Askr Skaðason
@askrskadason.bsky.social
160 followers 170 following 2K posts
Amateur medievalist (focus: 1000-1500 Iceland), unapologetically gay and unapologetically furry.
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also spelled
舞意〳〵
Edo-period-abbreviation style
ケキディオンには、舞意舞意(ブイブイ)の魂が有る。
Reposted by Askr Skaðason
Spotify is now running recruitment ads for ICE.

It’s time to cancel your account.
What in the world!?
My goodness you did well in unsubscribing
Well vent art is one of the healthiest ways to cope...
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I am a very confident goat today
Goat with a top hat
That hat is just asking to be smashed flat, I'm just sayin'
I am sure that if anyone were to criticize that writing, the person displaying it would feel persecuted.
Personally, that is actually true. For some reason I cannot find you on Twitter with the search function. I just find you if I look up my followed accounts.
Twitter truly sucks...
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These days I barely get 10~20 retweets on Twitter. It is about the same amount of reposts that I get here…which has less than tenth of followers.

I am now convinced that majority of followers just can’t see my drawings on Twitter.
What you said about mouths sometimes applies to paws.
That's such an unique image! Love the idea and what you did with the colors! I literally can feel the clash of different temperatures on my skin looking at this image lol
This is the most 2012 thing ever and I love it
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the pumpkin posting will continue until morale improves
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In East Asia, Moon Rabbit is often associated with the full moon during the Autumn equinox. Since today is Chuseok [Korean variant of Mid-Autumn Festival], I drew the Korean moon rabbit pounding a rice cake with a jeolgu [mortar and pestle]. He is wearing a typical Joseon period peasant cloth.
Mural of the Moon Rabbit and a Toad, Gaemachong Tomb, Goguryeo, early 6th century. In the earliest moon iconography of East Asia, rabbit and toad are coupled together. Rabbit is stirring an elixir of life instead of pounding a rice cake. Terracotta Roof Tile, Silla, 8th~10th centuries, National Museum of Korea. Rabbit and the Toad are standing on each side of a huge jar, and a big tree is sprouting out of it. This tree, called 계수나무 in Korean, is another common element that is popular in East Asian moon iconography. Rabbits Pounding a Rice Cake, 18th century, Joseon. By the Joseon period, the toad becomes absent, and the rabbit is commonly depicted as two. Rabbits Pounding a Rice Cake Under a Tree, early 19th century, Joseon, private collection.
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In Mesoamerica, rabbits are associated with the moon and fertility. The Nahuas believed that the deities diminished the moon's excessive brightness by throwing the rabbit on its surface. They also had rabbit deities called Centzon Totochtin, who ruled over pulque and drunkenness.
The rabbit in the moon, Codex Borgia page 10. The moon is depicted as a vessel full of liquid, and the night sky with stars are surrounding it. Lunar stela, Tlaxiaco, Mixtec culture, Late Postclassic (1200-1521), Museo Nacional de Antropología. Codex Vaticanus B, page 29
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When I eventually take over the world(Total goat domination) First thing I’ll be doing is banning pool noodles
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Two Moon Rabbits 두 마리 달토끼

Moon Rabbit is featured in East Asian and indigenous American folklore. This funny coincidence is because the dark markings on the Moon looks similar to a rabbit!
Why would you be so political???? /s
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oh you got raptured? I just got captured
what Jesus sees when he comes to rapture me

📷 : @beark.ink
#TiedUpTuesday
wolf fursuiter tied with two horizontal lines of blue rope, lying on his back