Just check the blog out if you wanna know, what this blog is about. Follow or not, your choice! :)

My email-address, if Supporters wanna contact me: rage.valley@hotmail.com (notice that I've gotten lots of mail, it takes some time to reply to everyone. And yeah, I will reply to everyone back!)

WARNING!!! Mostly publishing text chapter by chapter from 2083 - A European Declaration of Indepence manifest, so it would be easier to read it for some people. Please, read it with a thought. And when you have done it, share this to your friends.

Cheers, fellow crusaders!!

-Berwick- xoxoxo

 

Any and all individuals with the appropriate skills are encouraged to contribute to a second edition of this compendium by improving and expanding it where needed.

Andrew Berwick, London, England - 2011

Justiciar Knight Commander for Knights Templar Europe and one of several leaders of the National and pan-European Patriotic Resistance Movement

With the assistance from brothers and sisters in England, France, Germany, Sweden, Austria, Italy, Spain, Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark, the US etc.

Anonymous asked
If I was born in England and I am English and my parents, grandparents and a few generations back were born in England, am I a nordic man or could I possibly have nordic genealogy? :)

Not Nordic, I think. Because The Nordic countries make up a region in Northern Europe and the Nort Atlantic which consists of Denmark, Finland,  Iceland, Norway and Sweden, and their associated territories: the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Åland.

But! You could have a nordic genealogy. :)

Because as you probably know, The Kingdom of England was founded mainly by invading Angles and in part by Jutes and Saxons, who all originated in Denmark prior to the Viking Age. These tribes shared a Scandinavian culture with the neighbouring Swedes, Danes and Geats, who all appear in the English national saga Beowulf, which is itself set in Denmark.

Much of England, particularly East Anglia, Mercia and Northhumbria, were once part of the Danelaw, an area of England ruled by Danish Vikings. These Danish Vikings may have been following a tradition of fortune-seeking in England that pre-dated the Viking Age, and was already well established when earlier Angles, Jutes and Saxons set up petty kingdoms in England. By contrast, the Norwegian Vikings tended to raid Scotland, Wales and Ireland.

And so on…