Amplified target

@orthodox_33ad

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Score
33.32
Inbound RTs
1
Amplifiers
1
HHI
1.000
Repeat-crew
0.0%
Within 15m
1
Top amplifier @Placebo_0100.0%
fastest: @Placebo_0first-retweeter: @Placebo_0 (1)median lag: 34.1hcross-components: 0

Amplifier breakdown

1 unique retweeters · 1 total inbound from retweet_edges.csv.

AmplifierRetweetsShareRole
@Placebo_01100.0%mixed_behavior(0.40)

Cascades originated by @orthodox_33ad

1 cascade(s), sorted by retweet count.

First retweeterRetweetsWithin 15mWithin 60mFirst atSample
@Placebo_0111Apr 15, 2026, 19:31 UTC🔸 Bright Tuesday - The Appearance of Panagia Portaitissa on Mount Athos 🩸🔸 On Bright Tuesday, we commemorate the appearance of the Wonderworking Icon of Panagia Portaitissa (“The Gate Keeper”) on Mount Athos in 1004 AD. A unique characteristic of this icon is the bleeding scar that appears on the chin of the Virgin Mary. According to holy tradition, this wonderworking icon of the Mother of God was painted from life by the hand of Saint Luke the Evangelist. During the 9th century, this icon was the personal property of a devout widow from Nicaea in Asia Minor who kept it in her private chapel, and venerated it with great reverence. During the reign of the iconoclast emperor Theophilus (829-842), soldiers came to the house of the widow to carry out the emperor’s edict which called for the confiscation of icons. One of the soldiers struck the icon with his sword, and miraculously, blood began to flow from the gashed cheek of the Panagia. Shaken by this miracle, the soldier instantly repented, renounced the iconoclast heresy, and became a monk at a monastery. On his advice, the widow concealed the icon so that it would not be desecrated further. After praying for guidance before the icon, the widow put the Holy Image into the sea. But the icon did not sink, and began to drift away in the water. Many years later, the icon appeared at the Holy Mountain. On Bright Tuesday in 1004 AD, Gabriel, a Georgian monk in the Iveron Monastery on Mount Athos, received a vision of the Theotokos who guided him to the icon in the sea. Saint Gabriel took the icon and placed it in the alter of the Monastery. The icon however repeatedly disappeared, and was found above the gate of the monastery. In a dream, the Blessed Virgin told Saint Gabriel that this was the place which she herself had chosen, so that she could be the protector of the monks, as opposed to being protected by them. The icon took the name ‘Portaitissa’, as the Holy Theotokos revealed her desire to be the gatekeeper and protector of the Holy Mountain and Athonite monasticism. The original Portaitissa icon can be seen today at the Georgian Iviron Monastery, and continues to work many miracles.