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Recent MYSTERIOUS Discoveries About The Vikings!
Check out these Recent MYSTERIOUS Discoveries About The Vikings! From surprising facts to strange unexplained findings, this top 10 list of recent viking discoveries will amaze you!
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10. The First Viking City
The city of Ribe, in western Denmark, was the first Viking city in Scandinavia, and the source of numerous archaeological discoveries. As a part of the ‘Northern Emporium Project’, scientists have been digging down to 10 feet, where the first traces of the original settlements can be found.
9. Burials in Italy
We usually think of Vikings living in the regions around northern Europe and, perhaps, North America… but a discovery in Italy has shown a different side to the seafarers. Near the capital of the island of Sicily, Palermo, a grave was discovered with 10 skeletons.
8. Brutal Ancestors
The Vikings were renowned for their violent tendencies, but it seems as if they were relatively calm in comparison with their own ancestors… if a discovery made beneath a Swedish lake is anything to go by.
7. Confirmation of a Legend
Every culture has its own myths and legends, but it’s very rare that proof is found that the stories are true… and that’s exactly what researchers discovered during a dig in Trondheim in Norway. According to Sverre’s Saga, a record of events of one of the kings of Norway, and one of very few manuscripts that have survived from Viking times… in 1197, the King and his troops were attacked at his castle stronghold, called Sverresborg.
6. Music and Beads
I told you about the Viking city of Ribe and the artifacts that were found there… but there have been a series of discoveries from there, and elsewhere, that give us much more insight into what the daily lives of the Vikings were like. Rather than being all about the pillaging, and attacking coastal towns… they were a culture that enjoyed music, making beads and creating decorative ornaments.
5. Burial Chambers
In 2017, researchers announced what they believed to be one of the most significant discoveries ever made in Denmark- a series of chamber graves in the hamlet of Horning, near Skanderborg.
4. Harald Bluetooth’s Treasure Trove
Harald Bluetooth was one of the last Viking kings between about the year 958 to 986 and was credited with mass changes across the empire- including the construction of a number of forts, encouraging cultural pursuits, and even building the oldest known bridge in southern Scandinavia.
3. Burial Mounds
In early 2019, almost 1000 years after the Viking age ended, archaeologists announced the discovery of a rare find near the town of Halden in Norway. It was a burial mound, but this one contained several longhouses and a ship. The ship, itself, is a little more than 65 feet long and was less than a foot beneath the topsoil.
2. Mass Grave of the Great Heathen Army
The Great Viking Army, also known as the Great Heathen Army, was a coalition of warriors from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden who grouped together to invade England and avenge the death of Ragnar Lothbrok in the year 816. After taking a great deal of land, they were finally defeated by Alfred the Great at the Battle of Edington and retreated back.
1. Female Warriors
If you imagine a Viking Warrior, you're probably thinking of a big, gruff guy, with a beard, covered in armor, and carrying an ax. This is, of course, purely a stereotype, and the Viking warriors were a very diverse group! In 1878, a burial site was discovered on the site of Birka- a Viking town from the year 750 to 950 in central Sweden.
Origins Explained is the place to be to find all the answers to your questions, from mysterious events and unsolved mysteries to everything there is to know about the world and its amazing animals!
Folkofon at Trondheim Chamber Music Festival 2008
Folkofon at Trondheim Chamber Music Festival 2008
As a part of Trondheim Chamber Music Festival`s Sound & Light party at the opening of festival 2008 Ole Hamre played on the Folkofon. A multimedia multitude of voices, faces and images.
Norway ~ Celebration Syttende mai ~ May 17 [HD]
Watch in HD (720p or 1080p), the button is in the footer browser of the video!
Location: Hovet, a small mountainvillage in Norway, to be found on your route from Bergen to Oslo, or vice versa.
Travelling by train
It is also possible to travel from Oslo to Bergen by train. The so called Bergen line, famous as the most beautiful train traject from Europe. Geilo and Ål are the most nearby railway stations to Hovet. Travelling by train is the most green / ecological way of travelling.
