Violence, Society and Communication: the Vikings and Pattern of Violence in England and Ireland 793-860
1. Violence, Society and Communication: the Vikings and Pattern of
Violence in England and Ireland 793-860
Patrick J. Smith
Preface
This paper is about Vikings and violence. It is an attempt to transform the
violence of the Viking raids, and of early medieval Europe in a wider sense, into
something that amounts to more than a terse and uninformative annalistic account.
Ever since first being taught about cruel, violence Vikings at primary school and how
they raped their way across unsuspecting Britain and Ireland, I have been fascinated
by the way the Northmen have been depicted. After reading on the subject as an
undergraduate, the subject only became more interesting. This is perhaps an attempt
to put some of my own doubts to rest.
It would be impossible in the space allowed to give a full and exhaustive
analysis of both the actions of Viking invaders and native English and Irish warriors,
a brief look at many issues is necessary for my argument. I have not included a
narrative or even an overview of the Viking Age, simply because such information is
readily available in many forms and is written by scholars far more qualified in the
field. There was originally going to be an entire section on the Vikings in Francia, for
which there is perhaps the best and most reliable evidence – and a discussion of the
impact of post-Viking Age sagas on modern interpretations of Vikings, but there
simply was not enough room.
It must also be said that the impact of neighbouring fields of inquiry such as
archaeology and numismatics that have offered so much to the historian are
unfortunately largely absent from the discussion here simply due to a lack of space.
Although this piece concentrates mostly on written sources, and unashamedly draws
2. 2
from a revisionist tradition in secondary material in the Vikings, the same study could
perhaps be conducted with just these disciplines in mind.
Gratitude is extended to Professor Ian Moxon, who though not a medievalist
was kind enough to provide me with his excellent and very useful translation of the
The Life of Anskar, which hopefully one day will see the light of day as a published
piece for the benefit of other students without a good grasp of Latin.
Thanks also to those who read all or some of it during the making,
especially Professor Ian Wood, Freddie, Peter and Tamsyn who pointed out the worst
of the mistakes. I can only accept responsibility myself for the remainder of them.
3. 3
Introduction
A furore normannorum, libera nos, domine.
(From the violence of the Northmen deliver us.)1
Much has been and continues to be written about the Vikings. The actions of
these famous Scandinavians have come to represent one of the most enduring and
vivid images of the middle ages. We might well ask, as Kelly De Vries has, whether
there ‘is anything more representative of medieval society than the knight in shining
armour, lance coached under his arm, bearing down his tournament opponent, or the
Viking warrior, horns on helmet, slicing through defenceless peasants and
monks…?’2 It is this image that shall be examined in this paper. How violent were the
Vikings in Western Europe? Were they more violent than their Western European
victims or are the monastic sources that suggest this a fair representation? The
western sources portray them as a monstrosity, something horrific and alien.
Sometimes they even are barely even human, ‘swarming communities like stinging
hornets and spread on all sides like fearful wolves’ across unsuspecting Northumbria.3
This kind of reaction is perhaps hardly surprising given the unexpected and
undoubtedly destructive nature of the raids. There is, however, more to the West’s
reaction than simple outrage. There is confusion and a misunderstanding; a sense of
bewilderment of how could such a thing could happen. Like most things in Middle
Age Christian Europe it was seen by many to be a judgment of God, retribution for
straying from His path.
It is important to remember that the Viking menace grew with the telling.4
Successive generations after the end of the Viking Age proper seem to have
1
Quoted in F. Donald Logan, The Vikings in History (1983, London) p.15
2
Kelly DeVries, Medieval Military Technology (1992, Broadview) p.3
3
Simeon of Durham, EHD p.247
4
Peter Sawyer, The Age of the Vikings (1971, London) p. 95
4. 4
elaborated on either the heroic or depraved elements of the Viking migration. In the
case of the Icelandic sagas for instance, this was done quite ingeniously. As works of
literature, and indeed as propaganda, the sagas are wonderful examples of their genre
and make quite enjoyable reading. They unfortunately do not figure as historical
documents. Accepting this, what concerns us primarily, in the words of Peter Sawyer,
is the way in which the hostility of the sources, and the biases and exaggerations
therein have ‘so thoroughly infected historical writing about the period as a whole’
and portrayed Vikings in such a negative light. 5 Consider and compare for example
the view of one of a leading churchman writing in at the end of the ninth century with
the view of a leading historian of his time, which we feel are worth quoting at length:
Wild beasts…(go) by horse and foot through hills and fields, forests, open plains and
villages, killing babies, children, young men, old men, fathers, sons and mothers…They
overthrow, they despoil, they destroy, they burn, they ravage, sinister cohort, fatal phalanx,
cruel host…6
…As buccaneers, thieves and murderers, the Northmen horrified all western
Christendom, startled even the Greek Empire, and more than once shocked the Muslim people
of the Caliphate…history knows them as bloodthirsty and abominable barbarians, enemies of
society capable of infamous, indefensible outrages of arson and slaughter…7
For writers to be worked up into such a frothy rage in their commentaries on
Viking raids is not rare. The work of Patrick Wormald and Alfred Smyth, once
described as an unusual reactionary pairing of English and Irish scholars,8 in
particular contains quite similar condemnations of Viking activity in England. There
has of course been a sizeable body of work written in defence of Vikings in Europe in
5
Sawyer, Age of the Vikings (1971, London) p.9
6
Abbo, ‘Le Siége du Paris par les Normands’, in Henri Waquet (ed.) Les Classiques de l’Histoire du
France au Moyen Age (1942, Paris) p.28-30, at lines 177-95; quoted in Sawyer, Age of the Vikings
p.120. Abbo, though a notable Frank, also wrote the Passio Sancti Edmundi, in which he describes in
great detail the brutal death of the East Anglian King at the hands of the Danes.
