Gello
Gello (Ancient Greek: Γελλώ), in Greek mythology, is a female demon or revenant who threatens the reproductive cycle by causing infertility, miscarriage, and infant mortality. By the Byzantine era, the gelloudes (γελλούδες) were considered a class of beings. Women believed to be under demonic possession by gelloudes might stand trial or be subjected to exorcism.
Gyllou, Gylou, Gillo, or Gelu are some of its alternate forms.
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Although reports of Gello's behavior are consistent, her nature is less determinate. In the 7-8th century, John of Damascus equated the gello with the stryggai that sometimes appeared in spirit form while at other times had solid bodies and wore clothing.[27]
The strix could be regarded an "unclean spirit" (akátharton pneuma) subject to demonic excorcism, according to an exorcism text recorded by 17th century writer Allatius.[28] A woman could also be regarded as being a gello by the populace, but the charges were dismissed in an ecclesiastical trial c. 8th century.[29] The orthodox theology of the Church, expounded by Psellos or Ignatius, held that a woman's gendered nature precluded her from turning into a demon, since a demon was officially considered sexless.[30] Johnston prefers to use the Greek word aōros or aōrē, "untimely dead"[c] for this form of transgressive or liminal soul or entity, finding the usual phrase "child-killing demon" to be misleading.
In the myth and folklore of the Near East and Europe, Abyzou is the name of a female demon. Abyzou was blamed for miscarriages and infant mortality and was said to be motivated by envy, as she herself was infertile. In the Coptic Egypt she is identified with Alabasandria, and in Byzantine culture with Gylou, but in various texts surviving from the syncretic magical practice of antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, she is said to have many or virtually innumerable names.[1]
Abyzou (also spelled Abizou, Obizu, Obizuth, Obyzouth, Byzou etc.) is pictured on amulets with fish- or serpent-like attributes. Her fullest literary depiction is the compendium of demonology known as the Testament of Solomon, dated variously by scholars from as early as the 1st century AD to as late as the 4th
Antaura
Antaura is a female demon who causes migraine headaches. She is known primarily from a 2nd/3rd century silver lamella (inscribed metal leaf) found at the Roman military settlement Carnuntum in present-day Austria. Antaura, whose name means something like "Contrary Wind", is said to come out of the sea. In the inscription, she is confronted by the Ephesian Artemis, who plays the role assigned to the male figures Solomon, Arlaph, and Sisinnios in Jewish and Christian texts
References to a "spirit of impurity" or an "evil spirit" (ruaḥ tum'ah) are found in the Hebrew Bible, in Rabbinic literature, and in Pseudepigrapha.[16] It can be difficult to distinguish between a demon and an unclean or evil spirit in Judaic theology or contemporary scholarship; both entities like to inhabit wild or desolate places. Commonly the unclean spirit refers to Dybbuks, spirits of deceased persons who were not laid to rest and thus became demons.[17] Other demonic entities are shedim, which appears only twice in the Tanakh; originally a loan-word from Akkadian for a protective, benevolent spirit (sedu), but from Jewish perspective were foreign gods and according to established Jewish lore own beings, created by Jahwe.[18]
The se’irim or śa‘ir are goat-demons or "hairy demons"[19] (sometimes translated as "satyrs") associated with other harmful supernatural beings and with ruins, i.e., human structures that threaten to revert to the wild.[20] The demonic figure Azazel, depicted with goat-like features and in one instance as an unclean bird, is consigned to desert places as impure.[21] The Babylonian Talmud[22] says that a person who wanted to attract an impure spirit might fast and spend the night in a cemetery;[23
Pneuma poneron
The phrase pneuma poneron (πνεῦμα πονηρόν, "evil spirit") is used several times in the Septuagint, the New Testament[50] and also in patristic texts as an alternative to pneuma akatharton.[51]
The divinatory trance of the Pythia — the female oracle of Apollo at Delphi — is attributed by the 4th-century patristic authority John Chrysostom to a pneuma poneron:
Chrysostom uses the phrase pneuma poneron frequently in his writings; it is typically translated "evil spirit." The nature of the vapors that inspired the Pythia has been the subject of much debate; see Science and the Pythia. For the Greeks, the Pythia was characterized by sexual purity; her virginity is asserted in some sources, but in others she is said only to have dressed as a virgin and to have lived chastely, and was either an old woman or a married woman who gave up her family and carnal relations to serve the god.[53] A spell invoking Apollo in the Greek Magical Papyri requires ritual purification in the form of dietary restrictions and sexual abstinence; the spell implies that a sexual union with the god will result.[54] The vapors said to arise from the grotto at Delphi were a pneuma enthousiastikon, "inspiring exhalation," according to Plutarch.[55] Although the vaginal reception of the pneuma may strike the 21st-century reader as strange, fumigation was a not uncommon gynecological regimen throughout the Hippocratic Corpus and was employed as early as 1900–1500 BC in ancient Egyptian medicine.[56] Gynecological fumigation was also a technique of traditional Jewish medicine.[57] The intertwining of the medical and divinatory arts in Apollonian religion[58] was characterized as demonic by Christian writers.[59] As a form of ritual purification, fumigation was intended to enhance the Pythia's receptivity to divine communication; to the men of the Church, the open vagina that served no reproductive purpose was an uncontrolled form of sexuality that invited demonic influence, necessarily rendering the Pythia's prophecies false
Pneuma alalon
The pneuma alalon is a speechless spirit who renders the possessed mute (Greek alalon, "without speech"). It thus differs from most possessing demons, who are given to taunts and mockery (diabolos, the origin of both "diabolic" and "Devil," means "slanderer" in Greek). Mark 9:14–29 relates that a boy is brought to Jesus for healing because he cannot speak; verse 25 adds that he cannot hear. This demonic possession manifests itself through symptoms that resemble epilepsy, as is suggested also by Matthew 17:15, who uses a form of the colloquial verb seleniazetai ("moonstruck") for the condition.[78] Although traditionally epilepsy was regarded as "the sacred disease," Jews and Christians attributed the affliction to a demon.
