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- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 1
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- post-Atlantean civilizations came forth: the old Indian, the Persian,
- Persian epoch, although in a somewhat different form; and then the
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 4
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- the Persian civilization we see one which is in a certain way
- opposition is contained in the Persian civilization in the
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 7
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- At the time which we designate as the Old Persian age,
- Indian, Old Persian and Old Chaldean peoples, there was yet another
- Zeitgeist of the Egyptians and also that of the Persians had risen to
- the Egyptian-Chaldæan-Babylonian, Old Persian, and Indian ages of
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 8
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- the Persian civilization was founded, then the
- the Persian, from the Egyptian-Chaldæan, and most of all from those
- The peoples belonging to the Persian civilization were
- Persian communities awoke one stage lower than did the Indians, but
- still had to work up to. Hence the Persians were acquainted with the
- peoples of the Persian civilization were specially well able to
- Chaldeans were beginning to forget something. In the Persian
- to be found in Greek mythology had been forgotten by the Persians and
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 9
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- between India and Persia. There at a certain period it is expressed
- in a very remarkable manner. Persia knew little of the Luciferic
- the outer world. The Persian directs his chief attention to the
- followers of the Persian religion to descend into that world to which
- Persians, the Indians sought for them and wanted to be at work in
- their domain. But the Persians turned away, and avoided the region in
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 10
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- The Persian Folk-soul had not progressed so far as this,
- the Persian, the Sentient Soul in the Egyptian-Chaldæan, the
- which we have so often found in the Persian mythology; it has the
- Title: Mission of Folk-Souls (1929): Lecture 11
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- Persian culture, and that which we know as the Egyptian-Chaldæan and
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 1. Angels, Folk Spirits, Time Spirits: their part in the Evolution of Mankind.
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- cultures — the old Indian, the Persian, the Egypto-Chaldean,
- repetition of the Persian epoch, but in a somewhat different form.
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 4. The Evolution of Races and Civilization.
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- been transformed through the forces of rejuvenation. Thus the Persian
- Form. In the Persian civilization this dualism is reflected in the
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 7. Advance of Folk Spirits to the Rank of Time Spirits.
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- the Old Persian epoch the Archangel became the Spirit of Personality,
- evolving Time Spirits of the Old Indian, Old Persian and Old Chaldean
- Time Spirit of the Egyptians and of the Persians had advanced in
- Spirits during the Egypto-Chaldean-Babylonian, Old Persian and Indian
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 8. The Five Post-Atlantean Civilizations.
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- civilization, and nearer to our own age, was the Persian which was
- the Graeco-Latin peoples. They were different from the Persian, from
- peoples belonging to the ancient Persian civilization were less
- in them. The peoples belonging to the Persian communities awakened to
- Persians were conversant with the Powers or Spirits of Form, known
- their point of view, the peoples of the Persian civilization were
- they were beginning to lose the memory of Angelic beings. Persian
- found in Greek mythology had been forgotten by the Persians and
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 9. Loki - Hodur and Baldur - Twilight of the Gods.
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- difference is very apparent in the contrast between India and Persia
- Persians were less subject to the Luciferic influence than the
- Ahrimanic. It was in Persia in particular that men wrestled with the
- consciousness of the external world. The Persian aims primarily at
- followers of the Persian religion to look inwards, to follow the
- as dangerous. Whereas the Persians eschewed the Devas, the Indians
- Persians turned away and avoided the region where the battle against
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 10. The Mission of Individual Peoples and Cultures in the Past, Present and Future.
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- Persian Folk Soul had not developed so far; its organ of perception
- epoch, the sentient body in the Persian, the Sentient Soul in the
- so often met with in Persian mythology; it recognizes the Sun Being
- Title: Mission/Folk-Souls (1970): 11. Nerthus, Freyja and Gerda.
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- Rishis in its true form. We accept with gratitude the Persian
- Title: Fifth Gospel (1950): Lecture III
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- so-called Persian or Mithraic Mysteries. In these Mysteries
- Title: Man's Being: Lecture V: Man's Being, His Destiny and World Evolution - 2
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- primeval Persian. Then a man in his fifties could no longer
- the earth, so the primeval Persian felt that the body, by
- Golgotha, a member of the Persian civilization felt that speech
- Persian felt the connection of his speech, his breath, with the
- human development. The primeval Persian, too, felt as if his
- Title: The Fifth Gospel: Lecture III
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- observes the so-called Persian or Mithras mysteries. There
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Two
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- epoch, then the most ancient Persian age, concerning which the historical
- Persian culture. In place of the seven Indian teachers came the first
- with God was still too great. The Persians, on the other hand, were
- Then, living contemporaneously with the Persian culture of Zarathustra,
- the Hebrew ancestors developed a teaching much like that in Persia
- representative of the first, the Indian culture; the Persian finds its
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Four
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- that existed parallel to the ancient Persian culture also looked up
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Six
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- outside. This separation was reflected in the ancient Persian cultural
- sun spirit was the guiding and leading principle of the ancient Persian
- Persian, the Lemurian in the Egypto-Chaldean, and the Atlantean in the
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Nine
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- social laws did not exist among human beings in the Persian culture.
- There were no such institutions in ancient India or ancient Persia. In
- Title: Lecture: Reading the Pictures of the Apocalypse: Part 2: Lecture Twelve
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- into the human being. In the ancient Persian age the astral body was
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