miércoles, 3 de julio de 2019

You haven't seen this yet? 72h Left!


 
It's the greatest threat global security has ever faced.

All the weapons in the world won't matter once this small army kick into gear.

It's already proven its worth when it demolished an army nearly 40x their size in battlefield.

Find out how they did it here.

It was not their excellent training, or elite skills that helped them.

Eyewitnesses claim members of this army act like men possessed, as if they were under a Devilish spell.

But here's the spine-chilling cut: ancient "end of the world" prophecy talks about the coming of an unstoppable army led by an unholy force, that will battle and destroy 80 armies.



Click here to see how they plan to bring both the United States and Russian Armies to their knees... without firing even one bullet.
 










here are competing theories about the origins of the Anglo-Saxon futhorc. One theory proposes that it was developed in Frisia and from there spread later to England. Another holds that runes were first introduced to England from Scandinavia where the futhorc was modified and then exported to Frisia. Both theories have their inherent weaknesses, and a definitive answer may come from further archaeological evidence. The early futhorc was identical to the Elder Futhark, except for the split of ᚨ a into three variants ᚪ āc, áš« æsc and áš© ōs, resulting in 26 runes. This was necessary to account for the new phoneme produced by the Ingvaeonic split of allophones of long and short a. The earliest áš© ōs rune is found on the 5th-century Undley bracteate. ᚪ āc was introduced later, in the 6th century. The double-barred áš» hægl characteristic of continental inscriptions is first attested as late as 698, on St Cuthbert's coffin; before that, the single-barred Scandinavian variant was used. In England the futhorc expanded. Runic writing in England became closely associated with the Latin scriptoria from the time of Anglo-Saxon Christianization in the 7th century. The futhorc started to be replaced by the Latin alphabet from around the 7th century, but it was still sometimes used up until the 10th or 11th century. In some cases, texts would be written in the Latin alphabet, and þorn and Æ¿ynn came to be used as extensions of the Latin alphabet. By the Norman Conquest of 1066, it was very rare and disappeared altogether shortly thereafter. From at least five centuries of use, fewer than 200 artefacts bearing futhorc inscriptions have survived. Several famous English examples mix runes and Roman script, or Old English and Latin, on the same object, including the Franks Casket and St Cuthbert's coffin; in the latter, three of the names of the Four Evangelists are given in Latin written in runes, but "LUKAS" (Saint Luke) is in Roman script. The coffin is also an example of an object created at the heart of the Anglo-Saxon church that uses runes. A leading expert, Raymond Ian Page, rejects the assumption often made in non-scholarly literature that runes were especially associated in post-conversion Anglo-Saxon England with Anglo-Saxon pa

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