Valric In Grar: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Valric In Grar:''' In Grar means "the Grey" in Old Norwegian Norse which is an epithet he aquired due to his unusual habit of wearing mostly grey clothing despite being able to afford expensive dyes. | '''Valric In Grar:''' In Grar means "the Grey" in Old Norwegian Norse which is an epithet he aquired due to his unusual habit of wearing mostly grey clothing despite being able to afford expensive dyes. | ||
'''Description and story:''' | '''Description and story:''' | ||
Norwegian Norseman of middling nobility. The second son of the Jarl of Staavagard on the south western coast of Norway from between 950 A.d to 980 A.D. An inexperienced but enthusiastic heavy fighter and archer who preferred the almost Hiltless longswords common to his people, the Yew Longbow, and Kite shield. He wore a plain undyed linen tunic under a plain grey wool tunic, under a riveted Chainmail hauberk belted at the waist with a dark cow leather belt about an inch wide with a silver buckle, belt plates, and belt tip in the jelling style like the penannular brooch that held his grey wool rectangular cloak on, a Conical helm with a Nasal guard and a chainmail avantail, a pair of grey wool trousers, grey herringbone wool wicklebandr leg wrappings over Brown cow leather high shoes, and a pair of Naalbinding wool socks. Around his neck he wore an inch thick twisted silver Torc necklace with the heads of birds on the terminal ends, and on his right hand was an old silver ring fashioned in the shape of a Bird with a serpent coiled around it symbolizing the struggle between wisdom and the power of destruction. For a Norseman of his time he was well educated and as such earned his living in his father's Longhall as a [[Skald]] by singing the old songs, telling the old tales, reciting poetry and sagas, and playing playing a strange stringed instrument that he got from a Celt while he was a-Viking with his uncle. | Norwegian Norseman of middling nobility. The second son of the Jarl of Staavagard on the south western coast of Norway from between 950 A.d to 980 A.D. An inexperienced but enthusiastic heavy fighter and archer who preferred the almost Hiltless longswords common to his people, the Yew Longbow, and Kite shield. He wore a plain undyed linen tunic under a plain grey wool tunic, under a riveted Chainmail hauberk belted at the waist with a dark cow leather belt about an inch wide with a silver buckle, belt plates, and belt tip in the jelling style like the penannular brooch that held his grey wool rectangular cloak on, a Conical helm with a Nasal guard and a chainmail avantail, a pair of grey wool trousers, grey herringbone wool wicklebandr leg wrappings over Brown cow leather high shoes, and a pair of Naalbinding wool socks. Around his neck he wore an inch thick twisted silver Torc necklace with the heads of birds on the terminal ends, and on his right hand was an old silver ring fashioned in the shape of a Bird with a serpent coiled around it symbolizing the struggle between wisdom and the power of destruction. For a Norseman of his time he was well educated and as such earned his living in his father's Longhall as a [[Skald]] by singing the old songs, telling the old tales, reciting poetry and sagas, and playing playing a strange stringed instrument that he got from a Celt while he was a-Viking with his uncle. | ||
[[category:People]] |
Revision as of 00:55, 27 November 2009
Valric In Grar: In Grar means "the Grey" in Old Norwegian Norse which is an epithet he aquired due to his unusual habit of wearing mostly grey clothing despite being able to afford expensive dyes.
Description and story:
Norwegian Norseman of middling nobility. The second son of the Jarl of Staavagard on the south western coast of Norway from between 950 A.d to 980 A.D. An inexperienced but enthusiastic heavy fighter and archer who preferred the almost Hiltless longswords common to his people, the Yew Longbow, and Kite shield. He wore a plain undyed linen tunic under a plain grey wool tunic, under a riveted Chainmail hauberk belted at the waist with a dark cow leather belt about an inch wide with a silver buckle, belt plates, and belt tip in the jelling style like the penannular brooch that held his grey wool rectangular cloak on, a Conical helm with a Nasal guard and a chainmail avantail, a pair of grey wool trousers, grey herringbone wool wicklebandr leg wrappings over Brown cow leather high shoes, and a pair of Naalbinding wool socks. Around his neck he wore an inch thick twisted silver Torc necklace with the heads of birds on the terminal ends, and on his right hand was an old silver ring fashioned in the shape of a Bird with a serpent coiled around it symbolizing the struggle between wisdom and the power of destruction. For a Norseman of his time he was well educated and as such earned his living in his father's Longhall as a Skald by singing the old songs, telling the old tales, reciting poetry and sagas, and playing playing a strange stringed instrument that he got from a Celt while he was a-Viking with his uncle.