I am reading more about swords because White Savage
corrected me on a detail about swords in other topic, and a few debates
broke out.
An American Renaissance poster suggests in an
article that Germanic tribes used two handed swords centuries before
900 AD and that Dane soldiers were at tactical disadvantages because of
them.
"to force back the Saxons, who were rading
the coasts of North -East Britain (Now East Anglia). And the result was
the gradual, but inexorable displacement of the dominant and far more
"civilized" "Romano-British" by the dull witted Danes with their two
handed swords and their chain mail armor</span>.
Several hundred years
after that, (c. 980 AD), Brian Boru, a distant ancestor of the Kennedy
family, thought it a fine thing to "invite" some English adventurers
from the Home".
http://www.amren.com/mtnews/archives/2004/10/exposing_the_op .php
</font></font></font></font></font> David A. Kyne was the poster</font></font>
Edited by: IceSpeed2
corrected me on a detail about swords in other topic, and a few debates
broke out.
An American Renaissance poster suggests in an
article that Germanic tribes used two handed swords centuries before
900 AD and that Dane soldiers were at tactical disadvantages because of
them.
"to force back the Saxons, who were rading
the coasts of North -East Britain (Now East Anglia). And the result was
the gradual, but inexorable displacement of the dominant and far more
"civilized" "Romano-British" by the dull witted Danes with their two
handed swords and their chain mail armor</span>.
Several hundred years
after that, (c. 980 AD), Brian Boru, a distant ancestor of the Kennedy
family, thought it a fine thing to "invite" some English adventurers
from the Home".
http://www.amren.com/mtnews/archives/2004/10/exposing_the_op .php
</font></font></font></font></font> David A. Kyne was the poster</font></font>
Edited by: IceSpeed2