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Early types of Maximilian armour with either no fluting or wolfzähne (wolf teeth) style fluting (which differs from classic Maximilian fluting) and could be worn with a sallet are called Schott-Sonnenberg style armour by Oakeshott. [4] This transitional armour was worn from 1500 to 1520, and true Maximilian armour was worn from 1515 to 1525.
Rohga: Armor Force, released in Japan as Wolf Fang: Kuuga 2001 (ウルフファング 空牙2001), is a 1991 run and gun/platform hybrid arcade game developed and published by Data East. It is branded as a sequel to Vapor Trail and was itself followed by Skull Fang .
Vikings: Wolves of Midgard is set in the Shores of Midgard, a world based upon the mythology and history of the Vikings with a fantasy twist. [10] The game follows a warrior/shieldmaiden who recently become the newest chieftain of Ulfung Village, the home of the namesake tribe said to be consisted of outcasts and renegades, after saving their home from a Jötnar raid orchestrated by a powerful ...
Minecraft: Story Mode is an episodic point-and-click video game developed and published by Telltale Games, based on Mojang Studios' sandbox video game Minecraft.The first five episodes were released between October 2015 through March 2016 and an additional three episodes were released as downloadable content (DLC) in mid-2016.
The helm-plate press from Torslunda depicts a scene of a one-eyed warrior with bird-horned helm, assumed to be Odin, next to a wolf-headed warrior armed with a spear and sword as distinguishing features, assumed to be a berserker with a wolf pelt: "a wolf-skinned warrior with the apparently one-eyed dancer in the bird-horned helm, which is ...
In the philologist and fantasy author J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fiction, a warg is a particularly large and evil kind of wolf that could be ridden by orcs.He derived the name and characteristics of his wargs by combining meanings and myths from Old Norse and Old English.
Snorri also gives another name for a wolf who swallows the Moon, Mánagarmr ([ˈmɑːnɑˌɡɑrmz̠], "Moon-Hound", or "Moon's Dog"). Hati's patronymic Hróðvitnisson , attested in both the Eddic poem " Grímnismál " and the Gylfaginning section of the Prose Edda , indicates that he is the son of Fenrir , for whom Hróðvitnir ("Famous Wolf ...
Fenrir and Naglfar on the Tullstorp Runestone.The inscription mentions the name Ulfr ("wolf"), and the name Kleppir/Glippir.The last name is not fully understood, but may have represented Glæipiʀ which is similar to Gleipnir which was the rope with which the Fenrir wolf was bound.