My Wolves Will Devour Putins Trolls

Attack!

Return of the House of Wolfings

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wolf222https://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2012/10/01/the-wolfen-guild-of-rosemondt/

The Roesmont/Rosemont family owned Melon Woflswinckle, a watermill. My kindred were named Roelof, Rudolph. Rodolphus, meaning “famous wolf’.

When I asked Christine why she was staring so hard at Rena when they met, she said;

“She reminded me of a vampire, one of those women who play vampires in the movies.”

Rena had played at being a vampire with her boyfriend. She gave me an incredible kiss in order to capture my soul. Was she just playing? Was I playing? We were wild Danish wolves on our mountain. Together, we had overcome the world.

When I called Rean in Nebraska she was out in a field of grass surrounded by a thousand crows that took flight at sunset. She said;

“If you were here right now, I would give you such a kiss.”

“I love you more afar, then near.”

Rena had been thinking of me when I called. She had summoned me from afar. We were now closer then when we were near. Our souls were……one. Wherever she go, there go I. Wherever I go….. mon beauté des bois
go with me. Wolves mate for life. Do not pick our roses.

I am going to render the Rosemont cote of arms that shows a dancing wolf, and the words ‘Duke of the Woods’.

I have immortalized my family. Above are photos of the EE Zunft Rebleuten Guild of Basel whose emblem is a dancing wolf. Fremasonry has its roots in the guilds. Notice the cote of arms behind glass in top photo. William Morris said the sons of the House of Wolfen are best suited to tell the tale of their battle with the slave masters of Rome.

Jon Rosamond Wolferose

“Erhart de Rougemont who bought in 1495 “the house called Rebleuten-Zunft in Basle in the Freistrasse.’
Peter Rosemond had seen in print the letters from Erasmus to Gotschalk Rosemondt. He noticed that a seal used by a Rosemont in Holland, bearing a jumping fox, was like an emblem he had noticed in a wall of the house Rebleuten-Zunft in Basle. This seal
dated back to 1430,
This James (or Jacob, for these names were once interchangeable) was the son of Hans Ulrich
Rosemond, born 1623, a weaver; who was a son of Hans, a weaver, born
1581; who was a son of Fred Rosemond, born 1552, a weaver, member of
town council and a local captain; who was the son of another Hans
whose date of birth is not known, but he too, was a weaver and became
a citizen of Basle in 1534. His father was Erhart de Rougemont who
bought in 1495 “the house called Rebleuten-Zunft in Basle in the
Freistrasse.’ Peter Rosemond further reported information from the
Records Office in Basle that “before Basle the family resided in
Holland up to 1338, and it is said they descended from the estate
Rosemont, near Belfort, in France, where also the village Rougemont
is found.” A family coat-of-arms was registered in Basle about 1537
when the first Hans became a resident there. A reproduction of this
coat-of-arms in the writer’s possession shows a weaver’s crook
conspicuously, and it will be remembered that in Ireland our people
were linen weavers and farmers, and that Edward, the elder, was a
weaver in this country. Peter Rosemond had seen in print the letters
from Erasmus to Gotschalk Rosemondt. He noticed that a seal used by a
Rosemont in Holland, bearing a jumping fox, was like an emblem he had
noticed in a wall of the house Rebleuten-Zunft in Basle. This seal
dated back to 1430, whereas the coat-of-arms above mentioned dates
from 1534, it seems. Peter Rosemond died September 22, 1930. This is
but a sketch of what he wrote.”

The Wolfswinkelse Water Mill was a watermill on the Dommel. The water mill is located in the municipality of Sint-Oedenrode between Banda and Nijnsel. This mill may have ever known as Wallace .

Content
[hide]1 Etymologie
2 History 2.1 Glory Wolfswinkel to 1604
2.2 from 1604 to 1795
2.3 from 1795 to the present

3 nearby water mills

Etymologie[Edit]

In the name Wallace means a corner Shop . The element can be in multiple ways, however, Wolf explained. Many think the first time to the animal name, but it can also save on a field curvature . That seems like a meaningful statement because such terrain form around emphatically pointing to falls (that is, a strikingly high steep Ridge along the Dommel, half a kilometre to the North).

