Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OthalaOthala - Wikipedia

    The rune and winged symbol have been used by the Neo-Nazi Wiking-Jugend in Germany, and in South Africa by the Anglo-Afrikaner Bond, the Boeremag, the Blanke Bevrydingsbeweging, the Italian neo-fascist group National Vanguard, the Afrikaner Student Federation and the far-right wing White Liberation Movement before it was disbanded.

  2. Odal: Kinship, family, and blood unity The Odal rune was used by the SS to symbolise several values of central importance to Nazi ideology. It was based on the Elder Futhark ᛟ or othala rune, with further addition of "feet" or "serifs".

  3. The Odal Rune as A Nazi Symbol. Unfortunately, the Odal rune was one of the many symbols co-opted by the Nazi party of WWII Germany. Because of the symbol’s meaning of “nobility”, “superior race”, and “aristocracy”, it was used as the emblem of ethnic German military and Nazi organizations.

  4. www.adl.org › resources › hate-symbolOthala Rune | ADL

    The othala rune is part of the runic alphabet system, a system of writing used (with many variations) across pre-Roman Europe. In the 20th century, Nazis in Germany adopted the othal rune, among many other similar symbols, as part of their attempt to reconstruct a mythic "Aryan" past.

  5. Versions of the Odal rune were used as an insignia by at least two Nazi military divisions during World War II. It served as an emblem for the Nazi 7th SS Mountain Division that fought in...

  6. Vertical Wolfsangel, used by the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division. Odal rune with feet [7] (also used by the American-based "National Socialist Movement" since November 2016) [21] SS Doppel Siegrune, based on the sig Armanen rune, in turn based on the historical sowilo rune. Algiz rune.

  7. [UPDATED] Editorial: Yes, That Is An Odal Rune. By The Wild Hunt |February 27, 2021. Update March 3, 2021, 3:45PM EST: In an interview with Forward, Design Foundry, a stage design firm based in Hyattsville, Maryland, said it “had no idea that the design resembled any symbol, nor was there any intention to create something that did.”

  1. People also search for