Ink Pen by Phil Dunlap for December 28, 2011

  1. Elba 20111218 00003
    doc white  almost 13 years ago

    Don’t rase your arm.

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  2. Adhdshirt  324x324   324x324   324x324   167x150
    bossyheifer  almost 13 years ago

    rofl Oh wow Tyr, I’d love to see what your manly stench could do to a solid!

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  3. Georg von rosen   oden som vandringsman  1886  odin  the wanderer
    runar  almost 13 years ago

    The calendar used in the Viking Age had months of six five-day weeks (called "fimmts, from the Old Norse word for five). Four of the days were named after deities: Týrsdagr, Óðinsdagr, Þórsdagr and Frjádagr. Yes, this does add up to only 360 days in the year, but five days not part of any month were added as part of a midwinter festival (six in leap years). The last day of the week was not named after a deity – it was Laugardagr, which translates as “bathing day”. With one day in five set aside for a bath, the idea of the unwashed Viking barbarian (also perpetuated in Hagar The Horrible) can be put to rest. In fact, the Vikings probably had better personal hygiene than the rest of Europe. The seven-day week came to Scandinavia at the end of the Viking Age in the 10th-11th centuries, when Christianity was imposed there.

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