Guests from Overseas by Nicholas Roerich
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Norway
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Sweden

seen from United States
Guests from Overseas by Nicholas Roerich
The close of the ninth century witnessed the formation of an Old Russian state, accompanied by the rise of the Rus as the dominant force in this society.
New Banner Feature: The coming of the Rus to Slavic lands spurred the creation of Old Russia, a unified state which was controlled from Kyiv.
Viking runes on an ancient Greek statue,
The Piraeus Lion is a marble statue around 3 meters (9 feet) tall which was carved around 360 BC and had adorned Athens harbor for over 1800 years. In 1687 Greece was a part of the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Venice was at war the empire when they laid siege to and eventually sacked the city. The Venetians looted Athens of it’s wealth, carting of many treasures and historical antiquities including the Piraeus lion. The Venetians noticed that there was a strange writing along the shoulder and flank of the lion, however no one remembered what the language was, what it said, or who put it there. The lion was carted off to Venice and put on display at the Venetian Arsenal, where it sits to this day.
The origins of the writing remained a mystery until the lion was visited by a Swedish diplomat named Johann David Akerblad, who identified them as Nordic runes at the end of the 18th century. Since then numerous scholars have viewed and attempted to translate the runes. This task is greatly complicated by the fact that the runes are heavily eroded, with many completely illegible. The most widely accepted translation is from Erik Brate in 1914,
The runes are believed to have been carved in the 11th century by the Varangians. The Varangians were a group of Scandinavian Vikings who sold their services as mercenaries to the Eastern Roman Empire, AKA the Byzantine Empire. The Varangians would eventually settle down in what is now Russia and Ukraine.
Viking Raven
The medieval world was far more globalized than we give it credit for. The freaking Vikings went really far afield. A man from Baghdad, Ahmad Ibn Fadlan wrote about the Volga Vikings. There were Rus Vikings in the Varangian Guard of the Byzantine Empire, the capital of which was 2000 miles away. Charlemagne sent a Jewish diplomat, Isaac, to the Abbasid Caliphs in Baghdad. He returned with an elephant. These are only the examples I've come up with from a conversation with my brother.
Settlement of the Slavs in the 1st millennium A.D.
every time someone mentions rus vikings