War Of The Vikings Youtube

War Of The Vikings Youtube

War of the Vikings prepares you for one kind of battle and then tosses you headlong into another. More Reviews by Brian Albert. Ghost Recon: Wildlands Review. Sniper Elite 4.

Dan Snow joins archaeologist Professor Martin Biddle in the churchyard of St Wystan's Church in Repton, Derby, where he made an explosive discovery that will change the way we think about Viking Britain. Championship manager 2007 tactics. Anglo-Saxon England was very wealthyThe clearest cause for the Viking raids was simply the acquisition of wealth. Britain was particularly well known for its lucrative trade centres, and the Scandinavians were aware of this through their own commerce with the region.Far from targeting Lindisfarne for its religious association, the Vikings would have chosen it for its riches or, as scholar Janet T.

Nelson observes, “what lured Vikings was movable wealth”.The rich gifts given to Lindisfarne – and for instance – were, naturally, unprotected, as the monks had no weapons.Other religious communities were similar in this respect and so made tempting targets for Viking raiders. The following year Vikings sacked the nearby Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Abbey, once the home of the Venerable Bede. A page of the Codex Aureus (in Latin ‘Golden Book’).

Its text is decorated with gold, silver and coloured ink. During the mid-9th century Vikings seized the Codex Aureus and held it for ransom. And this wealth was in easy reach of the seaThe first sites struck were all religious institutions, but that has more to do with convenience than consideration; the abbeys and priories which first fell to the Vikings were located near the coast.Although the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gives a January date for the raid on Lindisfarne, other sources make clear it was in June, and this would make sense as the seas would have been calmer and provided greater ease in travel. Lindisfarne Priory’s proximity to the sea made it both an easy and an exceptionally wealthy target.The Vikings also discovered from their early raids that Britain offered lands that could be cultivated.

Consequently many Viking warriors travelled back to Britain with their families to settle down and cultivate the earth. A painting of Viking daily life. Many Viking warriors returned to Britain’s shores permanently to take advantage of the island’s fertile land. Early raids encouraged further expeditionsThe early raids and the rich plunder they generated encouraged more elaborate military expeditions. In 865 CE under the leadership of Halfdane and Ivar the Boneless arrived in East Anglia in a massive fleet and marched across the land.In 867 CE the city of York fell, in 868 CE Mercia was raided, and by 871 CE Halfdane had defeated every force sent against him and was so powerful that Alfred the Great had no choice but to pay him an exorbitant amount to leave Wessex.By 1018, was proclaimed King of Denmark and united it with Britain under his rule, before then claiming the thrones of Norway and Sweden.

Two great military forces dominated Europe in the 9th century. On the mainland was the Frankish Empire, a kingdom covering modern France and much of Germany, half a continent under the rule of a military monarchy. To the north were the Vikings, a disparate assortment of raiders and traders emerging from ice-bound Scandinavia, pillaging their neighbors before retreating to winter quarters. War was inevitable.

The Franks

The strength of the Franks lay in their cavalry. These were the predecessors of the medieval knights, a class of aristocratic armored warriors. Charging into battle as coordinated groups of shock troops, they were the heavy hitters of Europe’s battlefields. To face them was to be trampled beneath the hooves of the future of warfare.

The Vikings

The Vikings, on the other hand, were seafaring raiders. Though they used horses, particularly towards the end of the century, these were mostly for transport rather than battlefield combat.

With their swords, axes, and shields, the Vikings formed a formidable infantry force. Using their longboats to move swiftly along coastlines and up rivers, they launched surprise attacks wherever they went. Sudden violence struck fear into the population. While the Vikings were capable of standing their ground on a battlefield, this was not where their expertise lay. Terror was their weapon, and it forced many people to pay tribute to them.

1. Hamburg, 845

In 840, King Louis of the Franks died, and his kingdom descended into chaos. Torn apart by a war between his sons, in 843 Frankia became three kingdoms – East Frankia, West Frankia, and Middle Frankia, also known as Lotharingia. This created a perfect opportunity for the Vikings. Descending upon the previously intimidating Franks, they set to raiding.

