"For all that, the marriage bond is strict, and 
no feature in their mode of life is more creditable to them 
than this. Unlike the great majority of barbarians, they 
are content with one wife : very few of them have more 
than one, and these few exceptions are not due to wan- 
tonness ; they are cases of men of high rank, to whom 
several matrimonial alliances have been offered from 
motives of policy. The wife does not bring a dowry to 
her husband ; on the contrary, he offers one to her. This 
part of the affair is arranged by her parents and kinsmen, 
and they pass judgment on the wedding gifts, which are 
no toys collected to suit feminine frivolities or adorn a 
bride ; instead of that, they consist of oxen, and a 
bridled horse, and shield and spear and sword. These 
are the presents that await her as a wife, and her own 
wedding present to her husband in return is a gift of 
arms. This is the strongest bond of union this the 
mystery of marriage ; these are their gods of wedded life.
[...]
So they guard the chastity of their lives, with 
no shows to entice them nor orgies to excite their evil 
passions. To men and women alike such a thing as 
secret correspondence is unknown. Amongst all this 
immense population adultery is extremely rare : its 
penalty is instant, and is left to the husband ; he cuts 
off the hair of the unfaithful wife, strips her, turns 
her out of his house in the presence of the kinsmen, 
and scourges her through the whole village. For 
there is no pardon for the fallen woman ; not by her 
beauty, not by her youth, not by her wealth, will she 
succeed in finding a husband. For no one there makes 
a jest of vice, or says that seducing and being seduced 
is the style of the period.
Better still, to be sure, is the practice of those states in 
which none but maidens marry, and a woman becomes 
a wife with a wife's hopes and wishes once and 
once only. Thus it becomes as much a matter of 
course for her to have only one husband as to have 
only one body or one life, to the end that she may not 
look beyond him nor let her desires stray further, and 
that she may not so much cherish her husband as her 
status as a wife. To limit the number of the family or 
to put to death any of the later-born infants is held to 
be an abomination, and with the Germans good customs 
have more authority than good laws elsewhere. "
- Publius Cornelius Tacitus; Germania
 Written in the 1st century AND by their official enemy, which makes it 
all the more credible. But Tacitus' was an honorable man, he sought to 
rebuke his own people and predicted their inevitable downfall as a 
consequence of their increasing degeneracy. The early Roman Republic 
adhered to the same moral virtues as the Germanic tribes of Tacitus 
time, which was the main reason for their unsurpassed success. (that, 
and racial homogeneity, but that goes hand in hand with virtue anyway)
And he was right, the Germanics ended up conquering all of Western 
Europe, after the Romans put the final nail in their own coffin by their
 de jure adoption of christianity. Then the Germanic kingdoms split and 
in-fought after they did the same.
The so-called Viking age was nothing but a united Scandinavian effort 
against this foreign usurpative religion. Lindisfarne happened only a 
few years after the massacre at Verden (which you recently mentioned in a
 vid), after the surviving Saxons fled to Denmark and warned them of 
what was imminently impending. 
It is hardly a coincidence that that was the time when repeated, 
organized attacks on centers of christianity began (even if the 
post-modern "historians" say it was for the usual trivial reasons of 
'easy target & profit'")
And why was England the main target of invasion by the 'vikings'? 
Because they were a brotherfolk, who had fought a similar huge civil war
 AGAINST christianity barely even a century prior ( check King Penda of 
Mercia, a true hero from our æt). In other words, it was a 
liberation-invasion.
'Danedrotten
Dåd vi skylde,
hver, som god
og gjæv vil nævnes.
Ve den fejge
Nidding, som flyr!
når Kongen trænger
til trofast Følge!'
 Lindisfarne also happened, because that was the missionary center (HQ) 
from where they sent missionaries to Norway. So "big surprise", the 
Vikings who sacked that shit hold came from?..... yeah: Norway.
What is also often forgotten, in relation to your comment about the Massacre at Verden, by the Franks , is that the vast majority of Viking attacks took place against France . If I recall correctly, as much as 90% of the raids!
 However, this happened only after the Scandinavians had spent some time 
cleaning up back home in Scandinavia. Because until then (Verden), they 
had been tolerant to the Christians, and there were many monasteries and
 churches in Scandinavia already -- with British (Celtic and 
Anglo-Saxon) monks and priests. They sakced them and burnt those first and then went to stop more from coming -- from e. g. Lindisfarne.
Indeed, which would make sense, since the Franks were the primary 
military enemy. Strategically I think they focused their invasion on 
England for these reasons:
1: The forced conversion of the English was still recent, and had far 
from settled in the hearts and minds of our brothers, so ousting the 
authority would have ensured a quick reversion to their authentic 
loyalties.
2: To use England as a launching pad for war against France. If England 
had been under our control, the Franks could never have invaded Denmark 
as they did, since they would have been split on two fronts. The 
Norsemen could never have stood a chance against the combined armies of 
the Franks in open-field battle, but we could have stalled them 
indefinitely or perhaps even drained them and achieved final victory, if
 we had controlled England.
Also, the beginning of the Viking age is such an arbitrary date anyway. 
Several of our Kings, most prominently King Hugleik, began raiding 
France immediately after they'd adopted christianity around 500AD. 
Clovis converted around 507 I believe, which is also approx the exact time that Dannevirke was first built. 
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