4th century bracteate contains runic inscription that reads “He is Odin’s man” referring to unknown King Jaga or Jagaz.
Another curious element is the swastika and what it meant at this particular time.
In a groundbreaking discovery, researchers have unearthed the oldest known inscription of Norse god Odin on a gold bracteate from the Vindelev find. This remarkable find pushes the origins of Norse mythology back to the 4th century, 150 years earlier than previously believed, and could reshape our understanding of ancient runic inscriptions as well as the origins of the Swastika as an Aryan symbol.
For decades now history hucksters have claimed that the Germans were practicing "pseudoscience" trying to map the Germanic origins of Europeans and to prove that Europeans came out of Europe. Part of this attack on truth seeking was that the Swastika was not an ancient European symbol, but one "stolen" by Hitler from Hinduism in India. This artifact is another piece on top of dozens of historical evidence proving that the Swastika was indeed a historical symbol of the European peoples, and proof that the Germans were right in their quest for evidence,
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