Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European RacesC. Scribner's Sons, 1882 - 534 pagina's |
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Pagina xvi
... goddesses - Hêra distinct from the others - Poseidon and Hadês - Plûtôn divinities of the older pantheon - So also Arês and ... goddess dragged from place to place - The ceremonial of the Eleusinia - Older and newer ele- ments in it - A ...
... goddesses - Hêra distinct from the others - Poseidon and Hadês - Plûtôn divinities of the older pantheon - So also Arês and ... goddess dragged from place to place - The ceremonial of the Eleusinia - Older and newer ele- ments in it - A ...
Pagina xvii
... Goddess of Death - Can only waft Odysseus to Hadês - Odysseus in the kingdom of Hadês -Calypso another Goddess of Death - She sends Odysseus to Paradise , i.e. the Land of the Phæacians - The palace and garden of Alcinous - Odysseus ...
... Goddess of Death - Can only waft Odysseus to Hadês - Odysseus in the kingdom of Hadês -Calypso another Goddess of Death - She sends Odysseus to Paradise , i.e. the Land of the Phæacians - The palace and garden of Alcinous - Odysseus ...
Pagina xviii
... goddesses Nerthus , Frigg , Freyja - Freyr and Gerð , the story of the anodos- Freyja and Odhur , the story of the kathodos - The image of Nerthus dragged from place to place - Elements of a mystery in this ceremonial - Traces of its ...
... goddesses Nerthus , Frigg , Freyja - Freyr and Gerð , the story of the anodos- Freyja and Odhur , the story of the kathodos - The image of Nerthus dragged from place to place - Elements of a mystery in this ceremonial - Traces of its ...
Pagina 51
... Goddess . When the belief in any dogmatic creed - that is , in any theory of the world and of God and man - seems to be breaking up , men return as if by natural instinct to these wild forms of worship , which are earlier than any dogma ...
... Goddess . When the belief in any dogmatic creed - that is , in any theory of the world and of God and man - seems to be breaking up , men return as if by natural instinct to these wild forms of worship , which are earlier than any dogma ...
Pagina 61
... goddesses whose proper dwelling - place is the heaven . A bird , for instance , would come appropriately from Zeus , or ... goddess , or from Poseidôn , the god of the waves . And I suppose that when we encounter the figures of winged ...
... goddesses whose proper dwelling - place is the heaven . A bird , for instance , would come appropriately from Zeus , or ... goddess , or from Poseidôn , the god of the waves . And I suppose that when we encounter the figures of winged ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract Æsir Agni ancient Apollo Aryaman Aryan Aryas Ask and Embla Asvin Athênê belongs called chapter character clouds creed dawn dead death Dêmêtêr Dionysus divinity Dyâus earth goddess Edda Eleusinia Eleusis emotion example express fetich fire gods Greece Greek Hadês heaven henotheism Hêra Heracles Hermês hero history of belief holy Homer human hymns idea imagination Indian Indo-European Indra instinct Jörmungandr kind Kronos land language magic Maruts Max Müller meaning mind Mitra and Varuna moral morning mountain mysteries myth mythic mythology nations nature worship never Odhinn Odysseus once origin Persephonê phase of belief phenomena physical primitive Prithivi race religion religious Rig Veda rites river root sacred Sanskrit Savitar sense serpent soul storm story stream suppose Teutonic things Thorr thou thought tree Varuna Vedas Vedic Völuspá Vritra wanderings Wherefore wind word Yggdrasill Zeus
Populaire passages
Pagina 123 - You wait on nature's mischief! Come, thick night, And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry 'Hold, hold!