In East Frankia, they sacked the town of Hamburg in 845. But Louis the German, the king of East Frankia, was a potent military commander. This was the last serious Viking raid in the east for 30 years.

2. Bordeaux, 848

The Vikings could be cunning as well as brutal. In 848, the citizens of Bordeaux believed that they had driven back an attack by the Raiders. But the Vikings returned at night, seizing the town in a surprise attack under cover of darkness.

King Charles the Bald of West Frankia, intervened in the Viking attack on Bordeaux, relieving a siege of the town. But this was not out of concern about the Vikings so much as the politics of the region, making a show of his power in rebellious Aquitaine.

3. Jeufosse, 852

In 852, two of the Frankish kings united to tackle the Viking threat. Lothar of the Middle Franks teamed up with Charles the Bald to blockade the Viking camp at Jeufosse, cutting off their routes of supply and raiding, fighting off any attempts to break out.

It could have been the moment the Franks broke a great Viking fleet, but instead, it came to nothing. Charles’s armies, knowing that no plunder was to be had in a defensive war, refused to stay in the field over Christmas. The blockade was abandoned, and the Vikings sailed free.

4. The Seine Raids, 856-862

The West Franks, ruled by Charles the Bald, were by far the most vulnerable. Threatened by the other Frankish kingdoms, separatists in Aquitaine and Brittany, and rebellious nobles, Charles struggled to fight back when the Vikings came.

From 856, the Vikings focussed their attention on the Seine valley. Some of the richest lands in all of Frankia, it included the burgeoning city of Paris, with all its wealth. Creating bases at Jeufosse and then Oissel, the Vikings raided up and down the Seine, using both longboats and horses to reach far into Charles’s territory.

Paris was sacked twice in quick succession, the locals cowering before the brutality of Viking raiders in both 856 and 857. Evreux, Bayeux, and Noyon were all among the important towns devastated by these raids. St Maur, like Paris, fell to the Raiders twice.

Charles managed to buy off some of these Vikings, but it was only by hiring other raiders from the Somme that he was eventually able to drive them away. In 862, the Seine Vikings left the Seine, but not Frankia.

War of the vikings steam

5. St Denis, 857

Among the victims of the Seine Vikings were the monks at the monastery of St Denis.

On Easter morning, 857, the monks awoke to see riders approaching out of the dawn. It was the Vikings.

These raiders had chosen their timing carefully. Easter was the most important festival in the Christian calendar, a great distraction which would bring wealthy guests and rich gifts to an important religious house like St Denis. By riding overland and arriving at dawn, they ensured the element of surprise, giving them the best chance of taking wealthy noble prisoners.

6. Oissel, 861

The key moment in Charles’s breaking of the Seine fleet came in 861. Hiring Raiders under Weland to fight for him, he blockaded the Viking base at Oissel.

This was a far more effective siege than the one at Jeufosse. Filth, starvation, and misery descended upon the Viking camp. Forced to give up, they paid the besiegers and made an alliance with them in order to be allowed out.

7. Orléans, 854 and 856

Even before they were forced out of the Seine, some Vikings had instead been raiding further south, along the fertile Loire Valley.

One of the most important towns on the Loire, Orléans came under threat of a Viking attack in 854. The local Bishop teamed up with the bishop of Chartres to raise a force of ships and men. They drove the Vikings back up the Loire, saving Orléans.

But it was just a temporary respite. In 856 the Vikings returned and sacked Orléans, punishing the town for its resistance.

8. The Road from Le Mans, 866

The man most successful at fighting the Loire Vikings was Count Robert of Angers, who defeated them several times in the 860s. But in 866 he confronted a group of raiders returning from Le Mans and was killed in battle. One of the best hopes against the Vikings lay dead.

War Of The Vikings Youtube
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