Syttende mai, May 17
Norwegian Constitution Day is the National Day of Norway and is an official national holiday observed on May 17 each year. Among Norwegians, the day is referred to simply as syttende mai or syttande mai (both meaning May Seventeenth), Nasjonaldagen (The National Day) or Grunnlovsdagen (The Constitution Day), although the latter is less frequent.
Historical background
The Constitution of Norway was signed at Eidsvoll on May 17 in the year 1814. The constitution declared Norway to be an independent nation.
The celebration of this day began spontaneously among students and others from early on. However, Norway was at that time under Swedish rule (following the Convention of Moss in August 1814) and for some years the King of Sweden was reluctant to allow the celebrations. For a couple of years in the 1820s, King Karl Johan actually forbade it, as he thought the celebrations a kind of protest and disregard—even revolt—against Swedish sovereignty. The king's attitude changed slightly after the Battle of the Square in 1829, an incident which resulted in such a commotion that the king had to allow it. It was, however, not until 1833, that anyone ventured to hold a public address on behalf of the day. That year, official celebration was initiated by the monument of the late politician Christian Krogh, known to have stopped the king from gaining too much personal power. The address was held by Henrik Wergeland, thoroughly witnessed and accounted for by a Swedish spy, sent by the king himself.
After 1864, the day became more established, and the first children's parade was launched in Christiania, in a parade consisting only of boys. This initiative was taken by Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, although Wergeland made the first known children's parade at Eidsvoll around 1820. It was only in 1899 that girls were allowed to join in the parade for the first time.
By historical coincidence, the Second World War ended in Norway just nine days before that year's Constitution Day, on May 8, 1945, when the occupying German forces surrendered. Even if The Liberation Day is an official flag day in Norway, the day is not an official holiday and is not broadly celebrated. Instead a new and broader meaning has been added to the celebration of Norwegian Constitution Day on May 17.
The day focused originally on the Norwegian constitution, but after 1905, the focus has been directed also towards the royal family.
More: wiki
Traditional Norwegian costumes
In Norway, it is common to wear bunad at various celebrations such as: folk dances, weddings, and especially the May 17 National Day celebrations. In recent years, its use has reached far outside folk dancing, folk music, and particular holidays. Accepted as proper gala attire, it is increasingly common to see people, and especially women, dressed in bunad. The former Norwegian foreign minister, Thorvald Stoltenberg, made history by presenting his accreditation as ambassador to Margrethe II of Denmark dressed in a bunad. Bunads were also conspicuous among those present at the Blessing of the Reign of King Harald and Queen Sonja, demonstrating that the bunad is now considered acceptable as an alternative form of formal wear even on the most solemn public occasions. Moreover, people tend to wear bunads to festive celebrations such as anniversaries and birthdays, and for religious occasions including baptisms, confirmations and Christmas.
There is ongoing debate about the official status of various outfits, and what allowed variations are. In 1947 an official institution, the Landsnemda for Bunadspørsmål, was organized to act in an advisory capacity on all questions dealing with bunads in Norway. Due to ongoing discussions on the status of bunads, it is not possible to state accurately the number of different types of bunads in Norway, but most estimates place the number at around 200.
From the late 19th century until quite recently the image which was most commonly used to represent the Norwegian traditional rural dress in general was that of the Hardanger woman's bunad, but in more recent times this image is being increasingly superseded by that of the East Telemark woman's bunad.
More:
What you see in the video is the traditional bunad from Hallingdal.
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Music in this video:
Secret Garden
Title:
Celebration
Trondheim Chamber Music Festival 2008-2013
In this video we present some festival highlights from Trondheim Chamber Music Festival 2008-2013. Trondheim Chamber Music Festival is one of the major festivals in Norway and has since its inception in 1996 specialized in presenting chamber music in all genres, finding chamber music to be an expression of musical collaboration at a high professional level, and hence inherent in most music genres. Based on this philosophy, the festival promotes early music and contemporary music, jazz, popular music, rock and folk music. The festival is attracting attention from all over the world and has gained great international reputation for presenting a living Festival Composer each year. It also expresses youthfulness and vitality with focus on young ensembles at a high artistic level. The festival also arrange Trondheim International Chamber Music Competition & Academy.