7
T.D. Kendrick, A History of the Vikings (1930, London) p.12
8
Christopher D. Morris, ‘Raiders, Traders and settlers: the Early Viking Age in Scotland’ in Clark Ó
Floinn and Ní Mhaonaigh (eds.) Ireland and Scandinavia in the Early Viking Age (1998, Dublin) p73
5. 5
the past forty years and the spectrum of thought is far more balanced.9 We feel
however that it is time that historians stopped debating whether Vikings were ‘good’
or ’bad’ and what destructive processes they may or not have instigated, and started to
study the actions of the Vikings in a wider context of Western European
communication and violence. In light of recent research on the nature of violence and
warfare in the medieval West, taking into consideration the influence of many
influences on the projected image of Vikings, this is what we shall attempt to do now
The intentions of this paper then are threefold. In the first section we will
attempt to give a brief overview of violence and conflict in the pre-Viking Age in the
medieval west, focussing mainly on England and Ireland, the Viking’s main victims
in the first thirty years of the Viking Age. We will attempt to show that early
medieval communities and kingdoms were almost constantly beset by war and
conflict. Violence was indeed a way of life: the occupation of thousands of men and
the platform for kings to establish, consolidate and retain power. The common
misconception that the Vikings attacked peaceful communities, an idea so very
ingrained into popular culture as well as academic thought, is one in need of drastic
reappraisal.10 Vikings aside, it is well worth commenting on the nature of early
medieval violence and its relationship to society, in light of new work on the subject.
Raiding, though understandably associated with Vikings, was something that kings,
monasteries and communities frequently undertook against each other. It is
9
For the defence of Vikings see Sawyer, Age of the Vikings (1971, London), which instigated the
debate over the treatment of Scandinavians in the sources and is perhaps still the most important work
on the subject; Peter Sawyer, Kings and Vikings (1981, London) which offers a general overview of the
period and Peter Sawyer, ‘The Causes of the Viking Age’ in T. Farrell (ed.) The Vikings (1982,
London). For a more recent contribution, Sarah Foot ‘Violence against Christians? The Vikings and the
Church in ninth-century England in MH 1991 p.3-16 and Guy Halsall ‘Playing by whose rules? A
Further look at Viking Atrocity in the ninth century’ in MH 1992 p.2-10.
10
This view was famously aired in Binchy, D.A, ‘Passing of the Old Order’ in Brian Ó Cuív (ed.) The
Impact of the Scandinavian invasions on the Celtic-speaking peoples c.800-1100 A.D. : introductory
papers read at plenary sessions of the International Congress of Celtic Studies 1959 (1975, Dublin)
6. 6
condemned as an outrage in western sources when the perpetrator is a Scandinavian
but passes often without comment when the culprit is Christian, though we often see
the regional or monarchical bias of the sources when they refer to raids and wars. The
more traditionally debased elements of Viking activity such as the taking hostages or
slaves, brutal and elaborate sacrificial methods and even the iconic act of burning
churches occurred in pre-Viking Western Europe. We shall by way of comparison
examine Viking behaviour in the first phase of the Viking Age and argue that the
raids were not qualitatively very different at all from the kind of violence common in
the medieval West.
In the second section, Violence and Communication, it shall be argued that
within the pattern of violence in the west there were, just as in modern warfare, rules,
conventions and norms of warfare that can generically be termed a ‘grammar’ of
warfare. Guy Halsall, who has been an eloquent voice in favour of this theory for
more than a decade, writes in a recent book ‘there were normative rules, or codes of
conduct, which governed the practice of warfare at various times and places in the
post-Roman West…Warfare is, after all, a form of communication.’11 As in other
modes of communication, medieval violence involved statements and replies, in the
form of disputes, raids, conflicts and wars. In England and Ireland for example, rival
kingdoms followed certain unwritten rules in their wars with each other: an attack on
a neighbouring kingdom would doubtless result in a reciprocating attack the following
summer, or whenever a suitable force could be mustered. Also, within the ‘laws’ or
grammar of this discourse, there is a sense of legitimacy of violence. Early medieval
11
Guy Halsall, Warfare and Society in the Barbarian West, 450-900 (2003, Routledge) p.9. See also
Halsall: ‘Playing by Whose Rules?’, and ‘Anthropology and the Study of Pre-Conquest Warfare and
Society: the Ritual War in Anglo-Saxon England’ in S. Chadwick-Hawkes, Weapons and warfare in
Anglo-Saxon England (Oxford, 1989) p.155-77
7. 7
societies attempted in various ways to establish the legitimacy, and also the
illegitimacy, of violent behaviour. As we shall see there are two dimensions within
this: horizontal and vertical, representing respectively the attempts of communities
and rulers to establish their version of legitimate violence.
In our third section, Vikings as Miscommunicators, it will be argued that
what really distinguished the violent acts of Vikings from that by English and Irish
kings, monks and laymen is not the Northmens’ ferocity or their ‘debased cruelty’ as
some historians would have it,12 but their willingness to flaunt these traditionally
respected ‘rules’ of warfare. The recent work of Guy Halsall, whose ideas form the
basis of this paper, suggests that the harsh treatment of Vikings in contemporary
western sources was not due to Viking acts of ‘cruelty’, manifested in some sources
as grizzly human sacrifices and a pronounced disregard for sacred buildings, but from
a ‘clash of cultures with different mentalities and different attitudes to warfare and its
practices’. We will attempt to place the Vikings into the picture set out in sections one
and two. The West’s reaction in monastic sources and later commentaries can be seen
as the reactions of communities that could not understand a people who continually
showed no respect or knowledge of the normal ‘rules’ of combat and warfare. Also,
aside from breaking the rules of warfare, the Vikings were a pagan, alien force.
Christian kings throughout the ninth century tried endlessly to get Viking leaders to
convert to Christianity, so to enter them into a world they can understand. Herein lie
the seeds of contempt, fear and misunderstanding that the Vikings have been treated
with ever since.
