Dacia-hiperboreana - | Vasile-lovinescu
Dacia Hiperboreană remains a cornerstone for those studying "Traditionalist" thought in Eastern Europe. It elevates Romanian history from a regional narrative to a cosmic drama, asserting that the "Romanian miracle" is actually the preservation of an ancient, solar, and aristocratic spirituality.
In , Vasile Lovinescu presents a metaphysical reconstruction of Romanian spiritual history, identifying the ancient land of Dacia as a primary "Hyperborean" spiritual center. Heavily influenced by the Traditionalist school of René Guénon, Lovinescu argues that the Romanian space is not merely a geographic location but a sacred topography holding a "central" position in the world's spiritual history. Core Concepts of Dacia Hiperboreană Dacia-Hiperboreana - Vasile-Lovinescu
Lovinescu applied Guénon’s "Universal Tradition" to the Romanian context. He used symbols like the (the Dacian Draco), the Axis Mundi (represented by the Sacred Mountain), and the Labyrinth to prove that Dacia was a legitimate branch of the primordial tradition. Literary and Hermeneutic Style Dacia Hiperboreană remains a cornerstone for those studying
: Lovinescu connects the Geto-Dacian civilization to the primordial North (Hyperborea). He posits that the spiritual "pole" of the world shifted over millennia, and Dacia served as one of its major terrestrial anchors. Heavily influenced by the Traditionalist school of René
: The work interprets the figure of Zalmoxis not as a historical king, but as a symbolic manifestation of the Logos . The "immortality" of the Dacians is viewed as an initiatory state of being rather than a simple religious belief.
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