Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph. D.

Anunnaki Analogs, VIKINGS, Vandalized Vatican Votaries

By Sasha Alex Lessin, Ph.D. (Anthropology, UCLA), co-author (with Janet Kira Lessin) of  ANUNNAKI, EVOLUTION OF THE GODS–techno-savvy extraterrestrial people from the Planet Nibiru who came for gold, created us from their genome to work the mines, posed as gods, decided to let us drown, but then decided to breed us to work for them.

Before the longships cut through northern seas, people descended from the Anunnaki settled Scandinavia (around 800 CE).

 The Anunnaki were large people.  They employed advanced technology combined with developed psychic abilities. They came to Earth in waves from the Planet Nibiru and other Lyran (Homo sapiens sapiens)-controlled planets. This post explores the history of the Anunnaki of Scandinavia, whom we call Vikings.

The Vikings settled Scandinavia. They terrorized people along the Atlantic coast of Europe and along the Danube River, all the way to Turkey.


Before the longships cut through northern seas, people descended from the Anunnaki settled Scandinavia (around 800 CE).

In the Vikings’ sagas, they called themselves the Æsir.  They lived in
ASGARD, a fortified realm in the sky, connected by the rainbow bridge called BIFROST, which met MIDGARD, the world of humanity. The Bifröst Bridge was a luminous path of plasma, a space-gate between realms.

ODIN, the All-Father, one-eyed and wise, mirrors Enki, Lord of the Earth and keeper of forbidden knowledge.

The Scandinavian Odin hung himself to gain the RUNES.  The runes are akin to the Viking version of the Sumerian narrative in which Anunnaki Chief Scientist Enki defied the decrees of his Commander (Enlil), conveyed a DIAGRAM for Noah’s ark, and saved humankind from a global flood 13,000 years ago.

Both Odin and Enki embodied compassion for us Earthlings, an emotion that rose above the Anunnaki’s obsession with domination in their heritage.

THOR, hammer-wielder and thunder-bringer, stands as the Norse echo of Ninurta/Apollo, Enlil’s warrior son — the storm-spear, defender of the gods’ order.

FREYJA, goddess of love and magic, reflects Inanna (Ishtar), mistress of heaven and battle, both deities of sensuality and war.

LOKI, the cunning shapeshifter, recalls Marduk, ambitious son of Enki, whose plans upended divine councils and remade empires.

Norse seers taught that Thor, Freyja, and Loki strode across worlds, flew craft, shot fire, and applied knowledge from a place beyond Earth.

VALHALLA, the shining hall of the fallen, echoes the Anunnaki heavens as a staging ground for warriors who would rise again in Ragnarök.  Sumer was the Anunnaki equivalent of Ragnarök, serving as a place for Earthlings to develop. Enki’s chosen survivors enjoyed a thousand years of civilization-building, which Enki and Ninurta provided after the Deluge, to create what the Anunnaki considered an advanced civilization.

When the Viking Age dawned, the Vikings said they descended from gods and giants, children of Odin-Enki’s defiance. They sought glory and immortality through battle—which most Anunnaki Lords—but not Enki—reified as holy.

Their voyages were not just conquests of coastlines but echoes of a cosmic inheritance — the drive of the Anunnaki within them, ever expanding, ever seeking new worlds.

THE VIKING AGE (793–1066 CE)

The Viking Age opened with terror and thunder in 793, when Scandinavian warriors crossed the misty sea to strike the monastery of Lindisfarne off Northumbria’s coast. The monks had no warning. The longships came like ghosts from the fog; blades flashed; sacred relics fell; blood stained the stones of the holy isle. Never before had such a place been defiled — and with that storm of steel, the Viking era began.

Returning home with gold, silver, and slaves, the raiders hailed them as heroes. Their voyages grew bolder each summer, fleets swelling, ambitions rising.  To the terrified Christians of Britain and Francia, these “northern devils” seemed omens of the Apocalypse.

But to themselves, the Norsemen were champions of Odin and Thor, sons of gods who honored courage and despised fear.
They sought not salvation, but Valhalla — the warrior’s paradise beyond the veil.

Most Scandinavians, however, were not warriors but farmers, craftsmen, and traders.

