Traditional Gravestones in your country

I start with one with Runes

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algiz
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

>more runes

nice try, Germany

T.Jude

>a huge algiz rune upside down "Todesrune"

Don't see any gravestones on that picture.

>Became a Jew in 1898
>Became a Christian in 1938

>celtic cross

>couldn't decide if jewish or christian
>pic related

"traditional waste of space and stone"
graveyards are a symbol of your fathers thinking of their own reputation after death rather than the future you should have.
its a person saying he would rather be burden on future society than a benefit.

Nobody cares about your opinion you shekel grabbing baby dick sucking mutt.

Agreed in general
But they're also a portrayal of the countries culture

>grave of baby with life and death rune

Pic related is a typical headstone in the US.

Unfortunately many cemeteries are switching to in-ground headstones, which makes it easy to mow the grass, but impossible to find any particular grave unless you know where it is. I find that disrespectful.

Oh you two.

thank you for your time and well spoken answer to my claim, you represent your countrymen admirably

Jew's graveyard.

What location is this?

how many jews can you fit in an urn?

>name on grave despite being still alive

And i thought only we Germans do that
Foreigners usually find that bizarre.
I agree, if we can put ugly modern-art sculptures everywhere, upstanding gravestones should the the littlest of problems

>gravestone with a "Totenkopf" as it was tradition from the "Black Hussars" in the early 1800s until the Waffen-SS

Damn how cheap
Here in Germany (the regions you can own a semi-automatic" i'd pay around 6000 USD for the 516

There is one gravetombstone in big ass graveyard in Krakow, Poland, that has swastika engraved on it. I dont have a photo though and if you google it you will only find graves vandalized by stormcucks

You called your statement a claim. THIS IS WHY I DON'T HAVE A BANK ACCOUNT. IF YOU CAN'T PAY FOR IT IN CASH, YOU DON'T BUY IT!
LEARN CHILDREN.

That's sad and, well just heartbreaking; but that tombstone is beautiful at the same time. I don't know what that says about me, but whenever I come across a short life span stone or one where there is 2 or 3 or more with the same date of death; I just freeze and stare and feel sad and really question a lot of things.

Got to see that.
In Germany you only find Runes and even sometimes swastikas or the SS on graves in rural areas where people are not such whiny bitches

>gravestone with a version of the germanic swastika

On some german cemetaries we have whole sections for dead babies, most stillborn.
I know in many countries people don't even bury babies that died in the womb, here we do.

>pic showing german 20yo who died in Russia and is still missing there

>go inside rakowicki cemetery at krakow
>go along literally the first line of graves on the right side
>the second black tombstone has swastika on it

it probably has some non nazi meaning
I browsed googles a bit now and apparentl there is a few more swastikas. But I only saw this one because gf was bitching that she is tired so I wasnt very long there. Also didnt want to photograph it because Im containing my power levels

In Germany that explanation isn't even allowed.
There was a Tibetan Explorer who died in 1892 and had a swastika on his grave.
Was removed because could offend people.
Very silly

>grave with a "Binding Rune" of the Tyr-Rune and the inverted Algiz-Rune

do these runes actually mean something or people put them there just because they look cool?

I actually dont think Ive ever seen anything like that here. We have only christian symbolism

sorry to hear that bro. But I would recommend it. Prepare yourselves an your loved ones first. Start organizing with your neighbors. WE have a world wide problem that's happening now.

...

>And i thought only we Germans do that

Cemetery plots and headstones are expensive, most people buy them before they die so their kids don't have to deal with it.

>gravestone with a "Totenkopf"

I like it. And as one who likes to occasionally browse through cemeteries, I like it when graves have some information about the person's life written on it. (And not cheesy clip-art of animals and sunsets.)

Lots of graves in flanders have runes,
most of them are from ex waffen ss and Flemich nationalists

We still have whole families that are following germanic paganism since the 16th/17th century.
Some came during the new surge in the 1800s.

But they usually mean something, but you only find those in rural areas.
My family is catholic on maternal side and germanic pagan on the paternal side.

I wouldn't be surprised if you find such gravestones also in Sweden, Norway, Iceland or Denmark.

>image showing a family where one half used the life and death runes (germanic pagan) and the other star and cross (christian)

I had a cousin who was stillborn, and his grave looks kind of like this.

Nice, in which flemish cities?
I'm occasionally in Antwerp and Oostende so i might check them out

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algiz

Grave with Verdinaso emblem

oh I get the symbolism now. Its interesting to see that there are still some pagans. How do they even conduct their sermons and other religious rituals?

That's nice and good to know in the US are places where stillborn also get a grave

Most city's have them ,
even more in small villages
During the war lots of villages were completely natsoc
After the war everybody claimed to be in the resistance ,
but in reality at least 70% of Flanders was National socialist

We also still believe in God. Stop watching TV and be 15 miles outside any city. You'd be surprised how simple and yet hard working your life could be.

sermons in public and usually in the forest nearby (which is why you rarely find them in big german cities)

traditions and rituals at home, for example, my grandfather would create "Waldgeister" (english forest spirits) out of wood and place them around the house in order to keep "Waldschrate" and other bad spirits away.
Alot of little quirks like that

>image related shows what a wedding looks like, usually there is also a big oak where the weeding takes place infront of

I didn't mean it that way, i know you got lots of religious folks over there. But it often looked like you don't have a big graveyard culture, eventhough you got so much free space.
Anyway it's good to know

>Sommersonnenwende celebration

awful

Any shiza or blood orgies?

I should look around then.
Yes i know, the same with Alsace-Lorraine

>pic related

It says you're an emo faggot.

The only thing connected with blood is when you plant a new oak tree, you cut your hand, cover the seed and soil in blood and then put the soil over it

That must be a more german pagan thing though since the Oak is a holy tree here as we believe Yggdrasil is an Oak

That's why on every german military medal, bade, uniform you find oak leaves or acorns

I was being an asshole & shit posting but that actually sounds cool in a different cultural/tradition sort of way.