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Viking activity in the British Isles occurred during the Early Middle Ages, the 8th to the 11th centuries CE, when Scandinavians travelled to the British Isles to raid, conquer, settle and trade. They are generally referred to as Vikings, but some scholars debate whether the term Viking represented all Scandinavian settlers or just those who used violence.
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At the start of the early medieval period, Scandinavian kingdoms had developed trade links reaching as far as southern Europe and the Mediterranean, giving them access to foreign imports, such as silver, gold, bronze, and spices. These trade links also extended westwards into Ireland and Britain.
In the last decade of the eighth century, Viking raiders sacked several Christian monasteries in northern Britain, and over the next three centuries they launched increasingly large scale invasions and settled in many areas, especially in eastern Britain and Ireland, the islands north and west of Scotland and the Isle of Man.
Background of local ethnic groups
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During the Early Medieval period, the islands of Ireland and Britain were each culturally, linguistically, and religiously divided among various peoples.
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Language and religion
The languages of the Celtic Britons and of the Gaels descended from the Celtic languages spoken by Iron Age inhabitants of Europe. In Ireland and parts of western Scotland, as well as in the Isle of Man, people spoke an early form of Celtic Gaelic known as Old Irish. In Cornwall, Cumbria, Wales, and south-west Scotland, the Celtic Brythonic languages were spoken (their modern descendants include Welsh and Cornish).
The Picts, who spoke the Pictish language, lived in the area north of the Forth and Clyde rivers, which now constitutes a large portion of modern-day Scotland. Due to the scarcity of writing in Pictish, which survives only in Ogham, views differ as to whether Pictish was a Celtic language like those spoken further south, or perhaps even a non-Indo-European language like Basque. However, most inscriptions and place-names hint towards the Picts being Celtic in language and culture.
Much of southern Britain had become the various kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, where Anglo-Saxon migrants from continental Europe had settled during the fifth century CE, bringing with them their own Germanic language (known as Old English), polytheistic religion and cultural practices.
Many peoples of Britain and Ireland had already converted to Christianity from their older, pre-Christian polytheistic religions, including the distinct polytheistic religion (Anglo-Saxon paganism) practiced by the Anglo-Saxons.
Distribution of ethnic groups
In northern Britain, in the area roughly corresponding to modern-day Scotland, lived three distinct ethnic groups in their own respective kingdoms: the Picts, Scots, and Britons. The Pictish cultural group dominated the majority of Scotland, with major populations concentrated between the Firth of Forth and the River Dee, as well as in Sutherland, Caithness, and Orkney. The Scots, according to written sources, constituted a tribal group which had crossed to Britain from Dalriada in the north of Ireland during the late-fifth century. The northern Britons lived in the Old North, in parts of what have become southern Scotland and northern England, and, by the seventh or eighth centuries, these had apparently come under the political control of Anglo-Saxons.
By the mid-ninth century, Anglo-Saxon England comprised four separate and independent kingdoms: East Anglia, Wessex, Northumbria, and Mercia, the last of which was the strongest military power.
Class system
Between half a million and a million people lived in England at this time, with society being rigidly hierarchical. The class system had a king and his ealdormen at the top, under whom ranked the thegns (or landholders), and then the various categories of agricultural workers below them. Beneath all of these was a class of slaves, who may have made up as much as a quarter of the population.
The majority of the populace lived in the countryside, although a few large towns had developed, notably London and York, which became centres of royal and ecclesiastical administration. There were also a number of trading ports, such as Hamwic and Ipswich, which engaged in foreign trade.
Viking raids: 780s–850
In the final decade of the eighth century, Viking raiders attacked a series of Christian monasteries in the British Isles. Here, these monasteries had often been positioned on small islands and in other remote coastal areas so that the monks could live in seclusion, devoting themselves to worship without the interference of other elements of society. At the same time, it made them isolated and unprotected targets for attack by sea.
Lo, it is nearly 350 years that we and our fathers have inhabited this most lovely land, and never before has such a terror appeared as we have now suffered from a pagan race, nor was it thought that such an inroad from the sea could be made. Behold the church of St Cuthbert spattered with the blood of the priests of God, despoiled of all its ornaments.
The first known account of a Viking raid in Anglo-Saxon England comes from 789, when three ships from Hordaland (in modern Norway) landed in the Isle of Portland on the southern coast of Wessex. When approached by Beaduheard, the royal reeve from Dorchester, whose job it was to identify all foreign merchants entering the kingdom, they killed him.
There were almost certainly unrecorded earlier raids. In a document dating to 792, King Offa of Mercia set out privileges granted to monasteries and churches in Kent, but he excluded military service "against seaborne pirates with migrating fleets", showing that Viking raids were already an established problem. In a letter of 790–92 to King Æthelred I of Northumbria, Alcuin berated English people for copying the fashions of pagans who menaced them with terror. This shows that there were already close contacts between the two peoples, and the Vikings would have been well informed about their targets.
The next recorded attack against the Anglo-Saxons came the following year, in 793, when the monastery at Lindisfarne, an island off England's eastern coast, was sacked by a Viking raiding party on 8 June. The following year, they sacked the nearby Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey. In 795, they once again attacked, this time raiding Iona Abbey off Scotland's west coast. This monastery was attacked again in 802 and 806, when 68 people living there were killed. After this devastation, the monastic community at Iona abandoned the site and fled to Kells in Ireland. In the first decade of the ninth century, Viking raiders began to attack coastal districts of Ireland. In 835, the first major Viking raid in southern England took place and was directed against the Isle of Sheppey and in a battle in 839, Vikings inflicted heavy defeats against the Picts, killing Uuen, the King of the Picts, his brother Bran and Aed son of Boanta, King of Dál Riata.
England runestones
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The England runestones (Swedish: Englandsstenarna) is a group of about 30 runestones in Sweden which refer to Viking Age voyages to England. They constitute one of the largest groups of runestones that mention voyages to other countries, and they are comparable in number only to the approximately 30 Greece runestones and the 26 Ingvar runestones, of which the latter refer to a Viking expedition to the Middle East. They were engraved in Old Norse with the Younger Futhark.[citation needed]
The Anglo-Saxon rulers paid large sums, Danegelds, to Vikings, who mostly came from Denmark and Sweden who arrived to the English shores during the 990s and the first decades of the 11th century. Some runestones relate of these Danegelds, such as the Yttergärde runestone, U 344, which tells of Ulf of Borresta who received the danegeld three times, and the last one he received from Canute the Great. Canute sent home most of the Vikings who had helped him conquer England, but he kept a strong bodyguard, the Þingalið, and its members are also mentioned on several runestones.
