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Dagens.com on MSNRare Grave Site Discovery in Denmark Linked to Famous Viking KingA newly unearthed Viking burial site near Aarhus reveals a powerful noble lineage with close ties to King Harald Bluetooth ...
Archeologists speculate the burial site is probably related to a nobleman’s farm located less than 0.65 miles away. That find ...
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Live Science on MSNViking Age burial of chieftain with 'enormous power' found in Denmark — and he may have served Harald BluetoothArchaeologists were surprised to find 30 Viking Age burials in Denmark, and even more surprised by the extravagant grave ...
An excavation team “had no expectations” of finding graves, much less ones which shed light on a hugely important period in ...
Archaeologists in Denmark have uncovered a Viking-era burial site near Aarhus, believed to belong to nobles who served King ...
Over 1,000 years after his death, king who gave name to Bluetooth at center of archaeological debate
The 10th century golden Curmsun disc with the name of Danish King Harald "Bluetooth" Gormsson (Curmsun in Latin) on it, coming from a tomb at the Roman Catholic church in Wiejkowo, Poland ...
The first time King Harald was given the nickname Blåtand (Bluetooth) is in the Roskilde Chronicle, a 12th-century Latin text probably written by a monk from eastern Denmark.Bluetooth had chosen ...
Harald 'Bluetooth' Gormsson's burial mound may have been found The Viking king ruled Denmark from 958 AD to 986 and is known for bringing Christianity to the country Using technology aboard ...
Harald Bluetooth Archaeologists aren't sure why Harald gained the nickname "Bluetooth"; some historians suggest he may have had a prominent bad tooth, as the Norse word for "blue tooth" translates ...
Though ‘Bluetooth’ was meant to be a temporary code name for the short-range wireless technology while it was under development, it stuck, and the Younger Futhark runes that make up Harald ...
The 10th century golden Curmsun disc with the name of Danish King Harald “Bluetooth“ Gormsson (Curmsun in Latin) on it, coming from a tomb at the Roman Catholic church in Wiejkowo, Poland ...
Harald Bluetooth, a 10th century Danish king, knew nothing of the wireless device connection technology that bears his name. But King Bluetooth died fighting a rebellion started by his son, which ...
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