The Babylonian Talmud specifies that a child's epilepsy was caused by "the demon of the privy," which attached to the father when he had sex too soon after relieving himself; that is, he was impure:
The need for the demonic pneuma to transmigrate into another body is expressed also at Matthew 12:43, where desert is a haunt for the restless spirit:
When an unclean spirit comes out of a man, it goes through arid places seeking rest and does not find it.[49]
The syncretic magical practice of late antiquity drew on Hebraic elements, and spells from the Greek Magical Papyri evoke and attempt to command Jewish angels, demons, and other beings regarded as spiritually powerful. At one point, a compiler of the magical text emphasizes the Jewish aspect of purity, insisting that "this spell is Hebraic and is preserved among pure men", advising that the practitioner should keep himself pure and refrain from eating pork.[29] The spell concludes with a protracted insufflation.
A tradition of Solomonic exorcism continued into medieval Europe; an example is recorded by Gregory the Thaumaturge: "I adjure you all unclean spirits by Elohim, Adonai, Sabaoth, to come out and depart from the servant of God."[30
[ALL ABOVE FROM WIKIPEDIA]
Cemeteries ..Dead Infants ...Smokey Vaginal 'Cleansing' and 'Demons of the Lavatory'?
....across the Sands of Time...INTO A BOTTLE.
HEMP is a Family of Plants.. there are many strains including 'HOPS' used in making Beer..
but these were only used about 800 years ago as 'flavouring'...long before that there were all kinds of ingredients...but 'Evil Distillated Spirits' were always known about..
THE MOVIE IS VERY FUNNY THERE IS NO DENIAL OF THAT...BUT REMEMBER WHAT I SAID-WHERE THERE IS A CLOWN -'HIS' OPPOSITE IS ALWAYS SOMEPLACE IN THE BACKGROUND...JUST AS TARANTINOS MOVIES ARE ALL HEROIN PROMOTIONS BUT WITH A 'HIDDEN' SEXUAL FETISH MESSAGE [FOOT IN THAT CLOWNS CASE]-SO THESE MOVIES CAN TEACH US SOMETHING ABOUT THE NATURE OF HYPNOTIC MANIPULATION[ WHICH 'LEBOWSKI' ACTUALLY IS-ALL ACTORS HAVE BEEN 'REGRESSED' TO ABOUT AGE 13 AND ARE 'RECALLING THEIR EXPERIENCES BEFORE BEING ASKED TO 'PLAY A GAME' USING ANY DRUG METAPHOR/STREET TERMINOLOGY THEY CAN RECALL..
JEFF BRIDGES [SEE MY 'ULYSSES' POST] DOES NOT UNDERSTAND THAT MINNESOTA
IS THE NATIVE AMERICAN WORD FOR 'WHITE WATER'..BUT HEY MR TRUMP AND WATER SUPPLIES FOR RICH FARMERS..WILL SOON BE IN THE NEWS..
'PURPLE DEATH' was Influenza's 'Nickname' in 1918 for 'Spanish Flu' which killed tens of millions worldwide even though it originated in the USA not Spain [see web] ..History repeats itself Dude..
Ever wonder about the Lyrics of Don Maclean's 'American Pie?' ....'Lenin read a Book on Marx' etc
or 'Bowie's' Life on Mars'...take a look a 'Wikipedia' ..Originally Bowie wrote what was to become 'My Way'.. the Sinatra 'Classic'...but was ripped off...and American Pie has nothing to do with Buddy Holly..
last word ...Jackson Pollock [MAUD=MOON]...was into Jung? I never knew that.
Moon Woman is a painting by Jackson Pollock created in 1942. It is considered to be a crucial step towards abstract expressionism from regionalism The artwork represents periodic creation and death, reflecting Pollock’s Jungian interests. The painting was inspired by a North American Indian myth that connects the moon with femininity and creativity. It is an early example of the artist’s passionate intensity in pursuit of his personal vision
THE DIRECTORS OF MOVIES SOMETIMES 'TAKE LIBERTIES' WITH ACTORS...
“Oliver Stone has assassinated Jim Morrison. The film portrays Jim as a violent, drunken fool. That wasn’t Jim. When I walked out of the movie, I thought, ‘Geez, who was that jerk?’. Jim didn’t light Pam’s closet on fire. He didn’t throw a TV set at me. His student film didn’t have images from ‘Triumph of the Will.’ That was totally made up. And Jim never quit film school. He graduated from UCLA. All you see is Jim as a drunken hedonist. The tragedy is that fame consumed him. But that wasn’t Jim’s message. He was intelligent. He was loving. He was a good man who believed in freedom and in questioning authority. But you’d never know that from seeing this film.”
— Ray Manzarek
WHAT DO YOU CALL A WOMAN WITH A PAIR OF CUNTS? MRS COEN?
What's Your Favourite Buddy?
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