Peter Sawyer’s famous claim made in 1962 that the Viking migration was
12
Alfred Smyth, Scandinavian Kings in Britain (1977, Oxford)
8. 8
nothing more than an ‘extension of normal Dark Age activity’13 may suffice in
relation to the size of Viking bands and their activity in a general sense, but now more
than forty years after the publishing of The Age of The Vikings (and almost fifty since
Sawyer first revealed the conclusions made therein) it is surely due some revision.
Firstly, as David Wilson has said, the raids were too sustained and commonplace for
Viking activity to be deemed ‘normal’ within the context of the ninth century, even
though the actual violence itself was similar in practice and method. Patrick Wormald,
who is more ready to accept the ninth-century sources as accurate accounts than
many, adds that there must have at least been something exceptional about Viking
violence compared to violence by Christians to justify the attention the sources give to
it.14 We may in part accept this, but remain conscious of the propagandist nature of
the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the writers of which have had more than good reason
over the centuries it was written and revised to omit Christian violence and amplify
the effects of pagan destruction. The sources were not meant to be unbiased historical
accounts: what they record is the collective experience of a community. The laws of
history these writers adhered to were the laws of God and Christian morality.15
13
Sawyer, Age of the Vikings, p.202-3. For the purposes of this paper we will accept Sawyer’s estimate
that Viking bands in general numbered no more than ‘a few hundred men’, though the numbers were
undeniably much higher on occasion. We must accept, following the work of Nicholas Brooks, that
there are occasions when number correlate in the English sources and Irish sources, which must
suggest overall that Sawyer’s initial rule of a ‘few hundred men’ is no longer maintainable. It still
remains, however, a sensible guide for the period.
14
Wilson, D, ‘Viking studies: whence and whither? In Farrell, R.T, (ed.) The Vikings (1982,
Phillimore) p.129
9. 9
The Pattern of Violence in the Medieval West
In Western Europe established patterns of warfare had emerged by the
recorded beginning of Viking raids in 793. Even a cursory glance at the annals shows
that these were very violent times. Violence and warfare were intrinsically important
to the fabric of medieval society. For Lesnick the medieval world was one of ‘thick
skins, short fuses and physical violence’.16 Eric John’s statement that ‘Anglo-Saxon
society was so violent that a central fact of its politics, its way of life…was fighting
and making war’ may fit just as well with both Ireland and Francia.17 John paints a
world in which weapons are regarded as the ultimate status symbols, they are
bestowed onto noble boys upon coming of age and, judging by various excavations
across Britain, came to represent rank and authority. Halsall adds that these swords
given to Frankish nobles on their thirteenth birthday were not symbolic instruments as
swords are in modern-day ceremonies; these swords or axes should be viewed as
something designed to be used extensively in combat, indeed the medieval equivalent
of a machine gun. The spear came to represent all free males, and more elaborate
weapon armouries, like those found at Sutton Hoo in East Anglia, the higher social
classes.
Indeed, there is little doubting the existence of a ‘warrior cult’ in England and
Ireland the seventh and eighth centuries. Poetic works of the period feature warriors,
warring kings and, in the words of Halsall ‘stylised battle accounts…and religious
models…adapted to fit in with the stereotyped battle description’.18 Halsall may have
been referring specifically to Old English poetry, but even a basic reading of the great
Irish poem Codagh Gaedhel re Gallaibh (‘The wars of the Irish with the Foreigners’)
16
Lesnick, D.R, Insults and threats in medieval Todi; Journal of Medieval History (17,1991) pp.71-89
17
John, E, English feudalism and the structure of Anglo-Saxon society in John, E. (ed); Orbis
Britanniae and other studies (1966, Leicester) pp.128-53
18
Halsall, ‘Anthropology of Pre-Conquest War and Society’ p.171
10. 10
would produce similar conclusions. The fact that Codagh is a later source and
exaggerates the violent elements of both the Vikings and the Irish perhaps illustrates
the extent to which the Irish saw themselves, and attempted to portray themselves, in
successive generations.
Michael Wallace-Hadrill, who seemed to feel that the Vikings deserved their
supposed reputation as medieval Europe’s most feared pirates, at least agrees that
‘war was a natural state for the Anglo-Saxons, as for the Lombards, Franks and
Goths; so natural that it should be prepared for anticipated by warriors trained and
equipped in its service.’19 As with most issues relating to the Vikings in general,
though particularly with regard to the sources’ exaggeration of their exploits, we feel
drawn to the work of Peter Sawyer, who wrote in The Age of the Vikings:
‘Neither Scandinavians nor the peoples of western Europe were
strangers to war and bloodshed. The chronicles of the Christian world, long
before the Vikings interrupted into it, are full of wars and campaigns. Fighting,
whether among families or between kingdoms, must have been a common
experience…’20
19
J. Michael Wallace-Hadrill, ‘War and Peace in the Middle Ages’ in Trans, 5th series, vol.25 1975
20
Sawyer, Age of the Vikings p.202
11. 11
England
Four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms dominated the history of Britain in the seventh
and eighth centuries: Mercia, Wessex, Northumbria and East Anglia. The history of
these kingdoms in the seventh and eighth centuries is essentially the history of the
wars between them and insubordinate neighbouring peoples who retained their
regional and ethnic identities. By the end of the Ninth century however, only Wessex
survived intact. It has been argued that the West Saxons did not achieve their
supremacy through beating off their rivals but that the other kingdoms were
effectively killed off the by the Vikings.21 Whether this is true or not, there should be
no doubting the violent nature of the society the Vikings entered. Between 650 and
850 the sources record fourteen wars between Mercia and Wessex and eleven between
Mercia and the Welsh. We should not think that this list, which also includes eighteen
more conflicts against other opponents, is in any way complete: these wars are simply
the most noteworthy or particularly destructive of the period; our list of forty-two is
unfortunately far from exhaustive.22 It is unlikely that the Chronicle’s compilers knew
very much about military campaigns outside their native Wessex, particularly after
700 and the end of Bede’s history. Even some West Saxon action went unrecorded
and historians have been left to rely on the Annales Cambriae, various derivatives of
the Chronicle such as Simeon of Durham, saints’ lives and the Annals of Ulster. This
point underlines the inadequacy of source material relating to warfare and conflict in
the middle ages. On occasion even when a series of conflicts are mentioned in the
Chronicle, such as the entry for 755 (757 in some versions) which relates that
Cynewulf of Wessex slew an alderman and ‘fought many hard battle with the Welsh’,
not one specific battle is given mention’.23 Only in the work of the great intellectual
21
See for example Nicholas Brooks ‘England in the ninth century: the crucible of defeat’ in Trans,
1978 p.?? and Smyth, Scandinavian Kings in England
22
Halsall, Warfare and Society p.3
12. 12
figures of the age such as Bede or Gregory of Tours are there any references to
warfare that expand beyond the monastic ‘king x fought king y at town z’ model.
