Vasile-lovinescu: Dacia-hiperboreana -
: Lovinescu identifies specific Romanian landmarks—such as the Bucegi Mountains, the Danube, and the Carpathians—as part of a symbolic "Center of the World." He treats the landscape as a "geography of the soul" where physical features correspond to metaphysical realities.
: A central thesis is the "uninterrupted" link between the pre-Christian Dacian tradition and Romanian Orthodox Christianity. He argues that Christianity didn't destroy the old tradition but "baptized" and fulfilled it, preserving the Hyperborean essence in Romanian folklore and liturgical life. The Influence of René Guénon Dacia-Hiperboreana - Vasile-Lovinescu
: 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. The Influence of René Guénon : Lovinescu connects
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 He used symbols like the (the Dacian Draco),