Halvor  Brann
Halvor  Brann
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  • anybody know where i can get a good free sample pack of viking instruments
    anybody know where i can get a good free sample pack of viking instruments
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  • This where I will be working and performing a ren faire with the green sash Viking group two weeks from now I will bring history from the past to the present
    This where I will be working and performing a ren faire with the green sash Viking group two weeks from now I will bring history from the past to the present
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  • Archbishop Ælfheah of Canterbury was killed by Thorkell the Tall’s liquored up Vikings on this day, April 19, in 1012.

    Thorkell’s men had captured the Archbishop, who was a central figure in the negotiations around Geld (tribute) payments. The captors saw an opportunity to fill their pockets with silver through demanding a ransom for their hostage.

    Things didn’t go their way though – the Vikings were dealing with a stubborn and pious man. After 7 months of captivity, the Archbishop still refused to allow a ransom to be paid for his freedom on the grounds that he didn’t want to further impoverish his countrymen.

    The captors reached the end of their patience and killed him during a drunken feast fuelled by southern wine on April 19 1012 at Greenwich. Archbishop Ælfheah’s death appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:

    “… the raiding-army became much stirred up against the bishop, because he did not want to offer them any money, and forbade that anything might be granted in return for him. Also they were very drunk, because there was wine brought from the south. Then they seized the bishop, led him to their “hustings” on the Saturday in the octave of Easter, and then pelted him there with bones and the heads of cattle; and one of them struck him on the head with the butt of an axe, so that with the blow he sank down and his holy blood fell on the earth, and sent forth his holy soul to God’s kingdom.”

    Some sources mention that the final, killing blow with the back of an axe was delivered as an act of kindness by a Christian convert by the name of Thrum. Another contemporary report tells that Thorkell the Tall attempted to save the Archbishop from being killed by offering the mob everything he owned except for his ship, in exchange for the Archbishops life. The offer was clearly ignored by the angry, drunken warriors who had reached the end of their patience.
    Archbishop Ælfheah of Canterbury was killed by Thorkell the Tall’s liquored up Vikings on this day, April 19, in 1012. Thorkell’s men had captured the Archbishop, who was a central figure in the negotiations around Geld (tribute) payments. The captors saw an opportunity to fill their pockets with silver through demanding a ransom for their hostage. Things didn’t go their way though – the Vikings were dealing with a stubborn and pious man. After 7 months of captivity, the Archbishop still refused to allow a ransom to be paid for his freedom on the grounds that he didn’t want to further impoverish his countrymen. The captors reached the end of their patience and killed him during a drunken feast fuelled by southern wine on April 19 1012 at Greenwich. Archbishop Ælfheah’s death appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: “… the raiding-army became much stirred up against the bishop, because he did not want to offer them any money, and forbade that anything might be granted in return for him. Also they were very drunk, because there was wine brought from the south. Then they seized the bishop, led him to their “hustings” on the Saturday in the octave of Easter, and then pelted him there with bones and the heads of cattle; and one of them struck him on the head with the butt of an axe, so that with the blow he sank down and his holy blood fell on the earth, and sent forth his holy soul to God’s kingdom.” Some sources mention that the final, killing blow with the back of an axe was delivered as an act of kindness by a Christian convert by the name of Thrum. Another contemporary report tells that Thorkell the Tall attempted to save the Archbishop from being killed by offering the mob everything he owned except for his ship, in exchange for the Archbishops life. The offer was clearly ignored by the angry, drunken warriors who had reached the end of their patience.
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  • Save this and use it as you see fit
    Save this and use it as you see fit
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  • Do we have a release date for the IOS app ?
    Do we have a release date for the IOS app ?
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  • Looks like the top to a mace the hollowed out inside from what I know about midevil weaponry and Roman weapons served to make the weapon lighter and easier to swing faster while still maintaining hardness and damage with the notches or bumps it makes sense that the wood would not survive as it’s a weaker organic material

    ( I left this on the original post but wanted to share my perspective here also )
    Looks like the top to a mace the hollowed out inside from what I know about midevil weaponry and Roman weapons served to make the weapon lighter and easier to swing faster while still maintaining hardness and damage with the notches or bumps it makes sense that the wood would not survive as it’s a weaker organic material ( I left this on the original post but wanted to share my perspective here also )
    Ancient mystery.

    Roman dodecahedra:
    These intriguing objects have recently made headlines, with a new find from Norton Disney in Lincolnshire prompting much discussion as to their function.

    Dodecahedra date from the Roman period in Britain (43-410AD). About 130 have been found across the north-west provinces of the former Roman empire, each finely crafted from copper alloy.

    No representations of these objects are known in ancient art or literature. They do not conform to a standard size and rarely show use-wear which could hint at their purpose. Although armchair experts will tell you their granny used one to knit gloves, archaeologists are undecided on their intended use.
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  • I have what I like to call my Nordic bug out bag it’s a deer hide leather bag with leather straps and a draw string it has a small portable altar inside a book of my families practices a portable thor altar a pocket edition of the elder Edda and the havamal a seax and about a months worth of beef jerky and 2 bottles of water I take it with me when I go on trips and other things I recommend everyone make one especially pagans in the USA
    I have what I like to call my Nordic bug out bag it’s a deer hide leather bag with leather straps and a draw string it has a small portable altar inside a book of my families practices a portable thor altar a pocket edition of the elder Edda and the havamal a seax and about a months worth of beef jerky and 2 bottles of water I take it with me when I go on trips and other things I recommend everyone make one especially pagans in the USA
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  • I just made one of these fairly simple construction if anyone else wants to make one here’s the info on how
    I just made one of these fairly simple construction if anyone else wants to make one here’s the info on how
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