Thulean Archives

Let us talk about The RUNES!

Video info
Transcription
Description#runes #bookofthedead #germanic #odinn #ancestralcult
CollectionsPaganism, Mythology and TraditionsVisualBook review
Uploaded2025-09-02
Did you know that the scholars never understood what the runes represented, what they meant, what they symbolized? But do we know better today? Let's find out. Did you know that each rune has a poem attached to it? In fact, not just one,[1] but most of the time 3. There is one Norwegian poem for most of the runes, there is one Icelandic poem for most of the runes, and there is an Anglo-Saxon poem for each of the runes. These poems were initially investigated by the scholars, but they didn't understand what they meant. It made no sense to them. So they just, ignore them. When they didn't understand them, they just wrote them off and described them as meaningless rhymes, akin to, you know, C for crocodile, B for beaver, and so forth. And that's all the scholars have to say about that. Kind of strange, isn't it? Add to that the fact that the scholars mistranslated them, and they did, because the rhymes didn't make any sense. The poems didn't make any sense to them whatsoever, and therefore they thought that, well, it cannot be that word, because it doesn't make any sense. But it was that word. The true meaning of the poems have been lost in that translation because they tried to insert a meaning into it when they didn't find any. But thankfully, there is a book out there with proper translations of these poems. And I'm going to show you. Isaz the bridge, the old Norwegian poem. Here you have all the possible translations, and here you have what it means and what the scholars rejected as meaningless.
Ice is called a wide bridge
the blind must guide.
Doesn't make any sense if you have no clue about our heritage. Here you have the Icelandic verse and all possible translations of the different words.
Iss is the bark of the river
And the roof of the waves
And the foe of the cowardly man
The ice, the king
And finally, of course, you have the Anglo-Saxon poem and all possible translations of it, as well as the logical one, namely
The ice is exceedingly cold, extremely slippery,
It gleams most like a gem,
Ground made of frost, with a pleasant appearance.
And, of course, she does this for each and every rune, and then follows up with an explanation to what this actually means. She explains what the runes truly tell us. And to tell you a little bit what it actually means, the undertitle of the book is "The Germanic Book of the Dead". And the scholars never stood a chance at understanding any of this because they never understood the purpose of our European pagan heritage to begin with, and they never tried to. Their purpose was not to understand paganism, but to explain it away in the favor of Christianity. And I'm promoting this book because finally, we have an explanation to what the runes are all about, finally. They are finally explained. And the explanation fits perfectly with everything else we know about our heritage. The mythology, the rituals, the sites, everything fits. And I predict that we will see a continued rejection of all the Abrahamic faiths in Europe, and instead, we will see a return to our roots, to our own blood. And mind you, before you start throwing the racism card here, this ancient ancestral cult was not just European. You find the same in China, you find the same in, even in North America and South America, because it was a cult that stems from the Neanderthal. Our common forebears. The only place where you cannot find it is in Sub-Saharan Africa. Everyone else had the exact same ancestral cult. And the gods, the deities all over the world are the same. They just have different names because of different languages. So when I say that Odin is the sum of all our ancestors, well, it's the same for you, only you have different ancestors. So Odin is not the same, yet he is the same. The first Renaissance was a renaissance of pagan ideas and ideals. And this was our start to the return of our roots. And we, I think, will complete this journey in not too long. We will become our ancestors again,[2] and their powerful, strong spirit will return to us. Thank you for watching.
  1. These poems are our ONLY source of info about the runes.
  2. Yes, "The Runes Finally Explained" is available from Amazon.