Axe of Iron – The Settlers
The first double-sided axe was within Scandinavia. It is a real Nordic gun which spread through the duration of Europe and England. The earliest flint Guitar in the world was dated 1700 BC. But who was that pre-historic “Axe God?” On among the upright monoliths at Stonehenge, the forms of four axe-heads are found. That suggests that the Axe-God relates to the Pillar God. The Pillar Lord is Poseidon. In earliest Greece, Poseidon often appears holding just one and occasionally a double axe.
Later on Poseidon exchanged his Guitar for a Trident. The origin of Frisian Laws comes from the Frisian Lord Fosite. He traveled on the stormy seas to the sacred land of Frisia. There he used his axe on the shore and a Viking axe spring gushed up. The spot was named ‘Axenshow,’ or ‘Axtemple.’ The Frisians lay around the spring and the Lord Fosite shown them the Law.
The monks, cradled properly, while they thought, in the love and peace of God, stopped what these were performing and peered curiously at these odd craft. They found intense seeking guys disgorging from the vessels, brute-men in send byrnies and helms, with swords and axes. They didn’t end, but scaled the cliffs with a dreadful function and built straight for the poor, peace-loving monks.
Unarmed and rather empty to martial ways, they went in panic, in this manner and that, trying to truly save the valuable relics and gifts of the monastery. What opportunity had they? The Vikings were curved on an orgy of killing and looting. Their swords pierced the monks’ skin, while these horrible war-axes separated heads from bodies and in some cases chopped through from the throat to the middle, creating half-men of those that had once been Lord fearing human beings.