History[Edit]

Glory Wolfswinkel to 1604[Edit]

The mill was about 1200 by Duke Henry I of Brabant donated to the Priory of Postel. Later it became a little glory, consisting of a omgrachte hofstede (the Water Horse), a farm and water mill. This area was by the Ducal couple of Joanna, Duchess of Brabant and Wenceslas I of Luxembourg in 1381 in loan issued to the nobleman Edmund d’Aquis. There would then also a clasp. The oldest known occupant would Agnes van Wolfswinkel, after which her son Cameron has inherited the property of Dijnter, after which the owners were Dijnter and Emont of Geerke. In 1450 was the glory in possession of the family of Rosemont, and then the families Coensborgh and Molenpas. The lock was already gone. In the 15th and 16th centuries are listed followed by the families Huyoel families, Baja, Daly, Valentine and Thielemans.

From 1604 to 1795[Edit]

The mill was In 1604 , separate from the estate, sold as a separate fief to Coenraedt Jan A. In 1628 was the mill property of Jhr. the Jada who in 1650 a oil mill at the original corn mill. About 1720 the mill was in the possession of Lord Lambert, count of Val, and after his death the mill was sold to Johan Carel de Jada, who was Lord of Eckart .

In the French period, at the end of the 18th century, the mill was burned by the English and German troops in order in this way, the English army, that was pulled together on the Nistelrooise Heide, to warn of the approaching French. The remains were then sold to Widow in 1795 Raon van schalkwijk, which the mill 50 metres upstream re-constructed.

From 1795 to the present[Edit]

After the rebuilding has known many mill owners. She was used during the 19th century as the volmolen Geldorp and by the Tilburg textile manufacturers. Although the mill was still in operation in 1878 , touched them soon thereafter in decline. In 1928 , the lock in the Dommel and the water mill was sold to the Dommel water board. The watermill was demolished after 1945 , despite attempts at preservation.

Now rest on this scenic spot only the Mill House. In addition, reminds the Water farm to former glory. Furthermore, reminds a small monument to the water mill, as well as leading the way out there, which still carries the name watermolenstraat . The cycle route along the Peel performs there.

Gijsbert ROESMONT. After dying the ships nobleman hendrik Heym
in 1427 took he are place on the ship chair. He was church master of
Saint Janskerk, member of Lieve-Vrouwe-broederschap and died in 1449
306. Nobleman Arnold the ROOVER Dirkszn., knight, embark 1349 and
1355. he had married with Catharina Berthout said of Berlaer, for the
of Lodewijk, lord of Helmond and Keerbergen, and of Johanna van
Dinther. After dying her he have been still remarried with Maria van
Leyenberg Gerardsdr. The Roover were member of the Lieve-Vrouwe-
broederschap and exchanged it temporary with eternal in 1384 307.
Nobleman Dirck the Roover Janszn., lord of the Nemerlaer.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinther

Rusty Mont (Rosemont, Roosemont), b. ± 1250, Bron Wissenburg , zoon van “missing link” (de Rougemont) Roesmont (Rosemont) en de familie Roesmont (Roosmont Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /Rosemont) /(informatie) ± 1250, Source Wissenburg , son of “missing link” (de Rougemont) Rusty Mont (Rosemont) and the family Rusty Mont (Rose Montrose) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / Rosemont) / (information )
Chronologisch de meest waarschijnlijke verklaring voor de volgende akte (aannemelijker dan dat Godschalck de vader van de betreffende zonen was): (15-3-1315, regesten ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Godshuizen) Mar cilius de Colonia zoon van wijlen Arnoldus gen. Chronologically, the most likely explanation for the following instrument (likely than Godschalck the father of the sons was on): (15-3-1315, résumés’ s-Hertogenbosch, Hospices) Colonia Mar Cilius the son of the late Arnold gene. van Keulen van Den Bosch (de Colonia de Buscho Ducis) heeft verkocht aan Godescalcus Rosemont twee hoeven lands in Udenhout. Cologne from Den Bosch (the Colonia de Buscho Ducis) has sold to Godescalcus Rosemont two horseshoes land in Udenhout. Deze hoeven waren door hem uitgewonnen van Rodolfus, broeder van Godescalcus wegens schulden. This need had been conquered by him Rodolfus, brother of Godescalcus for debt. Godescalcus heeft vervolgens een van deze hoeven overgedragen aan de procurator van de tafel van de H. Godescalcus subsequently one of these have been transferred to the procurator of the table of the H. Geest van Den Bosch. Spirit of Den Bosch. Een nog t e houden loting zal beslissen, welke van de twee hoeven de tafel krijgt toebedeeld. A draw will still keep decide which of the two having the table gets assigned.