Nevertheless, there is still a lot to be learned from the Annals.
They show us principally, that military strength, and the frequent display of it,
was the basis of royal power throughout our period. Bede, in his Historia Ecclesia,
shows powerful kings in England to be successful military overlords who used their
might to intimidate lesser rulers into paying tribute and submission.24 Indeed, kings
were apparently expected to display their military prowess quite soon after their
accession. The evidence for Mercia shows that the only instance of a king taking more
than six years to undertake his first military campaign is Æthelbald who acceded in
715 and attacked Somerton in 733.25 These kings then often found themselves in a
vicious circle of military activity: they needed their armies to continue fighting in
order to remain in power. Halsall adds that the Chronicle reports in 716 of the death
of Osred of Northumbria in battle ‘south of the border’, which was in Æthelbald’s
reign.26
The heroic image of Anglo-Saxon warriors holding their leaders in the utmost
respect and viewing reputation above all else apparent in texts like Beowulf seems to
be somewhat dubious when we consider Bede’s comment that Anglo-Saxon soldiers
allowed their loyalties to stray, often switched sides and joined a rival kingdom’s
forces when booty from raids was not so forthcoming. We may perhaps see learn
23
ASC s.a. 757
24
Barbara Yorke, The Anglo-Saxons (1999, Sutton)
25
Halsall, ‘Anthropology and Pre-Conquest Warfare’ p170. Halsall adds that the ASC reports in 716 of
the death of Osred of Northumbria in battle ‘south of the border’, which was in Æthelbald’s reign. If
true, it would be an attack within one year of his accession and therefore prove the rule; if not it would
remain something of an unlikely anomaly.
26
From Boniface’s letter to Æthelbald, EHD no.177
13. 13
from Gildas, who called his military compatriots ‘bloody, proud and murderous men,
adulterers and enemies of God.’ Though in some ways misleading, what we do learn
from the poetic and hagiographical sources is the centrality of violence to Anglo-
Saxon communities, which cannot be overstated. This an interesting point to
remember when considering the Chronicle’s later condemnation of Viking bands as
disloyal infidels. Works like The Fortunes of Men or its companion works The Gifts of
Men and Maxims I and II, which are seen by many to be a good indicator of what
contemporaries saw as the proper ‘order of things’, treat violence as intrinsically
linked to the Anglo-Saxon way of life.27 They assert that ‘Good comrades must
encourage a young nobleman to war-making’ and that ‘Majesty must go with pride,
the daring with the brave; both must wage war with alacrity …In the man, martial
warlike arts must burgeon’.28 As Halsall points out, the ideal Anglo-Saxon image of a
Christian king was one of a ‘just king, his people’s defence in war’. An interesting
text, Felix’s Life of Guthlac, describes how the young nobleman upon reaching the
age of fifteen gathered a band of warriors and spent the following nine years burning,
ravaging and looting. Halsall suggests that as there is no comment from the author on
this behaviour, and there seems to be no literary or hagiographical model to follow, he
saw it as perfectly normal and acceptable behaviour.29 It is worth making a parallel
between the Life of Gunthlac and the Annals of Saint-Bertin, in which the entry for
841 states that in the civil war that followed the death of Louis the Pious, one of his
sons Lothar went from Sens to Le Mans and ravaged ‘everything with such acts of
devastation, burning, rape, sacrilege and blasphemy that he could not even restrain his
men from damaging those he was meant to be visiting’.30
27
Halsall, Anthropology and Pre-Conquest Warfare p.160
28
Maxims II and Maxims I, respectively. Quoted in Ibid p160
29
Ibid p.160
30
ASB s.a. 841
14. 14
This may as good an opportunity as any to, by way of a small diversion,
briefly discuss the reliability written sources in England. Sarah Foot wrote an article
in 1991 entitled ‘Violence Against Christians? The Vikings and the Church in Ninth-
Century England’ which examined the Viking’s treatment of the church in England.
Foot argued that the most detailed accounts referring to the destruction of individual
churches is of a late origin and describe events in a far more emotive way than those
who witnessed things first-hand.31 The Chronicle is a victim of this as much as
anything. The entry for 870 in most versions simply states that the Danes wintered in
Thanet, only a twelfth-century addition to the Peterborough ‘E’ manuscript adds:
At the same time they came to the minster at Medehamstede, burnt and
destroyed it, killed and abbot and monks and all they found there, and
brought it to pass that it became nought that had once been very mighty.32
Additions such as this are of historical value, if not for the history of the ninth
century, but for the opinions of twelfth-century writers: it would seem that the
Vikings had enough of an impact to strike into the English fear long after the Viking
Age – or that these writers found it impossible to contextualised the actions of a
people they still could not understand. Foot argues that the language used in ninth-
century texts is often indicative of the contempt for which the Vikings were held: the
Danes are constantly referred to between 851 and 866 as the ‘heathen army’.33
Though the Chronicle is undoubtedly West Saxon biased, Foot’s assertion that
chronicler(s) attempted to make an ‘explicit contrast between Viking heathenism and
Christianity and piety of (the Anglo-Saxons)’, may not always be so accurate. The
laws of history in modernity, being principally accuracy, a commitment to primary
sources and a balance of facts, were not present in the ninth century – nor was the
31
Sarah Foot, ‘Violence Against Christians? The Vikings and the Church in ninth-century England’ in
MH, 1991 p.3-17, at p.3
32
ASC s.a.870
33
Such language is used quite consistently throughout the raids in both English and Irish sources, e.g.
