Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
' Spirit, God, Deity, Divinity ') – A term broadly meaning spirit or deity, but has several separate meanings: deities mentioned in Japanese mythologies and local deities protecting areas, villages and families. [6] unnamed and non-anthropomorphic spirits found in natural phenomena. [6] a general sense of sacred power. [6]
An ancient symbol of a unicursal five-pointed star circumscribed by a circle with many meanings, including but not limited to, the five wounds of Christ and the five elements (earth, fire, water, air, and soul). In Satanism, it is flipped upside-down. See also: Sigil of Baphomet. Rose Cross: Rosicrucianism / Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Similar myths tell of how people who toppled the village altars, the Seonangdang, suddenly fell sick and died due to Dongti caused by the village patrons, the Seonangshin. [2] There are also myths about the holy trees, the Shinmok or Dangsu Namu, causing fatal disease. [3] The Gashin, or household deities, can also cause Dongti.
The full sigil of Lucifer, as it originally appeared in the Grimorium Verum. The Grimorium Verum (Latin for True Grimoire) is an 18th-century grimoire attributed to one "Alibeck the Egyptian" of Memphis, who purportedly wrote in 1517.
The evil udug is often a vector for physical and mental illnesses. [10] The word udug by itself without a qualifier usually connotes the evil udug. [10] Exorcism texts sometimes invoke the "good udug" against the "evil udug". [11] A text from the Old Babylonian Period (c. 1830 – c. 1531 BCE) requests, "May the evil udug and the evil galla stand
Within sacred altars of brujos, lessons of practitioners, and brujería rituals lie ties to African ideologies, Catholicism, and Spiritism; explaining the erasure of hierarchical order. [ 8 ] Before spiritism was developed, Taíno people and enslaved African people in Latin America developed the convictions that there exist spirits and those ...
A boggart is a supernatural being from English folklore.The dialectologist Elizabeth Wright described the boggart as 'a generic name for an apparition'; [1] folklorist Simon Young defines it as 'any ambivalent or evil solitary supernatural spirit'. [2]