The vast majority of the runestones, 27, were raised in modern-day Sweden and 17 in the oldest Swedish provinces around lake Mälaren. Modern-day Denmark has no such runestones, but there is a runestone in Scania which mentions London. There is also a runestone in Norway and a Swedish one in Schleswig, Germany.[citation needed]
Some Vikings, such as Guðvér, did not only attack England, but also Saxony, as reported by the Grinda Runestone Sö 166 in Södermanland:
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Connection to the slave trade
Slavery in the Muslim world provided a great market for the slaves captured by the vikings in Europe. Islamic law banned Muslims from enslaving other Muslims, and there was a big market for non-Muslim slaves on Islamic territory, where European slaves were referred to as saqaliba; these slaves were likely both Pagan Slavic, Finnic and Baltic Eastern Europeans as well as Christian Western Europeans.
People taken captive during the viking raids in Western Europe could be sold to Moorish Spain via the Dublin slave trade or transported to Hedeby or Brännö and from there via the Volga trade route to Russia, where slaves and furs were sold to Muslim merchants in exchange for Arab silver dirham and silk, which have been found in Birka, Wollin and Dublin. Initially this trade route between Europe and the Abbasid Caliphate passed via the Khazar Kaghanate, but from the early 10th century onward it went via Volga Bulgaria and from there by caravan to Khwarazm, to the Samanid slave market in Central Asia and finally via Iran to the Abbasid Caliphate. This was one of the major routes of the viking slave trade, alongside the Black Sea slave trade.
The slave trade between the Vikings and the Muslims in Central Asia is known to have functioned from at least between 786 and 1009, as large quantities of silver coins from the Samanid Empire have been found in Scandinavia from these years. People taken captive by the Vikings during their raids in Western Europe were likely sold in Islamic Central Asia, a slave trade which was so lucrative that it may have contributed to the Viking raids in Western Europe, which was used by the vikings as a slave supply source for their slave trade with the Muslim world.
Treasure hoards
Various hoards of treasure were buried in England at this time. Some of these may have been deposited by Anglo-Saxons attempting to hide their wealth from Viking raiders, and others by the Viking raiders as a way of protecting their looted treasure.
One of these hoards, discovered in Croydon (historically part of Surrey, now in Greater London) in 1862, contained 250 coins, three silver ingots, and part of a fourth as well as four pieces of hack silver in a linen bag. Archaeologists interpret this as loot collected by a member of the Viking army. By dating the artefacts, archaeologists estimated that this hoard had been buried in 872, when the army wintered in London. The coins themselves came from a wide range of different kingdoms, with Wessex, Mercian, and East Anglian examples found alongside foreign imports from Carolingian-dynasty Francia and from the Arab world. Not all such Viking hoards in England contain coins, however: for example, at Bowes Moor, Durham, 19 silver ingots were discovered, whilst at Orton Scar, Cumbria, a silver neck-ring and penannular brooch were uncovered.
The historian Peter Hunter Blair believed that the success of the Viking raids and the "complete unpreparedness of Britain to meet such attacks" became major factors in the subsequent Viking invasions and colonisation of large parts of the British Isles.
Invasion and Danelaw: 865–954
From 865, the Viking attitude towards the British Isles changed, as they began to see it as a place for potential colonisation rather than simply a place to raid. As a result of this, larger armies began arriving on Britain's shores, with the intention of conquering land and constructing settlements there. The early Viking settlers would have appeared visibly different from the Anglo-Saxon populace, wearing Scandinavian styles of jewellery, and probably also wearing their own peculiar styles of clothing. Viking and Anglo-Saxon men also had different hairstyles: Viking men's hair was shaved at the back and left shaggy on the front, whilst the Anglo-Saxons typically wore their hair long.
England
Viking armies captured York, the major city in the Kingdom of Northumbria, in 866. Counterattacks concluded in a decisive defeat for Anglo-Saxon forces at York on 21 March 867, and the deaths of Northumbrian leaders Ælla and Osberht.
Other Anglo-Saxon kings began to capitulate to the Viking demands and surrendered land to Viking settlers. In addition, many areas in eastern and northern England—including all but the northernmost parts of Northumbria—came under the direct rule of Viking leaders or their puppet kings.
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King Æthelred of Wessex, who had been leading the conflict against the Vikings, died in 871 and was succeeded on the throne of Wessex by his younger brother, Alfred. The Viking king of Northumbria, Halfdan Ragnarrson (Old English: Healfdene)—one of the leaders of the Viking Great Army (known to the Anglo-Saxons as the Great Heathen Army)—surrendered his lands to a second wave of Viking invaders in 876. In the next four years, Vikings gained further land in the kingdoms of Mercia and East Anglia as well. King Alfred continued his conflict with the invading forces but was driven back into Somerset in the south-west of his kingdom in 878, where he was forced to take refuge in the marshes of Athelney.
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Alfred regrouped his military forces and defeated the armies of the Viking monarch of East Anglia, Guthrum, at the Battle of Edington (May 878). Sometime after the Battle of Edington, a treaty was agreed that set out the lasting peace terms between the two kings that included the boundaries of each of their kingdoms. It is known as the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum. The treaty is one of the few existing documents of Alfred's reign and survives in Old English in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, Manuscript 383, and in a Latin compilation, known as Quadripartitus. The areas to the north and east became known as the Danelaw because it was under Viking political influence, whilst those areas to the south and west remained under Anglo-Saxon dominance. Alfred's government set about constructing a series of defended towns or burhs, began the construction of a navy, and organised a militia system (the fyrd), whereby half of his peasant army remained on active service at any one time. To maintain the burhs, and the standing army, he set up a taxation and conscription system known as the Burghal Hidage.
In 892 a new Viking army, with 250 ships, established itself in Appledore, Kent and another army of 80 ships soon afterwards in Milton Regis. The army then launched a continuous series of attacks on Wessex. However, due in part to the efforts of Alfred and his army, the kingdom's new defences proved to be a success, and the Viking invaders were met with a determined resistance and made less of an impact than they had hoped. By 896, the invaders dispersed—instead settling in East Anglia and Northumbria, with some instead sailing to Normandy.
