FYRDUNG - Ancient Saxon word for the MILITIA
~ FYRDUNG ~
An Ancient
Saxon word for the Militia
"Fyrd-ung"
Fyrdung

1. v. i. The military force of the
whole nation, consisting of all men able to bear arms.
Ancient Saxon word for the Militia
Pronounced “Feared-uns” meaning the “Feared ones”, meaning the Militia!
If you have ever spent time in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas (Arkinsaw) and heard local Arkansawyers use the words: "we-ungs", "you-uns, "our-ung" (our'n), "your-ung" (your'n), and "his-un" (his'n), or "her-ung" (her'n), then you know how to correctly pronounce the word "Fyrdung", just drop the "g" sound, and replace it with a "s" sound. The word "ung" rhymes with the word "gun", or more correctly with the word "guns". So-called "Sophisticated" people tend to think the Hillbilly Arkansawyers are just ignorant hicks, but the truth of the matter is they are just speaking some hold over words from ancient Saxon. In other instances the Ozark Mountaineers speech contains some very correct Elizabethan English. In general people have a bad attitude about Arkansas and hillbilly culture, which is merely a reflection of their own ignorance and arrogance. The remaining "hillbilly cultures" throughout America are rich in Folk traditions, Folkways, and old time common sense, and our modern American culture could use a healthy return to old-time Folkways and common "horse sense". If White Americans are to survive they will once again have to become the "Fyrdung" and strike fear into the hearts of our enemies.
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LINKS
Fyrdung - Militias of the Folks - Page Two
Feared by Your Enemies - Audio Sermon by Pastor John Weaver
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Archaic English
The dialect spoken by Appalachian people has been given a variety of names, the majority of them somewhat less than complimentary. Educated people who look with disfavor on this particular form of speech are perfectly honest in their belief that something called The English Language, which they conceive of as a completed work - unchanging and fixed for all time - has been taken and, through ignorance, shamefully distorted by the mountain folk.
The fact is that this is completely untrue. The folk speech of Appalachia instead of being called corrupt ought to be classified as archaic. Many of the expressions heard throughout the region today can be found in the centuries-old works of some of the greatest English authors: Alfred, Chaucer, Shakespeare, and the men who contributed to the King James version of the Bible, to cite but a few.
Southern mountain dialect (as the folk speech of Appalachia is called by linguists) is certainly archaic, but the general historical period it represents can be narrowed down to the days of the first Queen Elizabeth, and can be further particularized by saying that what is heard today is actually a sort of Scottish-flavored Elizabethan English. This is not to say that Chaucerian forms will not be heard in everyday use, and even an occasional Anglo-Saxon one as well.
Certain grammatical forms occurring in the dialect have caused it to be regarded with pious horror by school marms. Prominent among the offenders, they would be almost sure to list these: "Bring them books over here." In the 1500's this was good English. "I found three bird's nestes on the way to school." This disyllabic ending for the plural goes back to the Middle Ages. "That pencil's not mine, it her'n." Possessive forms like his'n, our'n, your'n evolved in the Middle Ages on the model of mine and thine. In the revision of the Wycliffe Bible, which appeared shortly after 1380, we find phrases such as ". . .restore to hir alle things that ben hern," and "some of ourn went in to the grave."
http://www.wvculture.org/history/journal_wvh/wvh30-2.html
Appalachian English and Ozark English
Although separated by several hundred miles, Appalachian English and Ozark English have long shared a close association in descriptions of language in the southern highlands. Writers have often assumed that the dialects of the two regions are similar because most of the original settlers of the Ozarks came from the southern Appalachians. Although precise origins are difficult to determine, nineteenth-century census records indicate that natives of Tennessee and Kentucky were especially numerous among early residents of the Ozarks, and recent linguistic analyses have indeed confirmed that Ozark English and Appalachian English are very closely related varieties.
Early treatments of Ozark English, similar to those of Appalachian English, focused on the supposed* archaic quality of the region's dialects. As early as the 1890s, writers linked the regions in articles about the survival of Shakespearean or Elizabethan English.Appalachian English and Ozark English share features that set these dialects apart from other varieties of American English.
http://utpress.org/Appalachia/EntryDisplay.php?EntryID=025
supposed* - NOT supposed, this is an actual proven fact.
Free Folk Militias
Fyrdung - Militias of the Folks - Page Two
The Ancient Saxon word
"Fyrdung"
means
1. v. i. The military force of the whole nation, consisting of all men able to bear arms.
Dictionary LINKS:
http://www.online-dictionary.biz/english/vocabulary/reference/Fyrdung.asp
http://linkspider.serversystems.net/dictionary/lookup/fyrdung

"MILITIA" the American word for "FYRDUNG"
MILITIA
"I ask, Sir, What is the militia? It is the whole people...To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."--George Mason (One of the framers of the U.S. Constitution)
"...every citizen who enjoys the protection of a free government, owes not only a proportion of his property, but even of his personal services to the defence of it, and consequently that the citizens of America (with a few legal and official exceptions) from 18 to 50 years of age should be borne on the militia rolls, provided with uniform arms, and so far accustomed to them that the total strength of the country might be called forth at a short notice on any very interesting emergency." --George Washington
The BILL of RIGHTS - the Second Amendment
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
FYRDUNG!
Your responsibility of fighting your enemy here in earth
troops of the MOST HIGH GOD
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Quoting Dr. Wesley A. Swift - |
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Free Folks Militias
Fyrdung - Militias of the Folks - Page Two

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1983 Declaration of Independence
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Select Militias vs. Free Folks Militias
"The Case Against SGAUS Select Militias and the National Guard"
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Deutscher Volkssturm
Wehrmacht

During World War II German men and boys between the ages of 16 and 60 served in the German National Militia, the Volkssturm. Each Volkssturmmann wore an arm band with the lettering "Deutscher Volkssturm" above the word "Wehrmacht". The Nazis declared that this militia arm band officially made the Volkssturm militiaman a part of the Wehrmacht (Armed Forces). German Militia Armed Forces.
http://www.lonesentry.com/articles/volkssturm/index.html

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Volkssturm
Folk's Storm (National Storm)
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"Fyrdung! The Army of the Folk!"
Hail Christ's Victory!
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A Well-Regulated Militia

Firearms: the People's Liberty Teeth
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History of the Original Ku Klux Klan
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Deo
Vindice - Resurgamus!

"Thou
Art My Battle Axe and Weapons of War"
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Fyrdung - Militia of the Folk - Page One
Fyrdung - Militias of the Folks - Page Two
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American Reformation Ministries
Keltic Klan Kirk
American Rebel Militias
COLONEL JOE JOHNSON P.O. BOX 1166 MALVERN, ARKANSAS 72104
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