ASC s.a. 835: ‘in this year heathen men ravaged Sheppey’.
15. 15
ASC written as a ‘history’ at all. The law of history, or of recording events in the early
middle ages, was God’s law. Though we agree that the ASC is part of a Christian
propaganda that in the words of the eminent archaeologist Thomas Myhre had a
common interest in a presentation of the Scandinavians as frightening barbarians, we
may do well to keep in mind the possibility that many monastic annals were simply
written the lexicon of the day: the Vikings were pagan; to Anglo-Saxon priests they
were heathen. It is absurd to see the Annals from anywhere as wholly accurate,
objective descriptions of events. We are however not as ready, as Myhre is, to accept
that each and every reference in Frankish or English Christian sources can be seen as
‘arguments in a political and ideological conflict’.34
But what is to be made of the Viking’s relationship with the church in
England? Peter Sawyer argued forty years ago that while the church remained the
Viking’s chief target for plunder and they were for the best part of two hundred years
‘a scourge to the Christian’, Christian kings were also guilty of demeaning the
church.35 One such example given by Foot is a dispute in 781 between king Offa and
the church of Worcester over the ownership of church lands, particularly the minster
at Bath and territory in Worcestershire.36 Alfred the Great was accused in the same
period of wronging the church of Canterbury.37 Alfred was also accused of misusing
church lands to suit his own needs by an abbey of Abingdon who, after comparing the
34
Bjorn Myhre ‘The Beginning of the Viking Age – Some Archaeological Problems’ in A. Faulkes and
R. Perkins (eds.) Viking Re-evaluations – Viking Centenery Symposium (1993, London) p182-216. At
p.197. Foot cites ASC s.a. 855 in which ‘the heathen men for the first time stayed in Sheppey over the
winter’ whilst ‘Æthelwulf conveyed by charter the tenth part of his land throughout his all his kingdom
to the praise of God and his own eternal salvation’. I suggest that though it is possible entries like this
are attempts at showing a difference in both culture and morality, there are instances of Christian kings
giving tithes when they are no Vikings around, and of Vikings outstaying their welcome when the
Anglo-Saxons were not feeling particularly generous. The two being linked in this incidence, as with
others, may only be coincidental. Myhre was referring primarily to the writings of Alcuin, for which
the Christian propaganda argument is much more easily made.
35
Sawyer, Age of the Vikings p.202-5. The quote is at p.205
36
EHD, no.77
37
EHD, no. 222. Quoted in Foot, ‘Violence Against Christians’ p.5
16. 16
king to Judas among the twelve, said he ‘violently seized the vill in which the minster
was sited…with all its appurtenances’.38 But that is not to say the Vikings themselves
did not had something of a catastrophic effect on the church. According to Patrick
Wormald, their effect was enough to destroy completely the Episcopal sees of
Hexham, Leicester and Dunwich, which were all active in the eighth century. Many
others were disrupted for many years, and as in Ireland several were moved to safer
inland locations such as the monastery of St. Colomba on Lindesfarne that was
relocated with its relics to Chester-le-Street in Northumbria.39 One of the few things
we know about the church in East Anglia during the mid ninth century is the
supposedly brutal murder of King Ædmund by Ívarr inn beinluasi in 869.
It is difficult to prove that churches were as actively involved in the pattern
and fabric of warfare in the pre-Viking period as in early medieval Ireland, and only
seem to have been brought into the arena of war with the arrival of Norwegian raiders
in the last decade of the eighth century, or, as Peter Sawyer and Thomas Myhre have
suggested, slightly before then. Though there is no actual evidence of clergy bearing
arms and killing anyone, we know from the Chronicle and from Frankish sources that
there were bishops present in ninth-century Anglo-Saxon armies. The work of Janet
Nelson has shown that the clergy may have had a much larger role in warfare than
scholars have been ready to admit; we know for example that Anglo-Saxon bishops
Herefrith and Wigthegn died, possibly in battle, in 836 and Bishop Heahmund was
dealt the same fate in 871.40 It also worth mentioning that no specific clerics or
38
J. Stevenson (ed.) Chronicon Monasterii de Abingdon, ch.44, 2 vols (London, 1858); trans.
A.Thacker, ‘Æthelwold and Abingdon’ in Bishop Æthelwold
39
Patrick Wormald, ‘Viking studies: whence and whither’ in R.T. Farrell (ed.) The Vikings (1982,
Chichester) p.128-142
40
Janet Nelson, ‘The Church’s military service in the ninth century: a contemporary view’, in Studies
in Church History, xx (1983), 15-30
17. 17
bishops are mentioned as having lost their lives as a result of Danish invaders.41
Nevertheless, the comparatively peaceful nature of the church in pre-Viking Age
England takes nothing away from out argument that English society was equally as
violent as the one that Vikings came from, or the one they imported as raiders, and
later as colonists. Foot is right to suggest that there is a clear sense in the
contemporary sources, and importantly in those written long afterwards, that the
Vikings presented a very different and immediate threat to ecclesiastical property,
which they undoubtedly did. We feel that though there are instances of Anglo-Saxon
abuses of the church, they are exception that proves the rule that in the main, despite
how violent a place it was, there was an abiding respect for the church. As we shall
discuss in our last section, this was a respect the pagans did not share.