Alfred's policy of opposing the Viking settlers continued under his daughter Æthelflæd, who married Æthelred, Ealdorman of Mercia, and also under her brother, King Edward the Elder (reigned 899–924). When Edward died in July 924, his son Æthelstan became king. In 927, he conquered the last remaining Viking kingdom, York, making him the first Anglo-Saxon ruler of the whole of England. In 934, he invaded Scotland and forced Constantine II to submit to him, but Æthelstan's rule was resented by the Scots and Vikings, and, in 937, they invaded England. Æthelstan defeated them at the Battle of Brunanburh, a victory which gave him great prestige both in the British Isles and on the Continent and led to the collapse of Viking power in northern Britain. After his death in 939, the Vikings seized back control of York, and it was not finally reconquered until 954.
Edward's son Edmund became king of the English in 939. However, when Edmund was killed in a brawl, his younger brother, Eadred of Wessex took over as king. Then in 947 the Northumbrians rejected Eadred and made the Norwegian Eric Bloodaxe (Eirik Haraldsson) their king. Eadred responded by invading and ravaging Northumbria. When the Saxons headed back south, Eric Bloodaxe's army caught up with some them at Castleford and made 'great slaughter'. Eadred threatened to destroy Northumbria in revenge, so the Northumbrians turned their back on Eric and acknowledged Eadred as their king. The Northumbrians then had another change of heart and accepted Olaf Sihtricsson as their ruler, only to have Eric Bloodaxe remove him and become king of the Northumbrians again. Then, in 954, Eric Bloodaxe was expelled for the second and final time by Eadred. Bloodaxe was the last Norse king of Northumbria.
Second invasion: 980–1042
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England
Under the reign of Wessex King Edgar the Peaceful, England came to be further politically unified, with Edgar coming to be recognised as the king of all England by both Anglo-Saxon and Viking populations living in the country. However, in the reigns of his son Edward the Martyr, who was murdered in 978, and then Æthelred the Unready, the political strength of the English monarchy waned, and, in 980, raiders from Scandinavia resumed attacks against England. The English government decided that the only way of dealing with these attackers was to pay them protection money, and so, in 991, they gave them £10,000. This fee did not prove to be enough, and, over the next decade, the English kingdom was forced to pay the Viking attackers increasingly large sums of money. Many English began to demand that a more hostile approach be taken against the Vikings, and so, on St Brice's Day in 1002, King Æthelred proclaimed that all Danes living in England would be executed. It would come to be known as the St. Brice's Day massacre.
The news of the massacre reached King Sweyn Forkbeard in Denmark. It is believed that Sweyn's sister Gunhilde could have been among the victims, which prompted Sweyn to raid England the following year, when Exeter was burned down. Hampshire, Wiltshire, Wilton, and Salisbury also fell victim to the Viking revenge attack. Sweyn continued his raid in England and in 1004 his Viking army looted East Anglia, plundered Thetford and sacked Norwich, before he once again returned to Denmark.
Further raids took place in 1006–1007 then Sweyn was paid over 10 000 pounds of silver to leave, and, in 1009–1012, Thorkell the Tall led a Viking invasion into England.[citation needed]
In 1013, Sweyn Forkbeard launched a full-scale invasion of England, after a few months of claiming submission over England and a successful attack on London, Æthelred fled to Normandy, leading Sweyn to take the English throne. Sweyn died five weeks later and Æthelred returned, driving out Sweyn’s son Cnut. but, in 1015, Cnut returned with a fleet of 200 ships, launching a hard-fought campaign that would last for over a year. After his victory over English forces at the Battle of Assandun, Cnut and Edmund Ironside agreed to divide England between them, Cnut the north and Edmund the south; whoever outlived the other becomes king of all England. Cnut became king of England upon Edmund’s death on the 30th of November, and was crowned later in 1017, subsequently ruling over both the Danish and English kingdoms. Following Cnut's death in 1035, the two kingdoms were once more declared independent and remained so, apart from a short period from 1040 to 1042 when Cnut's son Harthacnut ascended the English throne.
Stamford Bridge: 1066
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Harald Hardrada, King of Norway, led an invasion of England in 1066 with 300 longships and 10,000 soldiers, attempting to seize the English throne during the succession dispute following the death of Edward the Confessor. He met initial success, defeating the outnumbered forces mustered by the earldoms of Northumbria and Mercia at the Battle of Fulford. Whilst basking in his victory and occupying Northumbria in preparation for the advance south, Harald's army was surprised by a similarly sized force led by King Harold Godwinson, which had managed to force march all the way there from London in a week. The invasion was repulsed at the Battle of Stamford Bridge, and Hardrada was killed along with most of his men. Whilst the Viking attempt was unsuccessful, the near simultaneous Norman invasion was successful in the south at the Battle of Hastings. Hardrada's invasion and defeat has been described as the end of the Viking Age in Britain.
Written records
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Archaeologists James Graham-Campbell and Colleen E. Batey noted that there was a lack of historical sources discussing the earliest Viking encounters with the British Isles, which would have most probably been amongst the northern island groups, those closest to Scandinavia.
The Irish Annals provide us with accounts of much Viking activity during the 9th and 10th centuries.
The England Runestones, concentrated in Sweden, give accounts of the voyages from the Viking perspective.
The Viking raids that affected Anglo-Saxon England were primarily documented in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a collection of annals initially written in the late ninth century, most probably in the Kingdom of Wessex during the reign of Alfred the Great. The Chronicle is, however, a biased source, acting as a piece of "wartime propaganda" written on behalf of the Anglo-Saxon forces against their Viking opponents, and, in many cases, greatly exaggerates the size of the Viking fleets and armies, thereby making any Anglo-Saxon victories against them seem more heroic.
Archaeological evidence
The Viking settlers in the British Isles left remains of their material culture behind, which archaeologists have been able to excavate and interpret during the 20th and 21st centuries. Such Viking evidence in Britain consists primarily of Viking burials undertaken in Shetland, Orkney, the Western Isles, the Isle of Man, Ireland, and the north-west of England. Archaeologists James Graham-Campbell and Colleen E. Batey remarked that it was on the Isle of Man where Norse archaeology was "remarkably rich in quality and quantity".
However, as archaeologist Julian D. Richards commented, Scandinavians in Anglo-Saxon England "can be elusive to the archaeologist" because many of their houses and graves are indistinguishable from those of the other populations living in the country. For this reason, historian Peter Hunter Blair noted that, in Britain, the archaeological evidence for Viking invasion and settlement was "very slight compared with the corresponding evidence for the Anglo-Saxon invasions" of the fifth century.