Idem (10-9-1315) Godescalcus gen. Idem (10-9-1315) Godescalcus gene. Rosemont en de procurator van de tafel van de H. Rosemont and the procurator of the table of the H. Geest van Den Bosch hebben onder elkaar twee hoeven in Udenhout verdeeld. Spirit of Den Bosch have divided into Udenhout. Among themselves two Godescalcus ontvangt de hoeve gebruikt door Ghenekinus met diens huis erop gelegen in een broek; dit broek tot aan de waterloop, en 2 bunder uit 4 bunder moer aldaar aan de zijde van Rutsvoirt. Godescalcus receives the farm used by Ghenekinus with his house it situated in a trousers, this pants to the stream, and 2 of 4 bunder bunder nut there by the side of Rutsvoirt. De tafel ontvangt de hoeve gebruikt door Johannes van Winterven; de rest van het broek aan de zijde van Ghiersberghe en 2 bunder uit de 4 bunder moer aan de zijde van erfgoed van Woltherus van Haren. The table receives the farm used by Johannes van Erven Wins and the rest of the pants to the side of Ghiersberghe bunder and 2 from the 4 bunder nut on the side of heritage Woltherus of Haren. Er worden bepalingen gemaakt over een recht van w eg; het gemeenschappelijk onderhoud van een dijk gelegen in het broek; het gemeenschappelijk gebruik van de waterloop en het onderhoud van een brug daarover door Godescalcus en de verdeling van de op deze hoeven rustende cijnzen. There are provisions made ​​for a right of w eg, the common maintenance of a dike located in the pants, the common use of the watercourse and maintenance of a bridge about by Godescalcus and distribution to fulfill this need cijnzen. (bron: http://www.wissenburg.info) (Source: http://www.wissenburg.info)
Gehuwd voor 1275 met: Married before 1275 to:
XX , Bron Wissenburg XX Source Wissenburg
1) Godscalck Roesmont (Rosemont) , Bron Coolen-online (BE) 1) Godscalck Rusty Mont (Rosemont) , Source Coolen-online (BE)
Gehuwd voor 1300 met: Married before 1300 to:

Rudolph Godschalck Rusty Mont (Rosemont), d. ± 1379, Bron Coolen-online (BE) , Bron Wissenburg , zoon van Godscalck Roesmont (Rosemont) en XX met: ± 1379, Source Coolen-online (BE) , Source Wissenburg , son of Rusty Godscalck Mont (Rosemont) and XX with:
Mechteld , Bron Coolen-online (BE) , Bron Wissenburg Mechteld, Source Coolen-online (BE) , Source Wissenburg
1) Godschalck Roelofs Roesmont (Rosemont) , ovl. 1) Godschalck Roelofs Rusty Mont (Rosemont) , d. voor 12 feb 1411, Bron Coolen-online (BE) on Feb 12, 1411, Source Coolen-online (BE)
Diverse malen (ook via kinderen) vermeld in het Bosch Protocol (Stichting Adriaen Snoermanfonds). Several times (also by children) listed in the Bosch Protocol (Foundation Adriaen Snoermanfonds). Ook vermeld in cijnsboeken 1380 en 1340 en stoot- en spechtboek (Kleine Meierij), onder meer als zoon en erfgenaam van Roelof en neef van Luitgaard. Also mentioned levy records in 1380 and 1340 and impact and woodpecker book (Small Meierij), including the son and heir and nephew Roelof van Luit Gaard. (bron: http://www.wissenburg.info) (Source: http://www.wissenburg.info)
Gehuwd ± 1370 met: Married ± 1370 to:
Mechteld Posteel , ovl. Mechteld Posteel, d. tussen 1383 en 1405, Bron Coolen-online (BE) , Bron Wissenburg between 1383 and 1405, Source Coolen-online (BE) , Source Wissenburg
2) Hadewich Rodolphus Roesmont (Rosemont) , Bron Coolen-online (BE) , Bron Wissenburg met: 2) Hadewich Rodolphus Rusty Mont (Rosemont) , Source Coolen-online (BE) , Source Wissenburg with:
Daniel Willems Vander Hautert , ovl. Daniel Willems Vander Hautert, d. voor 1419, Bron Coolen-online (BE) for 1419, Source Coolen-online (BE)

Roelof is a name given to female children and its meaning is ‘famous wolf’. Roelof is a Dutch name of Germanic origin and a variant of the name Rudolph. The name is bestowed on male children.

Swinburne’s choice of the “rose of the world” as one of his first subjects for verse suggests that he associated his conception of Rosamond with courtly love allegory, specifically the Roman de la Rose, in which the rose is the eternal symbol of the beloved and of the perfect beauty that is fearfully transient but simultaneously immortal.3 As in Swinburne’s later lyrics “Before the Mirror” and “The Year of the Rose,” Rosamond’s central symbol is the rose, and, like them, this play recapitulates the major preoccupations of courtly love poetry: the apotheosis of beauty; love as the necessary consequence of beauty fear of mutability; and a final insistence on the immortality of both love and beauty, which can be attained, paradoxically, only through death.

