Women in the past were regarded as property. The past is filled with these surprising tales. I still feel warmly toward my ancestors who struggled with these things and I am grateful to live in the age of oil where cheap energy frees us from slavery.

    • @slyapbg
      @slyapbg Год назад +1

      @@drakedorosh9332 How were they treated as property? Just because they were given in exchange for something else?

  • @grayfiresoul
    @grayfiresoul Год назад +2

    Suberp minidoc! I would love a series on the localities and their versions of shared festivals, or their own unique festivals, all around England!

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +3

      This is part of a series. Its British folk traditions playlist

  • @bigscarysteve
    @bigscarysteve Год назад +7

    The one-volume edition of Frazer's _Golden Bough_ pictured in this video is an abridgement. The first edition was two volumes; the second, three; the third, twelve.

  • @greywanderer5935
    @greywanderer5935 Год назад +2

    Magnificent work!

  • @serdobsky_
    @serdobsky_ Год назад +8

    Очень интересно смотреть ваши ролики. Особенно приятно видеть параллели с нашими праздниками. Только я немного не понял. Насколько я знаю Ярило это скорее наименование чучела (олицетворение зимы), которое сжигается зимой. А на праздник Ивана Купала празднуется торжество сил света, поскольку это самый длинный день в году. Я скорее всего просто не разбираюсь до конца в теме. Спасибо за познавательные ролики!

    • @geoffbenoy2052
      @geoffbenoy2052 7 месяцев назад

      Девон, Российская Область??? 😃

  • @landofthesilverpath5823
    @landofthesilverpath5823 Год назад +5

    Great episode!

  • @greenjack1959l
    @greenjack1959l Год назад +4

    Makes my hair stand on end. So atmospheric.

  • @your_belief_vs_everything
    @your_belief_vs_everything Год назад +1

    I'm always excited to see a new vid!! This came just in time.

  • @HermannderCherusker1970
    @HermannderCherusker1970 Год назад +1

    Beautiful work, brother!

  • @trent3235
    @trent3235 Год назад +4

    2:32 the earl of Tyrone is buried in Italy today, his name is Hugh O’Neill.

  • @JackSardonic
    @JackSardonic Год назад +10

    When you do videos like this, one has to wonder how many active folk traditions we have on this island, going on the next town over. It really is a blessed plot!

  • @nullgravity2583
    @nullgravity2583 Год назад +1

    Very crisp photography and editing!

  • @alasdairtaylor4441
    @alasdairtaylor4441 Год назад +2

    Love to see it last so long, Gives us hope

  • @GMac2776
    @GMac2776 Год назад

    Really interesting video, another thing to add to the bucket list.

  • @stephan5673
    @stephan5673 Год назад +1

    RUclips didn't notify me of this video, and I have the notifications switched on.

  • @thebronzearchertba9442
    @thebronzearchertba9442 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for making this mini documentary I am funnily enough from Combe Martin and my mother is the one near the donkey in the footage as she is one of the only people in the Village trusted with helping out with the Donkey each year. I also want to add that it was banned in Combe Martin due to the son of a local earl getting drunk and falling and breaking his neck it's one of the reasons that this got banned in the rest of the country and my grandmother was one of the people to get it restarted again in the 1970s. It is nice to see this now as I'm at uni so I missed it this year so it was nice to see footage of it from a different perspective.

  • @dharmawarrior111
    @dharmawarrior111 Год назад +3

    Fascinating.

  • @burnzy3210
    @burnzy3210 Год назад +6

    More woodland jive walks!

  • @SaintPhinehas
    @SaintPhinehas Год назад +2

    Liking the documentaries, very professional they could go on TV. though we have different religious beliefs im more interested in the culture and history aspects but I still find the folklore a bit interesting also.

  • @Inquisitor_Vex
    @Inquisitor_Vex Год назад

    I bloody love these videos.

  • @aesthetix3398
    @aesthetix3398 Месяц назад +1

    British culture is so beautiful

  • @teutonicAnon
    @teutonicAnon Год назад +2

    Southerners have some very odd customs, ha. Excellent work Tom, thoroughly enjoyed it!

  • @EuanWhitehead
    @EuanWhitehead 10 месяцев назад +1

    Gald to see this is still a thing, i get frightened we are loosing our culture in England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland so when I watch these videos it keeps it alive for me.

  • @billturner6564
    @billturner6564 Год назад +5

    Very well made thanks

  • @kennedymontoya9962
    @kennedymontoya9962 Год назад +1

    Awesome. Quality content. Not surprising coming from you! Ha!

  • @geoffbenoy2052
    @geoffbenoy2052 Год назад +1

    Been many times in Combe Martin to see the old Oss. Hope to go back ons dat 😊❤

  • @shiftydog6969
    @shiftydog6969 Год назад +4

    "There's no sacrifice" yet the Rone is shot, just as an act. it's a symbolic sacrifice. cetainly still a sacrifice I'd say.

  • @RJVEK
    @RJVEK Год назад

    Tom- amazing- you should be making programs and presenting on the BBC.
    Wonderful.

  • @hedgiecc
    @hedgiecc Год назад

    Superb video, thanks!