See also
- Kingdom of the Isles
- Scandinavian Scotland
- Orkney
- Earldom of Orkney
- History of Shetland
- Orkneyinga saga
- Viking Age
- Category:Scandinavian Scotland
- Norman conquest of England
References
Footnotes
- The word Viking is a historical revival; it was not used in Middle English, but it was revived from Old Norse vikingr "freebooter, sea-rover, pirate, Viking", which usually is explained as meaning properly "one who came from the fjords" from vik "creek, inlet, small bay" (cf. Old English wic, Middle High German wich "bay", and the second element in Reykjavik). But Old English wicing and Old Frisian wizing are almost 300 years older, and probably derive from wic "village, camp" (temporary camps were a feature of the Viking raids), related to Latin vicus "village, habitation".
- Graham-Campbell and Batey suggest that "true Vikings [are] those who took part in Viking raids [...]. A Viking base, is thus a base from which Vikings went raiding, but a Norse settlement in Scotland is a settlement occupied by people of Scandinavian origin".
- There are only three surviving documents from the Anglo-Saxon period that can be described as peace treaties.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Worcester MSS D for 948 CE says: "And when the king [Eadred] was on his way home, the raiding army [Eric Bloodaxe], which was in York, overtook the king's army at Castleford and a great slaughter was made there."
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle says that Bloodaxe was 'driven out' from Northumbria; however, other sources claim that he was also killed.
Citations
- Keynes 1999. p. 460.
- Richards 1991. p. 9.
- Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 12 January 2020.Archived 7 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. p. 3.
- Blair 2003. pp. 56–57.
- Blair, Peter Hunter (2003). An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England. Anglo-Saxon studies (revised ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-0521537773. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
A variety of evidence, among which some of the objects from Sutton Hoo hold a prominent place, indicates that England lay well within the range of Scandinavia's foreign contacts before the Viking attacks began.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. p. 5.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. pp. 5–7.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. pp. 14–16.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. p. 18.
- Richards 1991. p. 13.
- Blair 2003. p. 63.
- Richards 1991. p. 16.
- Jarman 2021, pp. 93–96 (S 134).
- Blair 2003. p. 55.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. p. 24.
- Blair 2003. p. 66.
- Blair 2003. p. 68.
- Christopher Wright (1975). Kent through the years. Batsford. p. 54. ISBN 0-7134-2881-3.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- Annals of Ulster, 839.9
- Harrison & Svensson 2007:199
- Jansson 1980:34.
- Harrison & Svensson 2007:198.
- Entry Sö 166 in Rundata 2.0 for Windows.
- Korpela, J. (2018). Slaves from the North: Finns and Karelians in the East European Slave Trade, 900–1600. Nederländerna: Brill. p. 33-35
- The slave trade of European women to the Middle East and Asia from antiquity to the ninth century. by Kathryn Ann Hain. Department of History The University of Utah. December 2016. Copyright © Kathryn Ann Hain 2016. All Rights Reserved. https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6616pp7. p. 256-257
- "The Slave Market of Dublin". 23 April 2013.
- The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 91
- The World of the Khazars: New Perspectives. Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium. (2007). Nederländerna: Brill. p. 232
- The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 504
- Pargas & Schiel, Damian A.; Juliane (2023). The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery Throughout History. Tyskland: Springer International Publishing. p. 126
- The slave trade of European women to the Middle East and Asia from antiquity to the ninth century. by Kathryn Ann Hain. Department of History The University of Utah. December 2016. Copyright © Kathryn Ann Hain 2016. All Rights Reserved. https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6616pp7.
- Richards 1991. p. 17.
- Richards 1991. p. 20.
- Richards 1991. pp. 11–12.
- Starkey 2004. p. 51
- Lavelle 2010, p. 325.
- Whitelock 1996, pp. 417–418.
- Asser 1983, p. 311.
- Horspool 2006. p. 102
- Peter Sawyer (2001). The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings. Oxford University Press. pp. 58–59. ISBN 978-0-19-285434-6.
- Richards 1991 p. 22
- Pearson 2012. p. 131
- Panton 2011. p. 135.
- Richards 1991. p. 24.
- "The St Brice's Day Massacre". Historic UK. Retrieved 7 June 2020.
- Howard 2003, pp. 64–65.
- Howard 2003, pp. 66–67.
- Richards 1991. p. 28.
- "Last of the Vikings – Stamford Bridge, 1066". 26 August 2008.
- Graham-Campbell and Batey 1998. p. 2.
- Blair 2003. p. 64.
- Richards 1991. p. 15.
Bibliography
- Asser (1983). "Life of King Alfred". In Keynes, Simon; Lapidge, Michael (eds.). Alfred the Great: Asser's Life of King Alfred & Other Contemporary Sources. Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0-14-044409-4.
- Blair, Peter Hunter (2003). An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England (3rd ed.). Cambridge and New York City: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53777-3.
- Crawford, Barbara E. (1987). Scandinavian Scotland. Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey: Leicester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7185-1282-8.
- Graham-Campbell, James & Batey, Colleen E. (1998). Vikings in Scotland: An Archaeological Survey. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-0641-2.
- Horspool, David (2006). Why Alfred Burned the Cakes. London: Profile Books. ISBN 978-1-86197-786-1.
- Howard, Ian (2003). Swein Forkbeard's Invasions and the Danish Conquest of England, 991–1017 (illustrated ed.). Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0851159287.
- Jarman, Cat (2021). River Kings: The Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Roads. London: William Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-835311-7.
- Keynes, Simon (1999). Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (eds.). "Vikings". The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 460–461.
- Lavelle, Ryan (2010). Alfred's Wars Sources and Interpretations of Anglo-Saxon Warfare in the Viking Age. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydel Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-569-1.
- Panton, Kenneth J. (2011). Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy. Plymouth: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5779-7.
- Pearson, William (2012). Erik Bloodaxe: His Life and Times: A Royal Viking in His Historical and Geographical Settings. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4685-8330-4.
- Richards, Julian D. (1991). Viking Age England. London: B. T. Batsford and English Heritage. ISBN 978-0-7134-6520-4.
- Starkey, David (2004). The Monarchy of England. Vol. I. London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 0-7011-7678-4.
