Unleash the terror of the Viking Age with the deadly Dane axe - a weapon forged in blood and designed to strike fear into the hearts of enemies. Will you dare to wield this powerful tool of destruction?
Sources:
@Skallagrim
VikingAge.org
@csknived
Viking-Shield.com
VikingMartialArts.com
Jakub Jankiewicz - Creative Commons License
BlueLineGear.com
@lansmuseum
@northwesthistoricalfencing9486
@BuckinBillyRaySmith
@bjornandreasbull-hansen
I'm getting sick of these AI-narrated historical videos where most of it seems like fantasy with a splash of reality. Makes the whole thing seem like nonsense
awesome
1066 (date for tapestry events) was NOT the "Viking" (properly called transition) period, it's after. This bond you talk of is silly, it's to keep the haft from splitting. Your research is a bit fanciful in focus. Was looking for some fact based info, you show a little but the fantastical claims are just too much.
Thank you
interesting video
Wow
"it wasn't just a weapon, it was a tool of destruction" ah yes the floor is made out of floor Why would you ruin your credibility ? Sure, the dane axe is super cool, but it's an axe, just like any other weapon. It could be well made by a master or poorly made for a quick buck, it's essentially a piece of metal stuck to a wooden shaft. It wasn't magic, it couldn't cut through time and space. You keep jumping back and forth between facts and romanticized "poetic" statements. I suggest you pick one and be honest about it. Talk about the function and practical uses of each feature of the weapon, or you can talk about how cool and fearsome it was. If you keep jumping back and forth, the facts will sound like nonsense, then saying just the most obvious, redundant, "dramatic" stuff imaginable makes the whole thing seem silly and juvenile. Like another commenter here said, it's all too fanciful.
Ember orang atas tutupnya pandai besi . Secara betul kapak dua bukan tutup.
cut through armor?
Not really... He said that it can cut through plate armor... They never encountered plate armor...
10% factual historical info... 90% fantastical claims of the power of dane axe & glorifying fantasy version of vikings.