More interesting perhaps for our purposes is the evidence attesting to
sacrificial slayings in England, which despite being slightly outside of our dating,
deserves discussion. The blood-eagle, or in some sources the ‘Aquiline’, method of
execution has a long and chequered historiographical past. For some it remains the
worst feature of Viking violence, evidence of pagan hatred for Christianity – a rite so
gruesome it was retained for kings and only performed with a sense of occasion and
history in the making. For others, it is merely a fiction: a ‘telescoping’ of various
references in heroic Icelandic sagas, elusive scaldic verse and coincidental monastic
sources. Wallace-Hadrill, James Graham-Campbell, Patrick Wormald, Gwyn Jones
and Eric John are all advocates of the idea, though Alfred Smyth must be its most
enthusiastic, asserting that the blood-eagle rite was a very real custom, linked to
sacrificial slayings to the Norse God Odinn in Scandinavia. He used the work of the
41
Foot does mention the death of Archbishop Ælfleah in 1011 at the hand of Danes, though this is far
beyond our scope and period and does not require discussion, ‘Violence against Christians’ p.12 and
ASC s.a. 1011
18. 18
twelfth-century writer Saxo Grammaticus and various Sagas in an attempt to prove
that the grizzly ritual was carried out on Ælla of York in 867 and Ædmund in 869.
The standard version of the blood-eagle sacrifice is, in the case of Ælla at least, that
the king had the shape of an eagle literally carved in his back, had salt poured over the
wound, and was then beheaded, although the amount of differing deviations of this
story is almost farcical. For example, Sharon Turner writing in 1799 argued, as have
many others, that the lungs were pulled out of the victim’s assumedly to represent the
actual wings of an eagle, however only after this has happened is the salt poured on
the wound.42 Benjamin Thorpe writing slightly later in 1834 followed similar lines but
asserts that the salt was only inserted after the ribs hid been cut open but before the
lungs were pulled out. The story of Ædmund’s death differs in that according to Abbo
he was shot with arrows so that he resembled a hedgehog, and then beheaded,
although the reliability of this source is clearly undermined by its obvious reliance on
the Life of Sebastian.
Sparing the reader the vast details of this debate, the best way of
demonstrating the tenants of it would be quote a stanza from Knútsdrápa, a poem in
praise of Knútr, the Danish king of England in the eleventh century, written by the
scaldic poet Sighvatr:
And Ívarr, Ok Ellu bak
Who dwelt at York, at lét hinns sat
Carved the eagle Ívarr ara
On Ælla’s back. Jórvík skorit.43
These twelve words represent the best evidence for the occurrence of the
‘blood-eagling’ ritual in England, and when we take stock of the Irish evidence,
which is not much better, it is the only possible real evidence for sacrificial slaying in
42
Sharon Turner, The History of the Anglo-Saxons (1799-85, London)
43
EHD p.310
19. 19
the entire Viking Age. Written as early as 1038, this poem was apparently copied and
reproduced in several sagas such as Ragnar’s Saga, in which it appears in only one
manuscript, and the Hauksbók reduction of the notoriously untrustworthy Páttr af
Ragnar sonum. This is how the myth became widely known across Scandinavia by
the time of the twelfth century. It seems a large factor in the promotion of the myth is
that the great saga writer Snorri Sturluson misunderstood Sighvatr’s verse in his saga
of Harald Finehair, retelling the rite in all its gory detail.44
Roberta Frank pointed out the inaccuracies and absurdities of the blood-eagle
myth in 1984 and argued that the procedure becomes ‘more lurid, more pagan and
time-consuming with each passing century’.45 She demonstrated that when translated
directly, Sighvatr’s stanza which she describes as ‘cryptic, knotty and elusive’, does
not imply a sacrificial slaying at all: ‘And Ella’s back, at had the one who dwelt,
Ívarr, with eagle, York, cut’.46 Though Frank’s methodology has been heavily
criticised,47 she makes a valid point regarding the treatment of sources after the
Viking Age: each successive translation and interpretation of the Knutsdrápa makes it
easier for us to read the blood-eagle rite into it, whereas a contemporary of Sighvatr
may have seen the eagle as metaphorical and nothing more than a common
convention of scaldic verse. This is a prime example of how the attempts of twelfth
and thirteenth writers to emphasise their brutal pagan heritage, which was again
resurrected in the nineteenth century, in order to install themselves with a sense of
national pride. The sources advocates of the blood-eagle use are not historical;
therefore we can safely relegate the blood-eagle to the realm of fiction – further
44
Sawyer, Kings and Vikings, p. 95
45
Roberta Frank, ‘Viking atrocity and Skaldic verse: the Rite of the Blood-Eagle’ in HER, (1984)
p.332-343
46
Ibid. p.336
47
See above all Bjarni Einarsson, ‘De Normanorum Atrocitate, or on the execution by the Aquiline
method’ in Saga-Book of the Viking Society for Northern Research vol.22, pt.1 (1986) p.79-82
20. 20
evidence that the violence of Scandinavians in England was qualitatively the same as
the violence that preceded it.
In any case, the Vikings were not the only people of the early Middle Ages
who have been linked to imaginative executions. Bede describes the death of King
Oswine of Deira in quite gory terms, not dissimilar to Abbo of Fluery’s description of
the apparently brutal death of Ædmund in the ninth century.48 Halsall reminds us of
the tales of Æthelberht of East Anglia, who was captured by Offa by treachery and
beheaded and of Æthelred of Northumbria who dragged the sons of his predecessor
Ælfwald out of their sanctuary and drowned them in Lake Windermere.49 In any case,
the capture and execution of rival kings was not restricted to Viking Age Britain.