- Whitelock, Dorothy, ed. (1996). The treaty between Alfred and Guthrum. English Historical Documents. Vol. 1 (2 ed.). Oxford: Routledge. ISBN 0-203-43950-3.
Further reading
- Downham, Clare (2009). "'Hiberno-Norwegians' and 'Anglo-Danes': Anachronistic Ethnicities and Viking Age England". Medieval Scandinavia. 19: 139–169.
External links
- BBC History – The Vikings
Viking activity in the British Isles occurred during the Early Middle Ages the 8th to the 11th centuries CE when Scandinavians travelled to the British Isles to raid conquer settle and trade They are generally referred to as Vikings but some scholars debate whether the term Viking represented all Scandinavian settlers or just those who used violence Coin of King Cnut At the start of the early medieval period Scandinavian kingdoms had developed trade links reaching as far as southern Europe and the Mediterranean giving them access to foreign imports such as silver gold bronze and spices These trade links also extended westwards into Ireland and Britain In the last decade of the eighth century Viking raiders sacked several Christian monasteries in northern Britain and over the next three centuries they launched increasingly large scale invasions and settled in many areas especially in eastern Britain and Ireland the islands north and west of Scotland and the Isle of Man Background of local ethnic groupsThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Viking activity in the British Isles news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message During the Early Medieval period the islands of Ireland and Britain were each culturally linguistically and religiously divided among various peoples Territories controlled by the Vikings red Anglo Saxons yellow and Celts green in the 9th centuryLanguage and religion The languages of the Celtic Britons and of the Gaels descended from the Celtic languages spoken by Iron Age inhabitants of Europe In Ireland and parts of western Scotland as well as in the Isle of Man people spoke an early form of Celtic Gaelic known as Old Irish In Cornwall Cumbria Wales and south west Scotland the Celtic Brythonic languages were spoken their modern descendants include Welsh and Cornish The Picts who spoke the Pictish language lived in the area north of the Forth and Clyde rivers which now constitutes a large portion of modern day Scotland Due to the scarcity of writing in Pictish which survives only in Ogham views differ as to whether Pictish was a Celtic language like those spoken further south or perhaps even a non Indo European language like Basque However most inscriptions and place names hint towards the Picts being Celtic in language and culture Much of southern Britain had become the various kingdoms of Anglo Saxon England where Anglo Saxon migrants from continental Europe had settled during the fifth century CE bringing with them their own Germanic language known as Old English polytheistic religion and cultural practices Many peoples of Britain and Ireland had already converted to Christianity from their older pre Christian polytheistic religions including the distinct polytheistic religion Anglo Saxon paganism practiced by the Anglo Saxons Distribution of ethnic groups In northern Britain in the area roughly corresponding to modern day Scotland lived three distinct ethnic groups in their own respective kingdoms the Picts Scots and Britons The Pictish cultural group dominated the majority of Scotland with major populations concentrated between the Firth of Forth and the River Dee as well as in Sutherland Caithness and Orkney The Scots according to written sources constituted a tribal group which had crossed to Britain from Dalriada in the north of Ireland during the late fifth century The northern Britons lived in the Old North in parts of what have become southern Scotland and northern England and by the seventh or eighth centuries these had apparently come under the political control of Anglo Saxons By the mid ninth century Anglo Saxon England comprised four separate and independent kingdoms East Anglia Wessex Northumbria and Mercia the last of which was the strongest military power Class system Between half a million and a million people lived in England at this time with society being rigidly hierarchical The class system had a king and his ealdormen at the top under whom ranked the thegns or landholders and then the various categories of agricultural workers below them Beneath all of these was a class of slaves who may have made up as much as a quarter of the population The majority of the populace lived in the countryside although a few large towns had developed notably London and York which became centres of royal and ecclesiastical administration There were also a number of trading ports such as Hamwic and Ipswich which engaged in foreign trade Viking raids 780s 850In the final decade of the eighth century Viking raiders attacked a series of Christian monasteries in the British Isles Here these monasteries had often been positioned on small islands and in other remote coastal areas so that the monks could live in seclusion devoting themselves to worship without the interference of other elements of society At the same time it made them isolated and unprotected targets for attack by sea Lo it is nearly 350 years that we and our fathers have inhabited this most lovely land and never before has such a terror appeared as we have now suffered from a pagan race nor was it thought that such an inroad from the sea could be made Behold the church of St Cuthbert spattered with the blood of the priests of God despoiled of all its ornaments Archbishop Alcuin of York on the sacking of Lindisfarne The first known account of a Viking raid in Anglo Saxon England comes from 789 when three ships from Hordaland in modern Norway landed in the Isle of Portland on the southern coast of Wessex When approached by Beaduheard the royal reeve from Dorchester whose job it was to identify all foreign merchants entering the kingdom they killed him There were almost certainly unrecorded earlier raids In a document dating to 792 King Offa of Mercia set out privileges granted to monasteries and churches in Kent but he excluded military service against seaborne pirates with migrating fleets showing that Viking raids were already an established problem In a letter of 790 92 to King AEthelred I of Northumbria Alcuin berated English people for copying the fashions of pagans who menaced them with terror This shows that there were already close contacts between the two peoples and the Vikings would have been well informed about their targets The next recorded attack against the Anglo Saxons came the following year in 793 when the monastery at Lindisfarne an island off England s eastern coast was sacked by a Viking raiding party on 8 June The following year they sacked the nearby Monkwearmouth Jarrow Abbey In 795 they once again attacked this time raiding Iona Abbey off Scotland s west coast This monastery was attacked again in 802 and 806 when 68 people living there were killed After this devastation the monastic community at Iona abandoned the site and fled to Kells in Ireland In the first decade of the ninth century Viking raiders began to attack coastal districts of Ireland In 835 the first major Viking raid in southern England took place and was directed against the Isle of Sheppey and in a battle in 839 Vikings inflicted heavy defeats against the Picts killing Uuen the King of the Picts his brother Bran and Aed son of Boanta King of Dal Riata England runestones OsloCopenhagenStockholmclass notpageimage Map of the geographic distribution of