The Agojie Warrior: An African Queen
Migo Kamandag
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The Agojie Warrior: An African Queen
Migo Kamandag
Warrior queen Visenya
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), dir. James Cameron
"How do people like us take off their armor?"
"One piece at a time"
FIRST PHOTO OF MY JUDE WITH HER GOLDEN ARMOR AND ON A HORSE I AM ACTUALLY SCREAMING
That shoot was a dream coming true and required so much work in crafting location scouting renting the horse etc
I really hope you'll like and embrace this cosplay
Please remember everything you see is handmade by us
She barters not her velvet for the sword,
nor crowns her pulse in iron to be heard;
but bears within one sovereign, double flame ~ the hush of mercy wedded fast to claim.
Behold her softness: not a yielding shore,
but moon-drawn tide that carves the granite core;
a patient psalm the restless ages learn,
a quiet fire for which the tempests burn.
Her hands, unclosed, yet never void of might,
cup living embers of unerring sight;
an inward star that neither dims nor sways
though doubt would cast its long, eclipsing haze.
No trumpet names her strength, no banners plead ~ it roots in silence, then blossoms into deed;
it mends the torn, yet draws a hallowed line,
a boundary set as sacrament... divine.
Thus stands she ~ tender, terrible, and whole:
a velvet scepter governing the soul;
unarmored heart, yet citadel within ~ and none may conquer what she will not bend.
©️beccawise7💜🖤
(Excerpt from Her Warrior Heart)
“Boadicea Haranguing the Britons” - by John Opie. 1793
Sheeva: Arena Dominance by Jade Gretz
https://www.deviantart.com/jadegretzai/art/Sheeva-Arena-Dominance-1294527506?file=1
Let’s talk about Aethelflaed, Lady of Mercia.
She was the eldest child of Alfred the Great, born in the midst of a violent war to rid the Vikings from Saxon lands. She was given the same education as her brothers, and the crisis of war that surrounded her childhood would have taught her about the reality of her country. The women of Mercia often had more administrative power in court than the women of Wessex, so Aethelflaed would have been allowed power alongside her husband.
After the death of her husband, Aethelred, in 911, she became the sole ruler of the Saxon kingdom of Mercia. She never remarried most likely to preserve her rule over Mercia.
After she became the ruler of Mercia, Aethelflaed turned to her brother, Edward the Elder, King of Wessex. They both shared the idea that uniting the Saxons would be the only way to drive the Vikings from their land and unite the kingdoms.
In 917, Aethelflaed struck the five boroughs and was successful in taking back the Viking stronghold that was Derby. In 918, the Vikings of Leicester found themselves isolated and surrendered themselves to Aethelflaed and Mercia without a fight despite their previously aggressive nature. Also in 918, Aethelflaed reached the river Humber and persuaded the city of York to swear allegiance to her.
Aethelflaed passed away on 12th June 918 (coincidentally my birthday) in Tamworth, England, aged around 48, before she could ever reach York. After her death she passed her power to her only child and daughter, Aelfwynn, however she was soon ousted by Edward the Elder.
Why do we never hear about Aethelflaed in English history?
Most of what we hear about Saxon history comes from the Anglo Saxon chronicles, the most commonly used version comes from Wessex around the time of Edward the Elder, and almost completely marginalises and writes out Aethelflaed’s rule.