Their lands were beautiful yet harsh — thin soil, long winters, and hungry mouths. Necessity drove them to explore Iceland, Greenland, and the British Isles. First, they plundered.  Later, they built colonies for fertile earth and lasting homes.

THE VIKING ERA AND THE INVASION OF ENGLAND

In 793, a band of Scandinavian warriors braved the uncertainties of an unknown sea in search of treasures they believed the gods promised them. These fierce seafarers had long heard of the rich lands and monasteries of the western isles. Driven by ambition and divine fervor, they set sail toward destiny.

Off the coast of Northumbria, they came upon the Holy Island where the monastery of LINDISFARNE stood. The unsuspecting monks went about their devotions, unaware of the storm that approached. The Vikings landed and fell upon the monastery with merciless force, slaughtering the defenseless clerics and plundering everything of value. The assault was unlike anything Britain had ever known. Never before had anyone dared to desecrate such a sacred site. The Vikings took those few Brits who survived as slaves.  Word of the atrocity spread swiftly across Europe. Fear gripped the Christian realms. The age of the Vikings had begun.

When the raiders returned home, their villages hailed them as heroes. They brought with them riches beyond imagination—jewels, precious metals, spices, and slaves. Their daring proved immensely profitable. Greed, glory, and the yearning to match the fame of the first explorers soon filled every heart in the North. Each summer, more ships set sail, more warriors crossed the sea, and more Christian coasts fell under their blades. The terror of these northern men spread through Brittany and England, leading many to believe that Judgment Day itself was near. In their prayers, the frightened Christians begged deliverance from the dread of the Northmen.

But the Vikings feared neither death nor the Christian God. They worshiped their own warlike deities—Odin, Thor, and others—who rewarded courage, valor, and defiance in battle. To die fearlessly with sword in hand was to earn eternal glory beside Odin in the golden halls of Valhalla.

Yet, not all Scandinavians were warriors. Most were farmers, traders, and artisans who lived peacefully and valued art and family. Their culture was rich, with a complex faith that revered not only gods of war but also gods of fertility and the harvest. Spiritual growth was an honored pursuit. Still, life in the North was harsh. Norway’s rugged mountains and poor soils, along with its long winters and isolation, made survival difficult. Many sought better lands, and so began the great migrations—to Iceland, Greenland, and the fertile British Isles.

After decades of raids, the people of Britain grew accustomed to the cycle of summer invasions. Each year, they fortified their defenses, endured the plunder, and tried to rebuild before the following season. But in 865, a new and far greater danger appeared: the Great Heathen Army, commanded by the sons of the legendary Ragnar Lothbrok. Their goal was no longer mere plunder—it was conquest.

England at the time was divided into several smaller kingdoms, each wary of the others. Their disunity proved fatal. The Vikings exploited these rivalries, forging alliances through intimidation and diplomacy alike. Some Anglo-Saxon nobles, facing annihilation, agreed to pay tribute and even send soldiers to join the invaders. One by one, kingdoms fell or surrendered.

In 866, the Great Army marched on the city of York, the mightiest in the north. Even the old Roman walls could not withstand their fury. Taking advantage of a Christian holiday, the Vikings struck without warning, seizing the city and subduing the kingdom of Northumbria. From there, they advanced across England, extracting riches and loyalty from those too fearful to resist. Though their army was not large enough to rule every captured territory directly, they installed puppet kings who governed on their behalf and paid heavy tribute.

Over time, more settlers arrived from Scandinavia, and the Norse grip tightened. By the late ninth century, the Vikings controlled nearly two-thirds of England. It seemed only a matter of time before the rest would fall. Yet one kingdom still stood firm: Wessex, the richest and strongest of the Anglo-Saxon realms.

Under King Æthelred and his younger brother Alfred, Wessex organized a coalition of Saxons determined to resist the pagan invaders. Great battles followed—bloody, heroic, and relentless. Both sides suffered terrible losses, but the Saxons did not yield. Exhausted, they agreed to a temporary truce that required heavy tribute payments to the Norse lords.