the England Runestones in southern Scandinavia and northernmost Germany modern administrative borders and cities are shown The England runestones Swedish Englandsstenarna is a group of about 30 runestones in Sweden which refer to Viking Age voyages to England They constitute one of the largest groups of runestones that mention voyages to other countries and they are comparable in number only to the approximately 30 Greece runestones and the 26 Ingvar runestones of which the latter refer to a Viking expedition to the Middle East They were engraved in Old Norse with the Younger Futhark citation needed The Anglo Saxon rulers paid large sums Danegelds to Vikings who mostly came from Denmark and Sweden who arrived to the English shores during the 990s and the first decades of the 11th century Some runestones relate of these Danegelds such as the Yttergarde runestone U 344 which tells of Ulf of Borresta who received the danegeld three times and the last one he received from Canute the Great Canute sent home most of the Vikings who had helped him conquer England but he kept a strong bodyguard the THingalid and its members are also mentioned on several runestones The vast majority of the runestones 27 were raised in modern day Sweden and 17 in the oldest Swedish provinces around lake Malaren Modern day Denmark has no such runestones but there is a runestone in Scania which mentions London There is also a runestone in Norway and a Swedish one in Schleswig Germany citation needed Some Vikings such as Gudver did not only attack England but also Saxony as reported by the Grinda Runestone So 166 in Sodermanland Grjotgardr and Einridi the sons made the stone in memory of their able father Gudver was in the west divided up payment in England manfully attacked townships in Saxony Connection to the slave trade Slavery in the Muslim world provided a great market for the slaves captured by the vikings in Europe Islamic law banned Muslims from enslaving other Muslims and there was a big market for non Muslim slaves on Islamic territory where European slaves were referred to as saqaliba these slaves were likely both Pagan Slavic Finnic and Baltic Eastern Europeans as well as Christian Western Europeans People taken captive during the viking raids in Western Europe could be sold to Moorish Spain via the Dublin slave trade or transported to Hedeby or Branno and from there via the Volga trade route to Russia where slaves and furs were sold to Muslim merchants in exchange for Arab silver dirham and silk which have been found in Birka Wollin and Dublin Initially this trade route between Europe and the Abbasid Caliphate passed via the Khazar Kaghanate but from the early 10th century onward it went via Volga Bulgaria and from there by caravan to Khwarazm to the Samanid slave market in Central Asia and finally via Iran to the Abbasid Caliphate This was one of the major routes of the viking slave trade alongside the Black Sea slave trade The slave trade between the Vikings and the Muslims in Central Asia is known to have functioned from at least between 786 and 1009 as large quantities of silver coins from the Samanid Empire have been found in Scandinavia from these years People taken captive by the Vikings during their raids in Western Europe were likely sold in Islamic Central Asia a slave trade which was so lucrative that it may have contributed to the Viking raids in Western Europe which was used by the vikings as a slave supply source for their slave trade with the Muslim world Treasure hoards Various hoards of treasure were buried in England at this time Some of these may have been deposited by Anglo Saxons attempting to hide their wealth from Viking raiders and others by the Viking raiders as a way of protecting their looted treasure One of these hoards discovered in Croydon historically part of Surrey now in Greater London in 1862 contained 250 coins three silver ingots and part of a fourth as well as four pieces of hack silver in a linen bag Archaeologists interpret this as loot collected by a member of the Viking army By dating the artefacts archaeologists estimated that this hoard had been buried in 872 when the army wintered in London The coins themselves came from a wide range of different kingdoms with Wessex Mercian and East Anglian examples found alongside foreign imports from Carolingian dynasty Francia and from the Arab world Not all such Viking hoards in England contain coins however for example at Bowes Moor Durham 19 silver ingots were discovered whilst at Orton Scar Cumbria a silver neck ring and penannular brooch were uncovered The historian Peter Hunter Blair believed that the success of the Viking raids and the complete unpreparedness of Britain to meet such attacks became major factors in the subsequent Viking invasions and colonisation of large parts of the British Isles Invasion and Danelaw 865 954From 865 the Viking attitude towards the British Isles changed as they began to see it as a place for potential colonisation rather than simply a place to raid As a result of this larger armies began arriving on Britain s shores with the intention of conquering land and constructing settlements there The early Viking settlers would have appeared visibly different from the Anglo Saxon populace wearing Scandinavian styles of jewellery and probably also wearing their own peculiar styles of clothing Viking and Anglo Saxon men also had different hairstyles Viking men s hair was shaved at the back and left shaggy on the front whilst the Anglo Saxons typically wore their hair long England Viking armies captured York the major city in the Kingdom of Northumbria in 866 Counterattacks concluded in a decisive defeat for Anglo Saxon forces at York on 21 March 867 and the deaths of Northumbrian leaders AElla and Osberht Other Anglo Saxon kings began to capitulate to the Viking demands and surrendered land to Viking settlers In addition many areas in eastern and northern England including all but the northernmost parts of Northumbria came under the direct rule of Viking leaders or their puppet kings Great Heathen Army battles King AEthelred of Wessex who had been leading the conflict against the Vikings died in 871 and was succeeded on the throne of Wessex by his younger brother Alfred The Viking king of Northumbria Halfdan Ragnarrson Old English Healfdene one of the leaders of the Viking Great Army known to the Anglo Saxons as the Great Heathen Army surrendered his lands to a second wave of Viking invaders in 876 In the next four years Vikings gained further land in the kingdoms of Mercia and East Anglia as well King Alfred continued his conflict with the invading forces but was driven back into Somerset in the south west of his kingdom in 878 where he was forced to take refuge in the marshes of Athelney England in 878 Alfred regrouped his military forces and defeated the armies of the Viking monarch of East Anglia Guthrum at the Battle of Edington May 878 Sometime after the Battle of Edington a treaty was agreed that set out the lasting peace terms between the two kings that included the boundaries of each of their kingdoms It is known as the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum The treaty is one of the few existing documents of Alfred s reign and survives in Old English in Corpus Christi College Cambridge Manuscript 383 and in a Latin compilation known as Quadripartitus The areas to the north and east became known as the Danelaw because it was under Viking political influence whilst those areas to the south and west remained under Anglo Saxon dominance Alfred s government set about constructing a series of defended