MoH:AA - Mission 2 - Escape From Trondheim
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Into The White movie pre-premiere in Trondheim, Norway
Director Petter Næss & actor Florian Lukas taking questions from the audience after the pre-premiere of the movie Into The White in Trondheim, Norway. The movie also stars Rupert Grint. Spoken languages are english & norwegian.
Steinvikholmen Castle Ruins - Central Norway
Welcome to the Lilli E Show!
- The Norwegian who decided to Vlog about Norway.
( Creative, I know! )
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In this video you're taking a walk with me and my younger brother a Steinvikholmen castle, Central Norway!
You can read about these castle ruins here:
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Uploading Schedule:
MONDAYS - Out & About
WEDNESDAYS - Weird Norwegian Expressions
FRIDAYS - Fun Fact Friday
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Recorded with: Canon g7x mark ii
Edited with: Filmora
Music: YouTube Music Library
The secret server in norway not the orginal film..
A norwegian server, but its open for all people.
Norwegian anthem played on Folkofon
Ole Hamre`s Folkofon
Harry and the Potters in Norway - The Foil
The Foil
Harry and the Potters Scandinavian Tour 2010
From the first HatP show EVER in Scandinavia. Øksendal Libris bokhandel, Trondheim, Norway
A totally awesome show with lots and lots of giggling... :D
Viking Burial Mound ~ Norway
This burial mound of a Viking dates from between 700 to 1,000 A.D.......there is now an elementary school on the grounds.
April 6, 2015
The nine anonymous violin concertos in Trondheim
Trondheim, June 4th 2017:
No less than nine anonymous 18th century violin concertos are preserved in the NTNU’s manuscript collection in Trondheim. The identities of the composers is a mystery that remains to be solved. All we know is that this music was performed in Trondheim throughout the 18th century, by professional musicians, for a wealthy audience with a taste for the latest continental art.
Last week, I gathered a few of my dear colleagues in the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra for a read-through after rehearsal. This is what we recorded. Most likely, this is the first time this music has been played since the 18th century.
We would like to ask you, dear listener, what you think. Can the composer be identified? If you have any clue, opinion or knowledge to share, please get in touch.
Sincerely, Sigurd Imsen (baroque violin)
post@sigurdimsen.com
Manuscript Gunnerus xm 141:
1st movement, Largo
3rd movement
2nd movement
(we ran out of time before the 4th movement)
NORWAY: BRITISH RESCUE TEAM ARRIVES FOR SUBMARINE
English/Nat
XFA
The British rescue team and a mini-submarine has arrived on the coast of Norway and is ready to set sail to help save 116 people trapped in a Russian submarine.
From Trondheim harbour the rescue team will sail out into Barents Sea to the position above the trapped Russian submarine.
The Kursk nuclear submarine became trapped on Saturday in international waters off the northwestern Russian coast, about 250 kilometers (185 miles) from Norwegian territory.
The L-R-5 mini-submarine was flown from Scotland to Norway on Wednesday.
It took workers several hours to unload the mini-sub off the plane and then transport it to the harbour at Trondheim.
It arrived at the port at 11 p.m. (2100 GMT) on Wednesday.
Workers then toiled before dawn on Thursday to load the mini-sub and other equipment onto a supply ship.
The supply ship and a Norwegian ship, carrying deep-sea divers, are not expected to arrive at the accident site before Friday.
The Kursk submarine has been stuck since Saturday at a depth of about 108 meters (350 feet).
The Russian Navy has said it has no idea of the conditions inside the submarine, including whether anyone inside was still alive.
Chances grow bleaker by the hour as temperatures turn frigid and the oxygen supply dwindles.
The British Commander Alan Hoskins said his crew has carried out many rescue exercises.
The last exercise the team did was in June in the Baltic Sea, working with Swedish and Norwegian submarines.
He says the most critical factor in the rescue is the seal around the hatch and the skirt under the submarine.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
When the two surfaces meet that then provides a soft seal. What the pilot will then do would be to pump out the water to create a big pressure difference between the skirt area and the sea. That pressure difference, that is what holds it on. You then have what we call a hard seal. Once you have a hard seal the next step is to equalise the pressure between the rescue submarine, the skirt area and the distress submarine. Only once those pressures have been equalised can you open the hatchet safely and then let people transfer from the distress submarine into the rescue chamber.
