《外星少女失語症》 sica
何洛瑤(Jessica Ho,2000年5月24日) @j.sicasi
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《外星少女失語症》 sica
何洛瑤(Jessica Ho,2000年5月24日) @j.sicasi

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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The sword of the day is the sica.
The sica is a short sword or long dagger originating with the Illyrian people of the Mediterranean. It also saw use in ancient Roman culture, especially as a gladiator’s weapon. It was largely used by Thraex (Thracian) gladiators, in conjunction with a small parma shield and light armor. The bend allowed a wielder to strike around shields at an opponent’s flanks, and generally to strike from unpredictable angles.
OC-tober day one!
i couldn't decide between my two favorite guys but luckily they come as a set. what are the ethics when it comes to making your centuries old familiar that's actually just some guy cursed to be a cat forever pose for a silly little picture
“Knowledge isn't free. You have to pay attention.”
― Richard P. Feynman

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"Where the lance does not prevail, the dagger may."
— Ralph of Caen, Gesta Tancredi (12th century), cited in James Titterton's Deception in Medieval Warfare: Trickery and Cunning in the Central Middle Ages (thanks to @we-are-knight for suggesting it!). It basically means “if force doesn't cut it, try trickery”.
In Latin it's “ubi non valet lancea, valeat sica”. Now, I haven't spent much time reading medieval Latin texts, so I'm far from qualified to derive nuance from vocabulary choices. But, the standard word for “dagger” in the antiquity was pugio, especially in military contexts, while the word sica (“a poniard, a curved dagger”) was associated with the criminal underworld: “In Rome it was carried by the lower classes, criminals, ruffians, and bullies, and was regarded as fit for such persons only”. I don't know if that connotation survived to the Middle Ages, but the derived word sicarius (“assassin, contract killer, murderer”) did.
Thracian sica
The Getae and the Dacians were ancient Thracian peoples who lived in Moesia, on the northern plain of the river Danube, and in the Carpathian Mountains, approximately in the territory of modern-day Romania and Moldova. Although the religion of the Getae and the Dacians escapes complete reconstruction, it forms, nevertheless, like the religion of the ancient Celts, one of the most interesting chapters in the history of Indo-European religions outside the Greco-Roman world. Despite the rationalistic tendency of some scholars to diminish the importance of religion among these peoples, evidence indicates that the foundation of the state consisting of the Getae and the Dacians was a result of theocratic ideas. These ideas stemmed from the worship of Zalmoxis, possibly an ancient religious reformer to whom the beginnings of Getic kingship are also related. As for the Dacians, testimonies explicitly relate their name to the Phrygian word daos ("wolf"). Paul Kretschmer's etymology, which derives dakoi from the Indo-European *dhawo-s ("wolf"), has been supported by Vladimir Georgiev and has received an exhaustive historico-religious comment from Mircea Eliade(1972). Eliade claims that the Dacians, like several other Indo-European peoples, formed a Männerbund based on the idea of ritual lycanthropy. Young Dacian warriors were probably trained to imitate the behavior of ferocious wolves. This has nothing to do with the Getae's legendary contempt for death, however, as that was based on the Zalmoxean promise of immortality. In all probability the message of Zalmoxis referred to a paradise in which valiant warriors would survive after death in a state of perpetual happiness. Greek evidence, starting with Herodotos, establishes a close relationship between Zalmoxis and Pythagoras. The set of religious ideas whose origin is attributed to Zalmoxis indeed presents resemblances with Pythagoreanism. The logo Falx Films is bases on their weapons, whom the Romans called falx or sickle which caused a lot of damage to the Romans to the point that they has to remake their armour #dacians #dacia #getae #getii #burebista #zalmoxis #ancestors #decebal #falx #sica https://www.instagram.com/p/CccaL-jOtsv/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=