towns or burhs began the construction of a navy and organised a militia system the fyrd whereby half of his peasant army remained on active service at any one time To maintain the burhs and the standing army he set up a taxation and conscription system known as the Burghal Hidage In 892 a new Viking army with 250 ships established itself in Appledore Kent and another army of 80 ships soon afterwards in Milton Regis The army then launched a continuous series of attacks on Wessex However due in part to the efforts of Alfred and his army the kingdom s new defences proved to be a success and the Viking invaders were met with a determined resistance and made less of an impact than they had hoped By 896 the invaders dispersed instead settling in East Anglia and Northumbria with some instead sailing to Normandy Alfred s policy of opposing the Viking settlers continued under his daughter AEthelflaed who married AEthelred Ealdorman of Mercia and also under her brother King Edward the Elder reigned 899 924 When Edward died in July 924 his son AEthelstan became king In 927 he conquered the last remaining Viking kingdom York making him the first Anglo Saxon ruler of the whole of England In 934 he invaded Scotland and forced Constantine II to submit to him but AEthelstan s rule was resented by the Scots and Vikings and in 937 they invaded England AEthelstan defeated them at the Battle of Brunanburh a victory which gave him great prestige both in the British Isles and on the Continent and led to the collapse of Viking power in northern Britain After his death in 939 the Vikings seized back control of York and it was not finally reconquered until 954 Edward s son Edmund became king of the English in 939 However when Edmund was killed in a brawl his younger brother Eadred of Wessex took over as king Then in 947 the Northumbrians rejected Eadred and made the Norwegian Eric Bloodaxe Eirik Haraldsson their king Eadred responded by invading and ravaging Northumbria When the Saxons headed back south Eric Bloodaxe s army caught up with some them at Castleford and made great slaughter Eadred threatened to destroy Northumbria in revenge so the Northumbrians turned their back on Eric and acknowledged Eadred as their king The Northumbrians then had another change of heart and accepted Olaf Sihtricsson as their ruler only to have Eric Bloodaxe remove him and become king of the Northumbrians again Then in 954 Eric Bloodaxe was expelled for the second and final time by Eadred Bloodaxe was the last Norse king of Northumbria Second invasion 980 1042Cnut the Great s domains in red England Under the reign of Wessex King Edgar the Peaceful England came to be further politically unified with Edgar coming to be recognised as the king of all England by both Anglo Saxon and Viking populations living in the country However in the reigns of his son Edward the Martyr who was murdered in 978 and then AEthelred the Unready the political strength of the English monarchy waned and in 980 raiders from Scandinavia resumed attacks against England The English government decided that the only way of dealing with these attackers was to pay them protection money and so in 991 they gave them 10 000 This fee did not prove to be enough and over the next decade the English kingdom was forced to pay the Viking attackers increasingly large sums of money Many English began to demand that a more hostile approach be taken against the Vikings and so on St Brice s Day in 1002 King AEthelred proclaimed that all Danes living in England would be executed It would come to be known as the St Brice s Day massacre The news of the massacre reached King Sweyn Forkbeard in Denmark It is believed that Sweyn s sister Gunhilde could have been among the victims which prompted Sweyn to raid England the following year when Exeter was burned down Hampshire Wiltshire Wilton and Salisbury also fell victim to the Viking revenge attack Sweyn continued his raid in England and in 1004 his Viking army looted East Anglia plundered Thetford and sacked Norwich before he once again returned to Denmark Further raids took place in 1006 1007 then Sweyn was paid over 10 000 pounds of silver to leave and in 1009 1012 Thorkell the Tall led a Viking invasion into England citation needed In 1013 Sweyn Forkbeard launched a full scale invasion of England after a few months of claiming submission over England and a successful attack on London AEthelred fled to Normandy leading Sweyn to take the English throne Sweyn died five weeks later and AEthelred returned driving out Sweyn s son Cnut but in 1015 Cnut returned with a fleet of 200 ships launching a hard fought campaign that would last for over a year After his victory over English forces at the Battle of Assandun Cnut and Edmund Ironside agreed to divide England between them Cnut the north and Edmund the south whoever outlived the other becomes king of all England Cnut became king of England upon Edmund s death on the 30th of November and was crowned later in 1017 subsequently ruling over both the Danish and English kingdoms Following Cnut s death in 1035 the two kingdoms were once more declared independent and remained so apart from a short period from 1040 to 1042 when Cnut s son Harthacnut ascended the English throne Stamford Bridge 1066The Battle of Stamford Bridge 1870 Peter Nicolai Arbo Harald Hardrada King of Norway led an invasion of England in 1066 with 300 longships and 10 000 soldiers attempting to seize the English throne during the succession dispute following the death of Edward the Confessor He met initial success defeating the outnumbered forces mustered by the earldoms of Northumbria and Mercia at the Battle of Fulford Whilst basking in his victory and occupying Northumbria in preparation for the advance south Harald s army was surprised by a similarly sized force led by King Harold Godwinson which had managed to force march all the way there from London in a week The invasion was repulsed at the Battle of Stamford Bridge and Hardrada was killed along with most of his men Whilst the Viking attempt was unsuccessful the near simultaneous Norman invasion was successful in the south at the Battle of Hastings Hardrada s invasion and defeat has been described as the end of the Viking Age in Britain Written recordsThe Kingdom of the Isles about the year 1100 Archaeologists James Graham Campbell and Colleen E Batey noted that there was a lack of historical sources discussing the earliest Viking encounters with the British Isles which would have most probably been amongst the northern island groups those closest to Scandinavia The Irish Annals provide us with accounts of much Viking activity during the 9th and 10th centuries The England Runestones concentrated in Sweden give accounts of the voyages from the Viking perspective The Viking raids that affected Anglo Saxon England were primarily documented in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle a collection of annals initially written in the late ninth century most probably in the Kingdom of Wessex during the reign of Alfred the Great The Chronicle is however a biased source acting as a piece of wartime propaganda written on behalf of the Anglo Saxon forces against their Viking opponents and in many cases greatly exaggerates the size of the Viking fleets and armies thereby making any Anglo Saxon victories against them seem more heroic Archaeological evidenceThe Viking settlers in the British Isles left remains of their material culture behind which archaeologists have been able to excavate and interpret during the 20th and 21st centuries Such Viking evidence in Britain consists primarily of