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Showing posts with label Celts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celts. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

BBC: Revisionists!

As it is illegal in so many countries to question the holyhoax (unlike the numbers who were massacred/wiped out by the Talmudic Communists), then the BBC must be hoping they don't get jailed for this bit of barefaced chutzpah:

Oh yes FC reader! Didntcha know that sub-Saharan negroes were champion knights in Romano-Celtic Britain.

Haven't you heard of the brave negro warriors who defended Britain from the influx of Saxon heathens?

This is Saturday night fodder for a brain dead generation who think Hitler was the goalkeeper in the 1966 world cup, or that Nelson was the name of the last space shuttle to orbit the earth. Let's not even try anything over 500 years old. (The Council of Trent was the Midlands local authority that started Winterval?)

Come on BBC! A negro as a Arthurian knight? Puuuuurlease!

Friday, 10 October 2008

The Mabinogion: Celtic Folklore & Medieval Literature


The Mabinigion is a collection of stories from Medieval Welsh, and are full of the kind of "Arthurian" folklore that has a great appeal to Nationalists right across the world.

Right: Pwyll, Prince of Dyfed, written in Medieval Welsh.

Written down long after the Age of Saints in Wales and hundreds of years before Wales was forced (by Henry VIII) to become a de facto part of England under law, The Mabinogion harkens back to an age of Celtic Princes and there can be little doubt that the 14th Century works are a much older collection of stories in the oral tradition of the Celts.

With McDonalds, Pepsi, Tescos and Starbucks homogenising all before them, what better way to renew our love of European folklore and Celtic traditions than by picking up a copy of The Mabinogion?

Link:
The Mabinogion

Thursday, 31 July 2008

Celtic Cross Flag & Others @ Just £5


A huge range of flags are now just £5 on the FC shop site: including the traditional nationalist styles of Celtic Cross flags.

Of course we also sell a very wide range of flags for cultural events, including English county flags and European flags, plus flags for demos.

And if you can't find the flag you're looking for, just ask us. Chances are we can get one for you!

FC: Flying the flag for nationalism!

Grab a flag or two today, great for your home, your meeting, your rallies, your concerts...


Link:
Nationalist Flags at FC's Shop

Tuesday, 22 April 2008

Ancient Irish Laws or Masonic Brussels Babble?


I picked up a wonderful little pocket book of 'Irish Laws' the other day, beautifully illustrated by Ian McCullough, which detail the ancient 'Brehon' laws of Ireland.

As one writer has it:

"Irish Law was practical, "down home" law and Elizabeth had it banned. English common law was substituted and that was the end of Gaelic order, which as far as I can determine, was far superior to anything the English offered, and from a practical point of view seems superior to anything we have going for us today."

From before the time of Caesar, these laws draw from common sense and Ireland's tribal nature. They speak of a time when justice reflected on families and small holdings, not on filling the coffers of a separate and aloof bureaucracy.

Here are a few of the laws:

"When you become old your family must provide you with one oatcake a day, plus a container of sour milk.

They must bathe you every twentieth night and wash your head every Saturday.

Seventeen sticks of firewood is the allotment for keeping you warm."

Which ties in with what we were saying about today's elders pushed into uncaring "retirement homes."

"If an accident occurs while a building is under construction no fine is due for injury to the bystander who is present only out of curiosity. Should the owner of the building have knowledge of danger or defect, however, full payment shall be made to those present on legitimate business, and to beasts. But only half payment to idlers."

If only local councils had such a law today, most council workman, leaning on their shovels, might fall into the latter category.

"No fools, drunks or female scolds are allowed in the doctor's house when a patient is healing there. No bad news to be brought, and no talking across the bed. No grunting of pigs or barking of dogs outside."

This might be brought ot the attention of the NHS today given news the other week of what nurses discuss across a sickbed!

There are many more laws to do with living within your community, your hospitality duties to travelers, common courtesies - even when drinking, and restitution due for actual bodily harm.

Better these laws than the "human rights" rot that emanates from the Freemasons in Brussels.


Links:

The Brehon Laws by the Irish Cultural Society
The Brehon Laws - Catholic Encyclopadia (written by Douglas Hyde, I don't know if it's the leading ex-red who wrote "I Believed" -- a great book btw).
The Brehon Laws - by the Woodland League
The Brehon Laws - Library Ireland's full handbook

Wednesday, 5 March 2008

Dydh Sen Pyran Da


A very happy St Piran's Day to the proud Celtic people of Cornwall.

Whether you are in Kernow itself as one of the "Southern Welsh" or if you're just a supporter of Celtic culture and the small nations of Europe, why not raise a glass for St Piran and the Cornish on their national day?

Dydh Sen Pyran Da.

There's a Cornish pastie (pasti Kernewek?) with my name on it somewhere...

Links:
St Piran's Flag from FC for £5

History of St Piran
Early British Kingdoms

Saturday, 16 February 2008

Last Week's Quote

"Freedom or death - better to perish in battle than live... as slaves."

attributed to Boadicea, Queen of the Iceni Celts.

Friday, 20 July 2007

The Welsh in Ancient Scotland

Here's a nice little site I happened across by chance, which gives a brief glimpse into the (Welsh) Celtic peoples, and details the links between the Celts in what is now Wales, and the "Welsh" Celts in what is now Scotland:

www.maelgwyn.com/kingdom.html


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