SUPERCAPTION: Alan Hoskins, the British Commander of L-R-5
On a brightly lit dock early on Thursday morning about 15 people worked with forklifts to load the mini-sub onto a red Norwegian supply ship.
The sub will be loaded and the ship ready to depart by 9 a.m. (0700 GMT), officials said.
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Medal of Honor Allied Assault - Mission 2 - TRONDHEIM (HD, No Commentary)
Revisiting the classic Medal of Honor Allied Assault on PC. This was perhaps my all time favourite war game ever with one of the most beautiful soundtrack's by Michael Giacchino. It was released in 2002. Wow where does time go? Anyway, I hope you Enjoy :-)
About Medal of Honor Allied Assault:
Soundtrack:
Making Reality Really Real Trondheim 2010 Jennifer Kanary part 2/4
Making Reality Really Real, Consciousness Reframed 2010 took place in Trondheim Norway. This is a recording of my presentation part 2/4. The presentation lasts about 20 mins and then their are about 10 mins of questions.
In this paper I investigate the concept of a hallucination from three frameworks.
- Hallucinations as a symptom of mental illness
- Hallucinations in the radical constructivists concept of 'The Invented Reality'
- Hallucinations in relation to the concept of living in a (quantum) computer simulation
I do this as a way to show that the stigma of madness is related to our concepts of reality.
This paper is part of my PhD research at Plymouth University: Labyrinth Psychotica. I am interested how an art can be used as a creative tool of empathy. In order to do this, in my opinion, an art experience could achieve this by infiltrating and altering our concepts of reality...
Tnx to Nikola for filming it.
This paper was presented at the International Conference Consciousness Reframed XI -- Making Reality Really Real, Trondheim, November 4 -- 6, 2010. It was published in the volume R. Ascott, E. Gangvik, M. Jahrmann (eds.), Making Reality Really Real - Consciousness Reframed XI, Trondheim, TEKS Publishing, 2010]
***Although written for Making Reality Really Real, this presentation was also given to a small audience at Global Conference on Madness 3 at Oxford University, organized by Interdisciplinary.net
Bob Hund - Studentersamfundet Trondheim 22.10.2016
Singing with Prosjekt: Pop!
Ancient Viking Ship and Long Buildings Found Buried in Norway Field
Ancient Viking Ship and Long Buildings Found Buried in Norway Field - Almost one thousand years after the end of the Viking Age, Norwegian archaeologists have made a sensational find near Halden in the south-east of Norway. The burial mound and adjacent field harbor several longhouses and at least one ship burial.
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*Stock footage used that best describes the video content.
#Vikings #Norway #Archaeology
Proof Q Civilian Top Secret Security Clearance / Bob Lazar MJ-12 which is 38 Levels Above TopS
We do not claim any rights to this video or interview. This interview was from the Joe Rogan Experience captured by body language observer Derek Van Schaik and given his personal observations.
We do not know originator(s) - Joe Rogan, Bob Lazar or Derek Van Schaik.
The Mini clip is used solely as an educational tool / confirmation.
This video is not intended to discuss or debate any form of religion, spirituality or the potential of other life forms, here, below or above.
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The information contained within body language is based upon study of human emotion, posture, sequential movements. Some say it is pure speculation, opinion.
Scientific research and controlled study have yielded a wealth of information about body language, but to a non-scientist, the more important information focuses on practical applications of body language knowledge. In other words, there is a great deal of ongoing interest in how body language affects real-world communication. People want to not only understand more about body language, but also want to know how to apply this knowledge in their day-to-day live
For more info
More details and analysis of all the popular body language and investigative videos on my main Derek Van Schaik Channel, product reviews, and much more.
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We do not endorse or promote the art or science of Body Language but you can learn more here:
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Disclaimer : We are not here to debate the possibilities of potential life existence & other forms of spirituality, nor Bob Lazars experiences.
But he proves a point. And guess what that is?
If you have read this far,... if you could ask anyone in the world any one question you wanted, what would it be?
Leave in comments.
Secret Room Found While Metal Sealed Bunker Discoveries Japanese in Weh Island Province Aceh I