Det er også interessant at Biarmia var i dagens Russisk Samiske områder på Kola halvøya. På dette kartet kan du se at området som ble kalt Norvegia var på sørspissen av dagens Norge, sør for Tilemarchia. Dette er et eldgammelt kart av Skandinavia som ble laget av Olaus Magnus ca. It is also interesting to see that Biarmia was the Russian Saami Areas at the Kola Peninsula. In this map you can see that Norvegia is at the southern tip of present Norway, south of Tilemarchia. This is an ancient map of the Scandinavian areas made by Olaus Magnus about 1520. It also sounds reasonable that most of the land in Norway actually was deserted and grains only grew in certain places. This legend indirectly provides an ethnic description of the Saami and the rest of the people in the Nordic. In spite of the controversies, the geographical descriptions are most likely based on observed facts. Nennius about 800 AD with “Historia Brittonum” was the first author of this legend. When the ideas about Good, God and Evil are ignored the Legends of King Arthur are at least as historical interesting as other texts from this era. As known, chosen parts and certain interpretations of the Norse Sagas have been central in the history building and historical discourse of the Nordic countries. Like with the Norse Sagas, Octher’s Travel (Ohthere’s Voyages) and other stories from this period of time, the reliability of King Arthur Legends is controversial in regard to what is fact and fiction and if king Arthur himself was a fact or a myth. The legend of King Arthur described the people of Norweia as wild and savage, did not love God or their neighbours, because all evil come from the North, yet there were among them certain Christians. Richard Hakluyt: Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation If so, that is long before Saint Olaf of Norway (995 - 1030) christened Norway. This text surprisingly tells that the Christian king Arthur baptized people all over Norway to believe in one God. He placed Russian Lapland and the Baltic Sea shores of Russia as the eastern Bounds of his British Empire (Britannia). There are additional areas mentioned in the text. Lapland (Lappam), and other lands of the East Sea (Orientalis Oceani = Østersjøen, Östersjön, the Baltic Sea) even into Russian Lapland (Lappa) and Russia (Russiam). The Legend of King Arthur of Britains (517 AD) tells that the same people lived in Scantia that is now called Norway, and on the Islands beyond Norway (Norweia) and appertaining into Norway, Sweden (Suechordam), Gotland (Gutlandiam), Denmarke (Daciam) ….
The following texts are quotes and a short summary into modern language with Latin names put in parenthesis, and some comments of mine. Written by Galfridus Monmentensis, and printed at Heidelberge anno 1587. Arthur and his conquests of the North regions, taken out of the historie of the kings of Britaine”. The text is from “Certeine Testimonies concerning K. The Legend of King Arthur and about King Edgar of Angeles King Arthur as one of the Nine Worthies, detail from the Christian Heroes Tapestry dated c. Credit to Christopher Wahren Fine Photographs: Special Exhibit: Laplander Studies by Roland Bonaparte
Ole Olsen Stal (Stall) a Saami from Varanger in Eastern Finnmark, Norway. Īnders Andersen Anto from Nesseby in Eastern Finnmark, Norway. Dette er antropologiske foto som jeg omtalte i en blogg fra September 2007.
Aigin now has to figure out how to mislead the Tchudes and save the Sami community.These are Anthropological photographies that I wrote about in a blog from September 2007. They agree, but when they have left the camp with Aigin, one of them returns and kills Raste. When Aigin sees this he dashes forward, and says he will guide them, if they just let Raste live. They want him to guide them to the coast, and start torturing him.
He tells Aigin to go to the coast and warn the others, and gives him his shaman drum as a token. When the Tchudes attack, only Aigin survives, hidden in a tent. The Sami chief orders the community to decamp and go to another settlement at the coast, but Aigin and three others decide to stay and fight the Tchudes. When the Sami teen-ager Aigin arrives to his family's cot in the evening, he finds his parents and little sister killed by the Tchudes. From time immemorial the Sami people had lived alone in the Arctic area of Europe, but 1000 years ago Tchude warriors from the East invaded the territory.