For a few years, peace held. But soon, a new Viking leader named Guthrum rose and renewed the assault on Wessex. With Æthelred’s death, Alfred ascended to the throne. Intelligent and resolute, he reformed his army, rebuilt his navy, and fortified his kingdom for the inevitable war. His people fought under the cross, believing that their God guided their swords and that it was their divine destiny to reclaim England from the pagan north.

The struggle between the Saxons and the Norse was far from over. The war for England had only just begun.

RAGNAR: SLAYER OF SERPENTS, FATHER OF KINGS

Among the Norse warlords, none cast a greater shadow than Ragnar, the warrior-king of Denmark and Sweden. His grandfather, RANDVER, was King of Denmark and a member of the semi-divine, Anunnaki-Earthling Yngling line. Born the son of the Swedish king Sigurd Ring, Ragnar descended from the Yngling dynasty—an ancient noble line that traced its ancestry to the gods themselves. The Ynglings claimed descent from Yngvi, son of the sea-god Njord, founder of the sacred temple at Uppsala, a center of Norse worship where kings join the gods after death.

FRO, the King of Sweden, invaded Norway, killed Randver, and forced Randver’s female relatives to work in a brothel. Lagertha, one of the imprisoned women, escaped, donned men’s clothing, and joined Ragnar’s army attacking Fro. Ragnar partnered with Lagertha a while.

Ragnar next rescued THORA Borgarhjort, the daughter of Earl Herraud of Götaland, from a snake guarding her. The Earl had given her a small snake that grew into a large, poisonous serpent. The serpent then enclosed her.  Her father promised her hand in marriage to anyone who could slay it. Ragnar beat the serpent by wearing pants boiled in tar to protect himself from its venom; that’s how he took the nickname “Lothbrok” (hairy trousers). Thora died from an illness soon after they wed.

RAGNAR AND ASLAUG

ASLAUG appeared as a simple peasant but was in truth the daughter of two legendary heroes: Sigurd, the dragonslayer who slew Fafnir, and Brynhild, one of Odin’s Valkyries. To test her wit, Ragnar challenged her to present herself to him neither dressed nor naked, neither hungry nor full, and neither alone nor accompanied.

Aslaug appeared, wrapped in a fishing net and biting an onion, followed by a dog, fulfilling all conditions at once. Impressed by her cleverness, Ragnar married her. Together they had five sons: Bjorn Ironside, Hvitserk, Halfdan, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, and Ivar the Boneless—names that would become legend across Europe.

Ragnar’s charm and power attracted many women. One unnamed noblewoman bore him another son, Ubba Ragnarsson, described in early sources as “the most beautiful of men ever seen by mortal eyes.”

Aslaug appeared, wrapped in a fishing net and biting an onion, followed by a dog, fulfilling all conditions at once. Impressed by her cleverness, Ragnar married her. Together they had five sons: Bjorn Ironside, Hvitserk, Halfdan, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, and Ivar the Boneless—names that would become legend across Europe.

Ragnar’s charm and power attracted many women. One unnamed noblewoman bore him another son, Ubba Ragnarsson,“the most beautiful of men ever seen by mortal eyes.

Paris

In 845 CE, leading hundreds of ships, Ragnar besieged Paris, defying the Franks’ walls and their god. He took tribute from terrified kings — but his victories brought envy and doom.

Northumbria, Northern England

Between 852 and 856, Ragnar shipwrecked on the shores of Northumbria, whose King Ælla, threw him into a pit of serpents. As venom coursed through his veins, Ragnar laughed:“How the little piglets will grunt when they hear how the old boar died.

And so they did. In 865 CE, his sonsIvar the Boneless, Bjorn Ironside, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, and Ubbaled the Great Heathen Army into England, conquering two-thirds of the land. Through them, Ragnar’s vengeance lived — and his legend endured.

ROLLO OF NORMANDY: FROM RAIDER TO RULER

While Ragnar’s sons carved kingdoms in England, another Norse chieftain turned ambition into empire. Rollo, towering and indomitable, began as an unsuccessful sea raider upon the coasts of France.  But in 886 CE, his fleet surrounded Paris. The French King, King Charles the Simple, weary of war, offered silver and peace. Rollo accepted, but not as tribute — as territory.

