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In the Bronze Age, communities along the Thames gave their finest swords to the river. They bent the blades, snapped the spearheads, and placed them in the water where they could never be retrieved. They did this for centuries.
Why? Not because they were primitive. Not because they were irrational. Because the river was someone, and you do not take from someone without giving back.
British Animism traces this understanding across thousands of years of evidence from the British Isles - from the antler masks of Mesolithic Yorkshire to the well-dressings still practised in Derbyshire today. Drawing on archaeology, anthropology, and ethnography, Sophie Buchanan shows that the peoples of these islands sustained relationships with their rivers, stones, trees, and hilltops that were as practical as they were profound. She is honest about what the evidence can tell us and what it cannot, and she has no patience for invented traditions or borrowed mysticism.
The final chapters turn to practice: how to attend to the places where you actually live, how to read the landscape with informed eyes, and how to build the kind of relationship with the living world that can only come from years of showing up.
This is not a book of ancient secrets. It is something more useful: a book of ancient habits, grounded in evidence, and still available to anyone willing to pay attention.
Ahoj! Som Libroamiko, tvoj knižný radca.
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