Knarfi
Yaba-daba-doo!
Hah, almost lost my mjollnir last saturday.. fucking lucky that it fell on a mates lap No idea how the hell it got off my neck though, the chain didnt snap..
Hah, almost lost my mjollnir last saturday.. fucking lucky that it fell on a mates lap No idea how the hell it got off my neck though, the chain didnt snap..
Well, according to Jan Guillou, the swedes were afraid of norwegian viking raides during the winter.. The longboats could break the ice, and they came without warning, slicing through the fog and ice like a knife in warm butter.Winter raids were not totally unknown, but the impression I get is that they were usually more of a military invasion in nature as opposed to the "smash and grab" of a raid where the main objective was to gather as many valuables as possible, and head for home. :
Blodørn;6128514 said:Well, according to Jan Guillou, the swedes were afraid of norwegian viking raides during the winter.. The longboats could break the ice, and they came without warning, slicing through the fog and ice like a knife in warm butter.
...the Swedes were just as scared of the Norweigans as the Norwegians were of the Danes, who were just as scared of the Swedes and so on.
Nice. 10 Gummipunkte für dich....all of them being afraid of the Scanians.
Oh, you mean as in "winter raids are not unheard of according to this source" sort of?
I suppose one sould take into account, too, that temperatures were warmer back then, so I suppose it could be that the ice was not as thick in some areas as it is now. Incidentally, at Birka, they supposedly held a winter market on the ice. The ice would have had to be pretty thick for that, but then again, I don't remember who my source is, and I think that it is not an entirely undisputed fact. None the less...
We still do in Sweden, on the Baltic coast. I don't know about the west coast, though. The ice across to Denmark got thick enough that people could cross it to escape the Germans during the war (and for one of our kings to attack Denmark with a whole army, horses and all, without going through the ice, once upson a time!).Blodørn;6132429 said:We generally have no ice on the seas in Scandinavia theese days.... Atleast not in the southern parts of Norway and Swedes..
Ja, sicher. Du auch, was?