Old phone booth in Volos, Greece. Photo by Sofia Gkouri.
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Old phone booth in Volos, Greece. Photo by Sofia Gkouri.

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George William Joy (Irish, 1844-1925)
Laodamia
The way you draw fur, legs and nuzzles gives me alot of euphoria. Its so Feral and clearly warrior culture inspired, amazing
:) ❤️ thank u hehehe
Makrinitsa (Greek: Μακρινίτσα), nicknamed "balcony of Mt. Pelion," is a village and a former community in Magnesia, Thessaly, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Volos, of which it is a municipal unit.The municipal unit has an area of 59.903 km2.
It is situated in the northwestern part of the Pelion mountains, 6 km northeast of Volos. One of the most characteristic traditional settlements, full of mansions and houses that look like hanging ornaments on the green mountain side. One of the traditional coffee houses is decorated with a fresco by the famous Greek painter Theofilos. The picturesque cobbled paths of Makrinitsa are scattered with traditional water fountains. Makrinitsa is a popular tourist destination, especially during the winter.
The village is the home of the Museum of Folk Art and History of Pelion, housed in the historic Topali Mansion, with over 1,500 objects related to the folk culture and everyday life of the region.
Source and more:Wikipedia
Frenzy: Dionysian & Apollonian
“The Bacchanals ate ivy, and their inspired fury was by some believed to be due to the exciting and intoxicating properties of the plant....
(Source: Christopher Wordsworth [1882], Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)
"A certain image of Apollo, which stood in a sacred cave at Hylae near Magnesia, was thought to impart superhuman strength. Sacred men, inspired by it, leaped down precipices, tore up huge trees by the roots, and carried them on their backs along the narrowest defiles.”
The Oracle of Delphi Entranced, by Heinrich Leutemann (c. mid-late 19th century).
(Source: Heinrich Leutemann, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons)
—J. G. Frazer, The Magic Art & the Evolution of Kings, part 1 (The Golden Bough, vol. I, p. 384; 386)
Note: Noted Welsh poet Robert Graves was a devoted Frazerian, but he had a different theory about the substance that drove the followers of Dionysus into a frenzy: “Dionysus’ Centaurs, Satyrs and Maenads, it seems, ritually ate a spotted toadstool called ‘flycap’ (amanita muscaria), which gave them enormous muscular strength, erotic power, delirious visions, and the gift of prophecy” (The White Goddess, 1966 amended & enlarged American ed., p. 45). Also see his foreword to the rev. 1960 ed. of The Greek Myths, as well as his Food for Centaurs, 1960 ed.

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Magnesia, Greece
Pronaos del templo de Zeus Sosípolis y estatua de Artemisa Leucofriene, originalmente en Magnesia del Meandro. Actualmente conservados en el Museo de Pérgamo de Berlín
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