In 911 CE, Rollo had himself baptized and married to Charles’s daughter Gisela.  Charles gave Rollo the lands that would bear his people’s name: Normandy, the “Land of the Northmen.” Here, the Norse became builders and farmers again. They raised churches where mead-halls once stood, and forged a new identity — the Normans.  Rollo ruled until his death around 930 CE, and his line endured for centuries. From his seed came William the Conqueror, who in 1066 CE crossed the Channel and seized England — fulfilling the destiny of the Northmen begun two centuries before.

LEIF ERIKSON AND THE DISCOVERY OF VINLAND

Leif Erikson, son of Erik the Red, sailed from Greenland seeking new lands. Following tales of strange shores told by sailors, he reached a green coast rich with timber and wild grapes. He called it Vinland — the “Land of Wine.”

Leif brought back wood and legend, and though the colony did not last, his journey expanded the Viking world.

CANUTE: THE VIKING KING OF ENGLAND

Canute (Cnut) the Great, son of Swein Forkbeard, conquered England in 1016 CE, uniting it with Denmark and Norway into a single NORTH SEA EMPIRE. Canute governed with law and order, blending Norse valor with Saxon stability. He embraced Christianity. Under him, England knew peace.

HARALD HARDRADA: THE LAST VIKING KING

Born of royal blood in 1015, Harald Hardrada lived a saga greater than any skald could sing. Warrior at fifteen, exile in Rus, commander of the Varangian Guard in Byzantium, husband to a Russian princess —Harald embodied the wanderer-warrior spirit of the North.

Harald returned to Norway, seized its throne, and ruled with iron discipline.  He invaded England in 1066 and fought another King Harold, Harold Godwinson at Stamford Bridge. Harold the Viking died there when an arrow pierced his throat. Thus ended the Viking era.

SHIELD MAIDENS

Yet the spirit of the Vikings was not solely male. Among them, women fought.  Shieldmaidens, trained in arms, stood beside their brothers on the shield-wall, wielding axes and spears, dying with the same fearless gaze. They were daughters of Freyja-Inanna, embodiments of partnership and strength, guardians of the balance between creation and destruction. In their courage lived the essence of the Partnership Consciousness that once guided Enki-Odin’s lineage — respect between male and female, mortal and divine.

That consciousness flickered amid the flames of conquest, dimmed but not extinguished.

Through storm and sword, the Northmen carried that spark across the world. And perhaps, in some distant age, their descendants — ours — will once more sail not the seas, but the stars, answering the same call that drew their ancestors from Asgard and Nibiru alike.

Ea Enki writes:
Marduk is Thor
Loki is Nergal, Erra, HadesTHOTH HERMES TRISMEGISTUS is BALDR

Baldr is the Norse god of beauty, light, joy, and purity, and the son of Odin and Frigga. He was the most beloved of all the gods, known for his fairness and wisdom. His tragic story revolves around his death at the hands of the blind god Höðr, who was tricked by Loki into throwing a mistletoe dart at him—the only thing that could harm him…

Domains: He is associated with light, beauty, peace, spring, and joy.

Family: He is the son of Odin and Frigga, and the husband of Nanna, with whom he had a son named Forseti.

Attributes: Baldr was considered the most beautiful, wise, and gracious of all the gods, and light was said to emanate from him. He was also known for his peaceful nature.

Home: His hall in Asgard was called Breidablik, meaning “broad gleam,” and was described as a place free from any uncleanliness or strife.

Death: The other gods discovered that Baldr could not be harmed by anything, as his mother Frigga had made everything in creation swear an oath not to injure him. However, the mistletoe was overlooked. Loki learned this, crafted a spear from mistletoe, and tricked Höðr into throwing it, which killed Baldr.

#Vikings #Anunnaki #Odin #Enki #NorseMythology #RagnarLodbrok #Lagertha #Valhalla #Nibiru #AncientAliens #AncientGods #AnunnakiHistory #PartnershipConsciousness #SpiritualEvolution #AncientAstronautTheory #EnkiSpeaks #AquarianMedia #SashaLessin #JanetKiraLessin #CosmicOrigins #WarriorSpirit #HistoryRevealed

Reference: See U in History / Mythology – “The Viking Era: The Brutal Warriors, the Culture and the Norse Mythology.” September 21, 2024.

You may also like...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *