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From 11713-10551-143212-3186-christian.gabriel=shortnote.de@mail.meetasiiianwomen.icu Wed Dec 12 23:02:05 2018
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From: "MeetRussianWoman" <enlightenment@meetasiiianwomen.icu>
To: <christian.gabriel@shortnote.de>
Subject: *****SPAM***** Meet Russian Women for Love!
Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 22:19:06 +0100
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Content preview: Meet Russian Women for Love! http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.2_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_f2720392
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Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2018 22:19:06 +0100
From: "MeetRussianWoman" <enlightenment@meetasiiianwomen.icu>
Reply-To: "MeetRussianWoman" <correspondence@meetasiiianwomen.icu>
Subject: Meet Russian Women for Love!
To: <christian.gabriel@shortnote.de>
Message-ID: <uazv2et1j6j69uma-ysw86067vwx9x827-2937-22f6c@meetasiiianwomen.icu>
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Meet Russian Women for Love!
http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.2_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_f2720392
http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.20_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_fa2b7850
Both the wood and the edible nuts of the hazel have played important roles in Irish and Welsh traditions. Hazel leaves and nuts are found in early British burial mounds and shaft-wells, especially at Ashill, Norfolk. The place-name story for Fordruim, an early name for Tara, describes it as a pleasant hazel wood. In the ogham alphabet of early Ireland, the letter C was represented by hazel [OIr. coll]. According to Robert Graves, it also represented the ninth month on the Old Irish calendar, 6 August to 2 September. Initiate members of the Fianna had to defend themselves armed only with a hazel stick and a shield; yet in the Fenian legends the hazel without leaves was thought evil, dripping poisonous milk, and the home of vultures. Thought a fairy tree in both Ireland and Wales, wood from the hazel was sacred to poets and was thus a taboo fuel on any hearth. Heralds carried hazel wands as badges of office. Witches' wands are often made of hazel, as are divining rods, used to find underground water. In Cornwall the hazel was used in the millpreve, the magical adder stones. In Wales a twig of hazel would be given to a rejected lover.
Even more esteemed than the hazel's wood were its nuts, often described as the 'nuts of wisdom', e.g. esoteric or occult knowledge. Hazels of wisdom grew at the heads of the seven chief rivers of Ireland, and nine grew over both Connla's Well and the Well of Segais, the legendary common source of the Boyne and the Shannon. The nuts would fall into the water, causing bubbles of mystic inspiration to form, or were eaten by salmon. The number of spots on a salmon's back were thought to indicate the number of nuts it had consumed. The salmon of wisdom caught by Fionn mac Cumhaill had eaten hazel nuts. Very similar tales related by Taliesin are retained in the Brythonic tradition. Traces of hazelnuts have been found in a 'Celtic' style three-chained suspension bowl discovered in a post-Roman burial dated to 650 CE in London.
The name of the Irish hero Mac Cuill means 'son of the hazel'. W. B. Yeats thought the hazel was the common Irish form of the tree of life. Proto-Celtic was *collos; Old Irish and Modern Irish coll'; Scots Gaelic, calltunn, calltuinn; Manx, coull; Welsh, collen; Cornish, collwedhen; Breton, kraoñklevezenn.
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<title>Newsletter</title>
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<body><a href="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.0_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_bf46bc58"><img src="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/893c2fe6cb46d20749.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.14_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_15f965a8" width="1" /></a><br />
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<center><br />
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<a href="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.2_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_f2720392" style="font-size:18px;">Meet Russian Women for Love!</a><br />
<div style="width:431px;border:solid 4px #000000;"><a href="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.2_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_f2720392"><img src="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/541c8572ac96798de4.jpg" /><br />
<img src="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/9dfeb0c205cba2cbe1.jpg" /> </a><br />
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<a href="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.12_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_2731d772"><img src="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/e81598a589bc370990.jpg" /></a><br />
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<p style="color:#ffffff;font-size:5px;">Both the wood and the edible nuts of the hazel have played important roles in Irish and Welsh traditions. Hazel leaves and nuts are found in early British burial mounds and shaft-wells, especially at Ashill, Norfolk. The place-name story for Fordruim, an early name for Tara, describes it as a pleasant hazel wood. In the ogham alphabet of early Ireland, the letter C was represented by hazel [OIr. coll]. According to Robert Graves, it also represented the ninth month on the Old Irish calendar, 6 August to 2 September. Initiate members of the Fianna had to defend themselves armed only with a hazel stick and a shield; yet in the Fenian legends the hazel without leaves was thought evil, dripping poisonous milk, and the home of vultures. Thought a fairy tree in both Ireland and Wales, wood from the hazel was sacred to poets and was thus a taboo fuel on any hearth. Heralds carried hazel wands as badges of office. Witches' wands are often made of hazel, as are divining rods, used to find underground water. In Cornwall the hazel was used in the millpreve, the magical adder stones. In Wales a twig of hazel would be given to a rejected lover. <a href="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.0_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_bf46bc58"><img src="http://meetasiiianwomen.icu/893c2fe6cb46d20749.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.meetasiiianwomen.icu/clk.14_11713_10551_143212_3186_6162_0300_15f965a8" width="1" /></a><br />
Even more esteemed than the hazel's wood were its nuts, often described as the 'nuts of wisdom', e.g. esoteric or occult knowledge. Hazels of wisdom grew at the heads of the seven chief rivers of Ireland, and nine grew over both Connla's Well and the Well of Segais, the legendary common source of the Boyne and the Shannon. The nuts would fall into the water, causing bubbles of mystic inspiration to form, or were eaten by salmon. The number of spots on a salmon's back were thought to indicate the number of nuts it had consumed. The salmon of wisdom caught by Fionn mac Cumhaill had eaten hazel nuts. Very similar tales related by Taliesin are retained in the Brythonic tradition. Traces of hazelnuts have been found in a 'Celtic' style three-chained suspension bowl discovered in a post-Roman burial dated to 650 CE in London. The name of the Irish hero Mac Cuill means 'son of the hazel'. W. B. Yeats thought the hazel was the common Irish form of the tree of life. Proto-Celtic was *collos; Old Irish and Modern Irish coll'; Scots Gaelic, calltunn, calltuinn; Manx, coull; Welsh, collen; Cornish, collwedhen; Breton, kraoñklevezenn.</p>
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