  • @midmiddleton163
    @midmiddleton163 Год назад +2

    That looks like a hell of fun party.

  • @sigurfeanaro3356
    @sigurfeanaro3356 Год назад +2

    Your research and interpretations are as always ever welcome! Polytheism and »Paganism« never really went away, I think; I believe that from the evidence and Atavism there is, we could rebuild everything and guarantee a future for our peoples and cultures!
    When I gather a little more money from my own work, I will surely support you, Thomas!
    Thank you!

  • @liquidoxygen819
    @liquidoxygen819 Год назад +1

    Cheers, Mr. Rowsell. It's always crazy to find these traditions scattered across the Indo-European world and realize that they must descend from a common Neolithic - Bronze Age source. It seems like this custom would go right back at least to Corded Ware, then, given the Indian evidence. I am doing some research on Armenian folklore, so I'll look into if there are any seeming cognates tucked away in the attestations of their folk practice. My brother's girlfriend is Greek, so I can also inquire if her relatives know of anything surviving into the modern day. Won't hurt! If there are attestations from, especially more than one, Yamnaya-descended culture, that'd be great evidence it could go right back to Sredny Stog or Repin. Moreover, my Lithuanian uncle is coming to visit soon, so I will ask him if he happens to know of anything similar.

  • @devduttganguly7122
    @devduttganguly7122 4 месяца назад

    Dussehra & Vijay Dashami are two different events & festivals. Just for your information.
    Apart from it, superb work & video. Excellent!!

  • @rickardt1222
    @rickardt1222 3 месяца назад

    Very interesting, thank you!

  • @nobody-qs1eh
    @nobody-qs1eh Год назад +3

    Amazing. Thanks Tom.

  • @randomusername5242
    @randomusername5242 Год назад

    Amazing video!

  • @49mrbassman
    @49mrbassman Год назад +2

    And in Dymchurch they have their own festival known as The Day Of Syn...Based on the novels Dr Syn Alias the Scarecrow. By Russell Thorndike. The stories are centered around Dymchurch on the Kent Coast. Dr Syn was the Rector of the Parish Church but also led a dark counterlife as the infamous smuggler the Scarecrow. The next "Day of Syn" will take place in 2024 between Saturday the 24th and Monday 26th August.

  • @TheSto400
    @TheSto400 Год назад +1

    I've watched some wrestling videos recently for the first time in a while. It's made the algorithm go into overdrive and now every fourth or fifth video suggested to me is a wrestling video. Every time I glance at the thumbnail for this video I automatically register it as a wrestling video, probably exploring some classic hardcore match at a 90s PPV where the babyface got locked in some bizarre cage contraption by the heel he was feuding with who was a dude with some kind of tribal gimmick.

  • @olwens1368
    @olwens1368 6 месяцев назад

    The Padstow 'Obby 'Osses have a resurrection scene/song- the 'oss sinks down and 'dies', (the music changes) and then the drumming restarts and it leaps up again.

  • @catfury360
    @catfury360 6 дней назад

    Which Earl of Tyrone might this be ? Terrific docymrntary ! Thanks Tom.

  • @jvk1770
    @jvk1770 Год назад +4

    The earl looks like a character out of the Mighty Boosh

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  Год назад +1

      He didn't perform a song at the end

    • @jvk1770
      @jvk1770 Год назад +1

      @@Survivethejive True, but I can't imagine he'd have it in him after being shot half a dozen times and drowned in the Bristol Channel

  • @sponge5196
    @sponge5196 Год назад +2

    STJ always has a way of making his videos very atmospheric. It feels like I'm watching an old documentary in elementary school.
    Though I do have a question, and not just for STJ. What do you think of the Norroena Society? Are they and their books reliable sources?

  • @KeytarArgonian
    @KeytarArgonian Год назад

    A guy I used to work with would travel there every year! He doesn’t live even in the same county but he and his family went there so much for the event that they were invited to join in and have every year since I believe. He would March with his drum. He had the masked character tattoo’d on his calf. I won’t mention his name because he used to get teased for taking part but I always found it super interesting.

  • @Fozz84
    @Fozz84 9 месяцев назад +1

    I know where I am going in may. thanks for this video.

    • @Survivethejive
      @Survivethejive  9 месяцев назад +1

      Hope you enjoy it!

    • @Fozz84
      @Fozz84 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Survivethejive I live in torbay and locally there is a 4000 year old burial in a place called braudsands beach. Also a roman burial up the road. I'm sure this place is more important than current historic theory says. I bet a lot has been lost due to land development though.

  • @raneknudsen4785
    @raneknudsen4785 Год назад +2

    I really liked the interview with those two cute chav girls. They really don't know what they're doing, but they're doing it anyway because ... tradition says so. That is true paganism: not necessarily knowing the significance of the rituals you are performing, but performing them anyway, because not doing so would just feel wrong.

    • @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905
      @djprincegrandmasteryrjdalo2905 Год назад

      How would it feel wrong? If you don’t wanna do it you don’t have to if those girls went there is because they didn’t mind doing it…

  • @ProtoIndoEuropean88
    @ProtoIndoEuropean88 Год назад

    could you make a video on cernunnos and Nerthus? I've been interested in these two Mysterious Deities.