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  2. List of deities of wine and beer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deities_of_wine...

    Deities of wine and beer include a number of agricultural deities associated with the fruits and grains used to produce alcoholic beverages, as well as the processes of fermentation and distillation. Acan, Mayan God of alcohol. Acratopotes, one of Dionysus' companions and a drinker of unmixed wine. Aegir, a Norse divinity associated with ale ...

  3. Alcohol in the Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_in_the_Bible

    The Hebrew Bible was largely written in Biblical Hebrew, with portions in Biblical Aramaic, and has an important Ancient Greek translation called the Septuagint.The modern Hebrew Bible, which generally follows the Masoretic Text, uses several words to represent alcoholic beverages:

  4. Religion and alcohol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_and_alcohol

    In Ancient Egyptian religion, beer and wine were drunk and offered to the gods in rituals and festivals. Beer and wine were also stored with the mummified dead in Egyptian burials. [89] Other ancient religious practices like Chinese ancestor worship, Sumerian and Babylonian religion used alcohol as offerings to gods and to the deceased.

  5. Libation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libation

    The ritual itself is a libation: beer is poured onto the skin and wood of the drum, and these materials "come to life" and speak with the voice of the shaman in the name of the tree and the deer. Among the Tubalar , moreover, the shaman imitates the voice of the animal , and its behaviour as well.

  6. Arnold of Soissons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_of_Soissons

    The beer normally consumed at breakfast and during the day at this time in Europe was called small beer, having a very low alcohol content, and containing spent yeast. It is likely that people in the local area normally consumed small beer from the monastery, or made their own small beer at the instructions of Arnold and his fellow monks.

  7. Christian views on alcohol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_views_on_alcohol

    Jesus making wine from water in The Marriage at Cana, a 14th-century fresco from the Visoki Dečani monastery. Christian views on alcohol are varied. Throughout the first 1,800 years of Church history, Christians generally consumed alcoholic beverages as a common part of everyday life and used "the fruit of the vine" [1] in their central rite—the Eucharist or Lord's Supper.

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  9. List of occult symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_occult_symbols

    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