The House of the Wolfings

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The House of the Wolfings

Title page of 1889 First Edition, London
Author(s)
William Morris
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Genre(s)
Fantasy novel
Publisher
Reeves and Turner
Publication date
1889
Media type
Print (Hardback)
Pages
199 pp
ISBN
NA
Followed by
The Roots of the Mountains
A Tale of the House of the Wolfings and All the Kindreds of the Mark is a fantasy novel by William Morris, perhaps the first modern fantasy writer to unite an imaginary world with the element of the supernatural, and thus the precursor of much of present-day fantasy literature.[1] It was first published in hardcover by Reeves and Turner in 1889.[2] Its importance in the history of fantasy literature was recognized by its republication by the Newcastle Publishing Company as the sixteenth volume of the celebrated Newcastle Forgotten Fantasy Library in April, 1978.
This book also influenced J. R. R. Tolkien’s popular The Lord of the Rings. In a December 31, 1960 letter published in The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, (p. 303), Tolkien wrote: ‘The Dead Marshes and the approaches to the Morannon owe something to Northern France after the Battle of the Somme. They owe more to William Morris and his Huns and Romans, as in The House of the Wolfings or The Roots of the Mountains.” Among the numerous parallels with The Lord of the Rings, Morris has Old English-style placenames such as Mirkwood (p. 2), germanic personal names such as Thiodolf (p. 8), and dwarves as skilled smiths (“How the Dwarf-wrought Hauberk was Brought away from the Hall of the Daylings”, p. 97).
This work and its successor, The Roots of the Mountains, were to some degree historical novels, with little or no magic. Morris would go on to develop the new genre established in this work in such later fantasies as Child Christopher and Goldilind the Fair, The Wood Beyond the World, The Well at the World’s End, and The Water of the Wondrous Isles.[3]

Contents
[hide]
1 Plot summary
2 Copyright
3 References
4 External links
Plot summary[edit]
The House of the Wolfings is Morris’ romantically reconstructed portrait of the lives of the Germanic Gothic tribes, written in an archaic style and incorporating a large amount of poetry. It combines his own idealistic views with what was actually known at the time of his subjects’ folkways and language. He portrays them as simple and hardworking, galvanized into heroic action to defend their families and liberty by the attacks of imperial Rome.
Morris’ Goths inhabit an area called the Mark on a river in the forest of Mirkwood, divided according into the Upper-mark, the Mid-mark and the Nether-mark. They worship their gods Odin and Tyr by sacrificing horses and rely on seers who foretell the future and serve as psychic news-gatherers.
The men of the Mark choose two War Dukes to lead them against their enemies, one each from the House of the Wolfings and the House of the Laxings. The Wolfing war leader is Thiodolf, a man of mysterious and perhaps divine antecedents whose ability to lead is threatened by his possession of a magnificent dwarf-made mail-shirt which, unknown to him, is cursed. He is supported by his lover the Wood Sun and their daughter the Hall Sun, who are related to the gods.
Copyright[edit]
The copyright for this story has expired in the United States, and thus now resides in the public domain there. The text is available via Project Gutenberg.

The book is the story of how the Wolfings fight, and eventually destroy, the invading Roman legions. But here Morris faced a problem: while he could try to reconstruct the society of these early people, their history is almost unknown, and what is known is known largely from the Roman side. Rather than attempt to force the story into a known historical context (in which case it would have had to be the story of the destruction of the legions of Varus in AD 9 by Arminius, leader of the Cherusci) Morris preferred to preserve his freedom of invention. His solution was brilliantly simple: the story is one told by the descendants of the Wolfings many years later, and as with the Saga of the Volsungs, events have become garbled with retelling. The people are consistently referred to as Goths, but this seems to have become a generic term, since the Teutones who invaded Italy in 109 BC have also become ‘Goths’, so that the actual identity of the tribe is left vague. The hero, Thiodolf, remembers killing three Hunnish kings in battle, yet the story is clearly set long before the arrival of the Huns in Western Europe, at a time when the Romans were only beginning to

http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/m/morris/william/m87hw/

