
Origami Around
styofa doing anything

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tannertan36

Janaina Medeiros

Kiana Khansmith

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
will byers stan first human second
No title available

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

PR's Tumblrdome
occasionally subtle

JVL

izzy's playlists!
Claire Keane

titsay

JBB: An Artblog!
Peter Solarz
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
hello vonnie
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@thedevilspeen
Lil Nas X - MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)
✞ 666 ✞
day 21 and 22 - “satan said dance”
Alan Crocetti, 📸Allan Hamitouche
Fossils in Basque mythology
There was an ancient belief among Basque people regarding lightning: they thought lightning was lead to earth by a heavenly stone that would fall from the sky.
This stones were called tximistarri (lightning stone) or ozpinarri, ozkarri, ortzarri or oneztarri, all of them variations of Oz’s stone. Oz - also spelled Ost, Ortz, Ortzi or Urtzi - was the Basque god of the sky. After Christianization, they were also known as Santiago harriak, or St. James’ stones.
Since these stones came from the sky, they were presumed to have powerful protective properties, so Basques would usually look for them. And in their search for tximistarriak, they would find sea urchins fossils:
Their strange shape made our ancestors believe that it was in the center of that star where the lightning stroke following the stone to earth. After Christianization, their star-shape was seen as a labarum.
Be it of Pagan or Christian origin, in some places of Euskal Herria it’s still a tradition to keep these tximistarriak or calvarris - this might come from Basque “bald stone” - at home.
What do you think about this? Do your people have any legend or belief involving fossils?
The fall of Icarus (detail) from the workshop of Bernard Picart, 1731.
What if they kicked satan out cause he was too hot?
@tragicgirls.co
Satan costume. Ameline, role de Satan, dans “La poule aux oeufs d’or.” ca. 1848.
Gallica
astrono77153462
Of all the directions I thought this comic was heading, this wasn’t it.