48
Bede, Ecclesiastical History III.14
49
Halsall, ‘Playing by whose rules?’ p.3-4
21. 21
Ireland
‘For in those days shall be such tribulations as were not from the beginning of
creation which God created until now; neither shall be. And unless the Lord
had shortened the days, no flesh shall be saved; but, for the sake of the elect
which he hath chosen, he hath shortened the days’50
This excerpt, from the book of Armagh, is typical of the annalistic references
to Vikings in the Irish sources. It may be misleading however, and belies a tendency
in Irish sources to be far less sensationalist and morally judgemental than the English
sources. There are no fiery dragons or whirlwinds heralding a new age of terror in
Ireland as in the English sources.51 Perhaps reacting to worry among the
ecclesiastical community in England after the attack on Lindesfarne, the Annals of
Ulster report in 794 of ‘the devastation of all the islands of Britain by heathens’. Like
the English, though, the Irish sources clearly portray the attacks as a bolt from the
blue.52 It is perhaps beyond the scope of this paper, but it is possible to show through
archaeology, though perhaps not wholly conclusively, that the Viking migration was
part of wider economic and social processes underway at the end of the eighth
century.53 A rise in trading activities no doubt played a crucial role in attracting
Northmen to Western Europe; their attacks on Northumbria were almost certainly
borne from settling in Northern Scottish islands, and most scholars are of the opinion
that the Irish raids began in similar fashion.54 As with England, a clear pattern of ‘hit
and run’ raiding on coastal targets quickly emerged and remained between 795 and
roughly 836, no target being attacked more than twenty miles inland.55 The first raids
50
AUL. s.a. 795. The entry refers to the attacks on the great island monastery of St. Colomba on Iona in
795, 802 when it was burned, and 806 when the Vikings returned and killed sixty-eight of its
community.
51
ASC s.a 793
52
AUL s.a 794
53
See esp. Myhre, ‘The beginning of the Viking Age’. Unfortunately perhaps for historians, Myhre
raised some serious questions about the dating of the Viking Age, which according to some insular
metalwork finds in England could have started well before 793 in the eighth century. Thankfully this is
out of the scope of this paper.
54
Donncha Ó Corráin, Ireland Before the Normans (1972, Dublin) p.80 and Sawyer, ‘The Viking Age
and Before’ in OIHV p.3-8
22. 22
cannot have massed more than two or three ships at the most. We might suggest here
that the world the Vikings entered into when they raided the isle of Rechrú in 795
surprised them almost as much as their arrival surprised the Irish. We shall now
attempt to show that pre-Viking Age Ireland was anything but peaceful.
Irish life in the early Middle Ages was one based upon violence, both ritual
and secular. It was instigated by kings and against kings, by monasteries against
kings, and vice versa. Just as in England and Francia, the violence of the Viking age
has been held responsible for many of the developments in Irish life throughout the
eighth and ninth centuries. It has for example been claimed that the Viking raids
brought an end to the immunity of the church from secular violence, that the
Northmen plundered rich monasteries with no regard for sacred buildings or artefacts
as if the local population had always upheld this respect. As previously mentioned, in
1962 at the first International Congress of Celtic Studies D.A. Binchy argued this and
also claimed that Viking attacks put an end to certain curiosities of Irish warfare such
as not annexing an opponents after victory and refusing to carry on fighting after one
side’s king had died. Moreover, the picture Binchy paints of pre-Viking Age Ireland
is one considerably more peaceful than the period the immediately succeeds it:
In pre-Norse times all wars (in Ireland) followed a curiously ritual pattern…one
did not continue to fight after one’s king had been slain; one did not annex the
enemy’s territory…one refrained from attacking a number of ‘neutral zones’ on
enemy soil – the monastic settlements, and so on.56
These claims have since then been put under considerable scrutiny by some
scholars, one finding that except his observation that Irish kings frequently employed
55
Ó Corráin, Ireland Before the Normans p.82. The exception to this rule is the attack on Roscommon
as mentioned in the Annals of Ulster for year 807, though the accuracy of this claim must be doubted
since, as Ó Corráin points out, no other attacks on targets so far inland are recorded for the next forty
years.
56
D.A. Binchy ‘The Passing of the Old Order’ in B. Ó Cuív (ed.) The Impact of the Scandinavians on
the Celtic speaking peoples c.800-1100, proceedings of the (first) International Congress of Celtic
Studies (1962, Dublin) p.119-32
23. 23
Vikings as allies, ‘Binchy’s quaint picture has no supporting evidence to sustain it
whatsoever’.57 The same scholar, extending this savage attack, emphasises the
internal violence in Ireland. Though he accepts that the Viking raids must have had a
traumatic effect on Irish life, but argues that raiding was not so prolonged nor the
Vikings’ activities so widespread throughout the country, that they could have
brought about the collapse of an entire social system.58
Historians like Eoin Mac Neill and Donncha Ó Corráin have shown,
conversely, that violence was integral to Irish life and attacks on monasteries by kings
was not at all rare, nor was violence by monastic settlements, although this is harder
to prove. Ó Corráin for one is convinced the initial impact of violence in the Viking
Age in Ireland has been overstated. He made a convincing argument in 1972 that the
sources demonstrate that Irish secular violence easily equalled the importance and
impact of that of the Vikings and recently defended his position.59 He argued that the
annals show very clearly that before during and after the Viking period more churches
were burned and plundered and clerics killed by the Irish than by the Norse. This is
not to say that the Vikings had no hand in the burning, defiling and destruction of
churches of the murder of clergy – monasteries remained their principle targets and
sources of wealth consistently in the ninth century. It is a redressing of the balance
that is needed: the Viking violence as with other areas needs to contextualised in the
complex picture of ninth-century violence. In the first quarter century of Viking raids
Ó Corráin argued that the sources show only twenty-six instances of plundering by
Vikings in Ireland whereas in the same period the Annals record eighty-seven
57
Dáibhí Ó Cronín, Early Medieval Ireland (1995, Dublin) pp. 261
58
Ibid p.263
59
See Ó Corráin, Ireland before the Normans and ‘Ireland, Wales, Man and the Hebrides’ in OIHV
p.83-109
24. 24