Chapter xix. Those Messengers Come to Thiodolf

Of Geirbald and Viglund the tale tells that they rode the woodland paths as speedily as they might. They had not gone far, and were winding through a path amidst of a thicket mingled of the hornbeam and holly, betwixt the openings of which the bracken grew exceeding tall, when Viglund, who was very fine-eared, deemed that he heard a horse coming to meet them: so they lay as close as they might, and drew back their horses behind a great holly-bush lest it should be some one or more of the foes who had fled into the wood when the Romans were scattered in that first fight. But as the sound drew nearer, and it was clearly the footsteps of a great horse, they deemed it would be some messenger from Thiodolf, as indeed it turned out: for as the new-comer fared on, somewhat unwarily, they saw a bright helm after the fashion of the Goths amidst of the trees, and then presently they knew by his attire that he was of the Bearings, and so at last they knew him to be Asbiorn of the said House, a doughty man; so they came forth to meet him and he drew rein when he saw armed men, but presently beholding their faces he knew them and laughed on them, and said:

“Hail fellows! what tidings are toward?”

“These,” said Viglund, “that thou art well met, since now shalt thou turn back and bring us to Thiodolf as speedily as may be.”

But Asbiorn laughed and said: “Nay rather turn about with me; or why are ye so grim of countenance?”

“Our errand is no light one,” said Geirbald, “but thou, why art thou so merry?”

“I have seen the Romans fall,” said he, “and belike shall soon see more of that game: for I am on an errand to Otter from Thiodolf: the War-duke, when he had questioned some of those whom we took on the Day of the Ridge, began to have a deeming that the Romans had beguiled us, and will fall on the Mark by the way of the south-east heaths: so now is he hastening to fetch a compass and follow that road either to overtake them or prevent them; and he biddeth Otter tarry not, but ride hard along the water to meet them if he may, or ever they have set their hands to the dwellings of my House. And belike when I have done mine errand to Otter I shall ride with him to look on these burners and slayers once more; therefore am I merry. Now for your tidings, fellows.”

Said Geirbald: “Our tidings are that both our errands are prevented, and come to nought: for Otter hath not tarried, but hath ridden with all his folk toward the stead of thine House. So shalt thou indeed see these burners and slayers if thou ridest hard; since we have tidings that the Romans will by now be in Mid-mark. And as for our errand, it is to bid Thiodolf do even as he hath done. Hereby may we see how good a pair of War-dukes we have gotten, since each thinketh of the same wisdom. Now take we counsel together as to what we shall do; whether we shall go back to Otter with thee, or thou go back to Thiodolf with us; or else each go the road ordained for us.”

Said Asbiorn: “To Otter will I ride as I was bidden, that I may look on the burning of our roof, and avenge me of the Romans afterwards; and I bid you, fellows, ride with me, since fewer men there are with Otter, and he must be the first to bide the brunt of battle.”

“Nay,” said Geirbald, “as for me ye must even lose a man’s aid; for to Thiodolf was I sent, and to Thiodolf will I go: and bethink thee if this be not best, since Thiodolf hath but a deeming of the ways of the Romans and we wot surely of them. Our coming shall make him the speedier, and the less like to turn back if any alien band shall follow after him. What sayest thou, Viglund?”

Said Viglund: “Even as thou, Geirbald: but for myself I deem I may well turn back with Asbiorn. For I would serve the House in battle as soon as may be; and maybe we shall slaughter these kites of the cities, so that Thiodolf shall have no work to do when he cometh.”

Said Asbiorn; “Geirbald, knowest thou right well the ways through the wood and on the other side thereof, to the place where Thiodolf abideth? for ye see that night is at hand.”

“Nay, not over well,” said Geirbald.

Said Asbiorn: “Then I rede thee take Viglund with thee; for he knoweth them yard by yard, and where they be hard and where they be soft. Moreover it were best indeed that ye meet Thiodolf betimes; for I deem not but that he wendeth leisurely, though always warily, because he deemeth not that Otter will ride before to-morrow morning. Hearken, Viglund! Thiodolf will rest to-night on the other side of the water, nigh to where the hills break off into the sheer cliffs that are called the Kites’ Nest, and the water runneth under them, coming from the east: and before him lieth the easy ground of the eastern heaths where he is minded to wend to-morrow betimes in the morning: and if ye do your best ye shall be there before he is upon the road, and sure it is that your tidings shall hasten him.”

“Thou sayest sooth,” saith Geirbald, “tarry we no longer; here sunder our ways; farewell!”

“Farewell,” said he, “and thou, Viglund, take this word in parting, that belike thou shalt yet see the Romans, and strike a stroke, and maybe be smitten. For indeed they be most mighty warriors.”

About Royal Rosamond Press

I am an artist, a writer, and a theologian.
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