Tag Archives: folklore

Entrances To Inner Earth

The Inner Earth is a concept proposing that our planet contains massive inhabited subterranean caverns that at some time contained, or still are home to, entire human civilizations. There are allegedly numerous entrances around the world, particularly in the polar regions, that are said to lead deep underground into these mythological Inner Earth Kingdoms. Here’s more from Robert Sepehr, author and anthropologist.

The Noble Italian Awakening

Giorgia Meloni was born in Rome in 1977 and became elected as Italy’s first female Prime Minister in 2022. She worked as a journalist before entering politics as one of the founding members of a new political movement called the Brothers of Italy, whose name comes from the words of the Italian national anthem.

Here, author and anthropologist Robert Sepehr traces Meloni’s rising popularity in a video called The Noble Italian Awakening.

King Arthur and the Great Bear

King Arthur is a legendary figure of British folklore who became king when he pulled a sword from a stone. In the legend, Arthur later received the magical sword Excalibur from the mysterious Lady of The Lake, a woman who appeared from the waters of Dozmary Pool.

Although the whole of Ursa Major is difficult to see without very dark skies, the Big Dipper is one of the most recognizable patterns in the northern sky. In ancient England, Ursa Major was King Arthur’s home and was called Arthur’s Chariot.

The Arctic Home in the Vedas is a book on the origin of Aryanic People by Bal Gangadhar Tilak, a mathematician turned astronomer, historian, journalist, philosopher and political leader of India. It propounded the idea that the North Pole was the original home of Aryans during the pre-glacial period. They had to leave due to the ice deluge around 8000 B.C. and had to migrate to the Northern parts of Europe and Asia in search of lands for new settlements.

Robert Sepehr is an author, producer, and anthropologist.

A Brief History of Witches

Throughout the early modern period, the English term “witch” was not exclusively negative in meaning, and could also indicate practitioners of folk medicine, folk magic, and divination, often involving out-of-body experiences and travelling through the realms of a hidden or “other-world”. Robert Sepehr is an author, producer and independent anthropologist.