Viking burials undertaken in Shetland Orkney the Western Isles the Isle of Man Ireland and the north west of England Archaeologists James Graham Campbell and Colleen E Batey remarked that it was on the Isle of Man where Norse archaeology was remarkably rich in quality and quantity However as archaeologist Julian D Richards commented Scandinavians in Anglo Saxon England can be elusive to the archaeologist because many of their houses and graves are indistinguishable from those of the other populations living in the country For this reason historian Peter Hunter Blair noted that in Britain the archaeological evidence for Viking invasion and settlement was very slight compared with the corresponding evidence for the Anglo Saxon invasions of the fifth century See alsoKingdom of the Isles Scandinavian Scotland Orkney Earldom of Orkney History of Shetland Orkneyinga saga Viking Age Category Scandinavian Scotland Norman conquest of EnglandReferencesFootnotes The word Viking is a historical revival it was not used in Middle English but it was revived from Old Norse vikingr freebooter sea rover pirate Viking which usually is explained as meaning properly one who came from the fjords from vik creek inlet small bay cf Old English wic Middle High German wich bay and the second element in Reykjavik But Old English wicing and Old Frisian wizing are almost 300 years older and probably derive from wic village camp temporary camps were a feature of the Viking raids related to Latin vicus village habitation Graham Campbell and Batey suggest that true Vikings are those who took part in Viking raids A Viking base is thus a base from which Vikings went raiding but a Norse settlement in Scotland is a settlement occupied by people of Scandinavian origin There are only three surviving documents from the Anglo Saxon period that can be described as peace treaties The Anglo Saxon Chronicle Worcester MSS D for 948 CE says And when the king Eadred was on his way home the raiding army Eric Bloodaxe which was in York overtook the king s army at Castleford and a great slaughter was made there The Anglo Saxon Chronicle says that Bloodaxe was driven out from Northumbria however other sources claim that he was also killed Citations Keynes 1999 p 460 Richards 1991 p 9 Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 12 January 2020 Archived 7 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 p 3 Blair 2003 pp 56 57 Blair Peter Hunter 2003 An Introduction to Anglo Saxon England Anglo Saxon studies revised ed Cambridge University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0521537773 Retrieved 30 April 2019 A variety of evidence among which some of the objects from Sutton Hoo hold a prominent place indicates that England lay well within the range of Scandinavia s foreign contacts before the Viking attacks began Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 p 5 Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 pp 5 7 Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 pp 14 16 Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 p 18 Richards 1991 p 13 Blair 2003 p 63 Richards 1991 p 16 Jarman 2021 pp 93 96 S 134 Blair 2003 p 55 Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 p 24 Blair 2003 p 66 Blair 2003 p 68 Christopher Wright 1975 Kent through the years Batsford p 54 ISBN 0 7134 2881 3 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle Annals of Ulster 839 9 Harrison amp Svensson 2007 199 Jansson 1980 34 Harrison amp Svensson 2007 198 Entry So 166 in Rundata 2 0 for Windows Korpela J 2018 Slaves from the North Finns and Karelians in the East European Slave Trade 900 1600 Nederlanderna Brill p 33 35 The slave trade of European women to the Middle East and Asia from antiquity to the ninth century by Kathryn Ann Hain Department of History The University of Utah December 2016 Copyright c Kathryn Ann Hain 2016 All Rights Reserved https collections lib utah edu ark 87278 s6616pp7 p 256 257 The Slave Market of Dublin 23 April 2013 The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 3 C 900 c 1024 1995 Storbritannien Cambridge University Press p 91 The World of the Khazars New Perspectives Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium 2007 Nederlanderna Brill p 232 The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 3 C 900 c 1024 1995 Storbritannien Cambridge University Press p 504 Pargas amp Schiel Damian A Juliane 2023 The Palgrave Handbook of Global Slavery Throughout History Tyskland Springer International Publishing p 126 The slave trade of European women to the Middle East and Asia from antiquity to the ninth century by Kathryn Ann Hain Department of History The University of Utah December 2016 Copyright c Kathryn Ann Hain 2016 All Rights Reserved https collections lib utah edu ark 87278 s6616pp7 Richards 1991 p 17 Richards 1991 p 20 Richards 1991 pp 11 12 Starkey 2004 p 51 Lavelle 2010 p 325 Whitelock 1996 pp 417 418 Asser 1983 p 311 Horspool 2006 p 102 Peter Sawyer 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings Oxford University Press pp 58 59 ISBN 978 0 19 285434 6 Richards 1991 p 22 Pearson 2012 p 131 Panton 2011 p 135 Richards 1991 p 24 The St Brice s Day Massacre Historic UK Retrieved 7 June 2020 Howard 2003 pp 64 65 Howard 2003 pp 66 67 Richards 1991 p 28 Last of the Vikings Stamford Bridge 1066 26 August 2008 Graham Campbell and Batey 1998 p 2 Blair 2003 p 64 Richards 1991 p 15 Bibliography Asser 1983 Life of King Alfred In Keynes Simon Lapidge Michael eds Alfred the Great Asser s Life of King Alfred amp Other Contemporary Sources Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0 14 044409 4 Blair Peter Hunter 2003 An Introduction to Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed Cambridge and New York City Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53777 3 Crawford Barbara E 1987 Scandinavian Scotland Atlantic Highlands New Jersey Leicester University Press ISBN 978 0 7185 1282 8 Graham Campbell James amp Batey Colleen E 1998 Vikings in Scotland An Archaeological Survey Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 0641 2 Horspool David 2006 Why Alfred Burned the Cakes London Profile Books ISBN 978 1 86197 786 1 Howard Ian 2003 Swein Forkbeard s Invasions and the Danish Conquest of England 991 1017 illustrated ed Boydell Press ISBN 978 0851159287 Jarman Cat 2021 River Kings The Vikings from Scandinavia to the Silk Roads London William Collins ISBN 978 0 00 835311 7 Keynes Simon 1999 Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds Vikings The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell pp 460 461 Lavelle Ryan 2010 Alfred s Wars Sources and Interpretations of Anglo Saxon Warfare in the Viking Age Woodbridge Suffolk Boydel Press ISBN 978 1 84383 569 1 Panton Kenneth J 2011 Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy Plymouth Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5779 7 Pearson William 2012 Erik Bloodaxe His Life and Times A Royal Viking in His Historical and Geographical Settings Bloomington IN AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4685 8330 4 Richards Julian D 1991 Viking Age England London B T Batsford and English Heritage ISBN 978 0 7134 6520 4 Starkey David 2004 The Monarchy of England Vol I London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 0 7011 7678 4 Whitelock Dorothy ed 1996 The treaty between Alfred and Guthrum English Historical Documents Vol 1 2 ed Oxford Routledge ISBN 0 203 43950 3 Further readingDownham Clare 2009 Hiberno Norwegians and Anglo Danes Anachronistic Ethnicities and Viking Age England Medieval Scandinavia 19 139 169 External linksBBC History The Vikings