Kansikuva näyttelystä Grail Sciences

Grail Sciences

Podcast by Nathaniel Heutmaker

englanti

Historia & uskonnot

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Grail Sciences is a Podcast that reveals the most occulted (hidden) information on the planet about how we as a species create our reality both individually and collectively. Come join us on a journey of self-discovery and freedom and learn how to change the world by changing your own story and become a Master of Destiny.

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36 jaksot

jakson Tracing Idunn’s Myths To A Bigger Goddess Story kansikuva

Tracing Idunn’s Myths To A Bigger Goddess Story

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352023/fan_mail/new] A goddess disappears and the gods begin to age—that’s the hinge that unlocks a bigger story about power, memory, and return. We take Idunn beyond the orchard and read her as a custodian of cyclical life, using the abduction by Thiazi, Loki’s fraught bargain, and the fiery pursuit to trace how renewal actually works in Norse myth. When Idunn is stolen, the Aesir don’t lose harvests; they lose time. That difference reframes the apples as a sacrament of continuity rather than a simple fertility badge. From there, we press into kennings, contested sources, and the often-overlooked Odin’s Raven Charm to explore descent motifs echoing Inanna’s journey to the underworld. The parallels aren’t about one-to-one identity; they’re about function: a goddess crosses a boundary, cosmic order falters, and return demands a price. Skadi’s entrance after Thiazi’s death adds a winter mirror to Idunn’s spring, hinting at a dual-aspect archetype—severe and life-giving—split between rival houses. If Bragi embodies poetry and Odin subsumes it, Idunn’s pairing places her at the sovereign threshold where art, memory, and renewal converge. So, is Idunn the Isis of Germania? Not cleanly. She resonates with Isis through preservation, revival, and communal binding, but lacks strong links to ships, battle, or broad statecraft that define Isis’s late antique profile. The evidence is fragmentary and layered with later glosses, which keeps the verdict cautious. Still, following Idunn sharpens the map: she is not merely a maiden of fruit; she is the point at which gods relearn how to be gods. That makes her essential to any serious reading of Norse cosmology. If you’re fascinated by mythic crossovers and how fragments reveal a wider pattern, hit play, subscribe for the next candidate in our series, and tell us: which goddess better fits the Isis puzzle and why? Your take might shape where we go next.

27. marras 2025 - 18 min
jakson When Your Audio Corrupts And The Grail Still Calls kansikuva

When Your Audio Corrupts And The Grail Still Calls

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352023/fan_mail/new] We explain the delay, what went wrong with the last recording, and why we’re shifting to shorter, focused episodes released on Sundays. We outline a new series on Germanic goddesses and how each links to the wider study of the Grail, starting with Idunn next. • corrupted audio caused a missed release • move to a weekly Sunday schedule • series plan for focused goddess deep dives • start with Idunn and her core attributes • alignments and conflicts with Grail themes • why shorter episodes improve clarity and reach • how non‑Celtic sources widen Grail studies Thank you for your time, and I plan on having another video out in the next two or three days on Idunn.

24. marras 2025 - 5 min
jakson Behind the Scenes of My Grail Quest! kansikuva

Behind the Scenes of My Grail Quest!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352023/fan_mail/new] We share a research roadmap for the Grail project and explain why Sumerian, Egyptian, Nordic and Celtic threads all point to a shared pattern of life, death and renewal. We also probe “Grail family” claims and return to the core ethical question: who does the Grail serve. • update on multi‑season Grail research across cultures • parallels among Inanna, Isis and a Germanic counterpart • living resurrection as spiritual pattern not literal immortality • Arthurian question of service as ethical core of the quest • review of Merovingian and Priory of Sion lineage claims • Trojan, Egyptian and Celtic origin legends compared • method of mapping symbols, rites and migrations • the inner Grail as conscience and moral choice • next video will identify Tacitus’s “Isis” in the Nordic context • how to follow playlists by tradition and stay engaged Thank you to everyone who liked, subscribed, bought books from my Amazon wish list, or supported me on Buy Me A Coffee—your help keeps this project moving

3. marras 2025 - 15 min
jakson The Germans Worshiped Isis?! kansikuva

The Germans Worshiped Isis?!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352023/fan_mail/new] A single line from Tacitus sparks a mystery: some of the Suebi “also sacrificed to Isis.” Was a Roman historian just confused, or did he glimpse a northern goddess through a Mediterranean lens? We pull on that thread and follow it across ships, stars, flood cycles, and royal power to see where it leads. We start with the emblem at the heart of the claim: a Liburnian ship. That detail does heavy lifting. It evokes border cults, sea trade, and portable rites that travel with sailors and merchants. From there, we outline how interpretatio Romana works—why Mercury can stand for Odin, Hercules for Thor, and Mars for Tyr—then ask why Tacitus kept “Isis” instead of swapping in Venus or Minerva. The best answer isn’t error; it’s function. Late antique Isis is queen of heaven and patron of ships, a mother and mourner, a healer and magician, star-linked to Sirius and aligned with the Nile’s life-giving inundation. Through syncretism with Hathor and Nephthys, she carries joy, music, sovereignty, funerary care, and the power of a necklace that enthrones. With that profile fixed to Tacitus’ timeframe, we build an attribute map—ships, sovereignty, fertility, prophecy, weaving, fate, gold and copper, rain and river sources, life and death, resurrection motifs—and test northern candidates. Freya brings Brísingamen, love, seiðr, battle-choice, and hints of maritime symbolism. Frigg and Sága contribute prophecy, weaving, water halls, and enthronement by marriage. Iðunn offers renewal and lifespan through apples, braided into poetry and skill. Regional figures like Nehalennia add dogs, sea altars, and underworld travel. The question shifts from name-matching to role-matching: which goddess occupies the liminal seam between sea and field, birth and burial, crown and cosmos? Rather than declare a neat winner, we show you the method to get there. Align by traits specific to the era, not timeless clichés; follow ritual technology like ships and necklaces; respect how ideas move along frontiers. Next, we’ll dig deeper into Freya, Frigg, Iðunn, and coastal cults to test the best fit with stories, archaeology, and language evidence. If this kindles your curiosity, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves myth and history, and leave a review telling us which goddess you think Tacitus saw. Your theory might shape the next deep dive.

25. loka 2025 - 53 min
jakson The Uncensored Behind The Scenes Of Our Wildest Discussions! kansikuva

The Uncensored Behind The Scenes Of Our Wildest Discussions!

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2352023/fan_mail/new]  Nathaniel Heutmaker of the Grail Sciences Podcast and James Bleckley of the Oldest Stories podcast sat down to discuss Mesopotamian myth from an occult perspective. But they ended up sitting for hours and hours over multiple days and got off track more than once. Because I (James Bleckley) find a bunch of it interesting, I (James Bleckley) cut the most interesting clips together for you today, so here you can hear Nathaniel's take on the oldest archeological findings, King Arthur, Josephus, and more! The Grail Sciences Podcast covers the deeper meaning of the Holy Grail and a variety of occult topics. Nathaniel is deeply read in a variety of world traditions, and expertly weaves it all together over at grailsciences.com/ The Oldest Stories Podcast covers the history, myth, and culture of ancient Mesopotamia, from the invention of writing until the fall of Nabonidas. James has been filling out the story of the oldest civilization for over 6 years at oldeststories.net

18. loka 2025 - 1 h 3 min
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