outbursts of violence that occur amongst the Irish themselves. If the Annals are to be
trusted there is therefore roughly only one raid per year in the first phase of the
Viking Age in Ireland. In a similar vein to Ó Cronin’s work, Ó Corráin suggests,
maybe taking his normally eloquent argument slightly too far in this instance, that the
Viking raids ‘can have caused no widespread disorder or great distress even if we
multiply them by a factor of five’.60
Power was organised in Ireland between provincial kings, regional sub-kings
and local lords, but there was also a hierarchy of kings such as in the kingdom of Tara
in the eighth century. There was no central governmental power, rather many kings
battling for domination against rival kings. The Uí Néill was the most prominent of
these dynasties in the eighth century prior to the Vikings’ arrival. By that time they
had conquered much territory and even constructed their own origin myth that
portrayed the Irish as a distinguishable gens in the vein of the Frankish or Gothic
sixth-century origin myths.61 The Uí Néill were to take the brunt of the Viking
attacks, holding the Louth-Wicklow gap: the southwest is the entry-point to the fertile
eastern lowlands. Here lay the over-kingdom of the Southern Uí Néill ruled by the
Clann Chlomáin dynasty that took the important kingdom of Tara in 734 and then
excluded the rival Bréga dynasty from the area. After this, the Bréga dynasty itself
into two rival factions, the Knowth and Lagore. In the same year the annals report a
battle in the territory of Muirtheimne between the Uí Néill and Ulaid in which Aed
Rón, king of the Ulaid, died.62 In the northeast the Uí Néill also held sway but was
divided within itself into two rival factions, the Cenél Congaill and the Cenél
nÉogain. The more dominant was Cenél nÉogain who in the second half of the eighth
60
Ó Corráin, Ireland Before the Normans, p.83
61
Ó Corráin, ‘Afterthoughts’ in C. Ó Floinn and N. Mhaonaigh (eds.) Ireland and Scandinavia in the
Early Viking Age (1998, Dublin) p.426
62
AU s.a. 734
25. 25
century gained control of much of the northeast and expanded south-eastwards
towards the mid-Ulster plain in the ninth century, including the important monastery
of Armagh. We feel this narrative is important because these territorial and dynastic
splits ‘are the essential backdrop to the Viking raids’.63 Property rights were well
guarded and rivalry was keen. We know this for the writing of Tierchán, writing at the
end of the seventh century who deplored the territorial greed of Clonmacnoise. It is
important to remember that, just as in England, Irish kings were expected to wage war
soon after acceding to the throne. Their role was one of war-leader.64
The importance of the church in all this cannot be overstated. The overlapping
influence and blurred lines between kings, dynasties and the church is a marked
feature of early medieval Ireland. As Kathleen Hughes has pointed out, by the eighth
century the church in Ireland had become respectable, powerful and wealthy. Some
monastic federations, such as Kildare, held property all over the country in the eighth
century and property made up a great deal of many saints’ Lives from the
period.65Cork claimed control of many churches within its territory. Hughes also
reminds us of the overlapping aristocratic influence on the church: the hereditary
principle that so dominated lay politics and property had become by far the most
important factor in determining ecclesiastical office.66 At the monastery of Lusk for
example, the Annals show that the abbacy and offices were in the possession of one
ecclesiastical family from 725 to 805, with a member of the same family holding
office at Duleek. In Slane, a major ecclesiastical centre, two families shared the
63
Ó Corráin, ‘Afterthoughts’ p.427
64
Halsall, ‘Anthropology and Pre-Conquest Warfare’ p.171
65
Ibid. p.429, see also Ó Corráin, ‘Irish Vernacular Law and the Old Testament’ in P. Ní Cathain and
M. Richer (eds.) Ireland and Christendom: the Bible and Missions (1987, Stuttgart) p284-310, at 297-9
66
Hughes, K, The Church in Early Medieval Ireland (London, 1996) pp.157, quoted in Ó Corráin
(1972) pp. 84
26. 26
abbacy from around 750 to 845. One of these families supplied abbots to Louth,
Duleek and Kilbrew. Hereditary succession had become commonplace at monasteries
such as Monasterboice, Achad Bó, Trevet, Lann Léire and Armagh. These church
families, drawn from less successful parts of Ireland’s ruling houses, were
‘professional hereditary clergy, whose family and private property became
inextricably bound up with church property and church office’67.
When dynasties took over the monasteries, like the Clann Sínnach and Uí
Gormáin did at Armagh and Clonmacnoise respectively, ecclesiastic actions became
intrinsically linked to dynastic action. Fights often broke out between monasteries, the
first ecclesiastical war perhaps occurring in 664 at Birr68. In 760 Birr battled with
Clonmacnoise to settle long-held disputes between them; Clonmacnoise did battle
with Durrow in 764 in which, so the annals claim, 200 people of the monastic
community at Durrow lost their lives. Fights could even break out within monasteries,
something all too common in the many houses of kingships like Uí Neill. For example
in 783 the abbot and bursar of Ferns seems to have settled a dispute through violent
means.69 The leaders of the Irish church in many ways differ from that of their
European neighbours: they were aristocrats with close ties to dominant dynasties, and
were very used to violent power struggles. The Vikings fell on ‘no simple monkdom
but a confident church organisation able to defend itself’.70
An act commonly thought to be the preserve of fierce Scandinavians, the
burning of churches, appears to be almost customary in Irish warfare: between 612
and 792 the Annals record the burning of monasteries on no less than thirty occasions.
67
Ó Corráin, Ireland Before the Normans pp. 84
68
Ann.Inis s.a. 664
69
Ibid. s.a. 783
70
Ó Corráin, ‘Afterthoughts’ p.431
27. 27
Three occasions are attributed to lightning, and it is of course possible that accidental
causes were behind the other twenty-seven, although it does seem somewhat absurd to
assume this when the annals record four examples of deliberate acts of burning by
Irish kings.71 In 757 the monastery of Cell Mór Díthraib was burned by the people of
Uí Chremthainn; in 789 Kilclonfert was burned to the ground by the Uí Failge and in
793 Armagh, though not quite burned to the ground, was certainly plundered by the
Uí Chremthainn. Ó Corráin cites the entry of 780 in the Annals of Ulster as evidence
that burning churches was ‘an integral part of Irish warfare’. 72 The entry reads:
The flight of Ruadrí from Óchtar Ocha, and of Cairpre son of Laidcnén, with
two septs of the Laigin. Donnchad pursued them with his adherents, and laid
waste and burned their territory and churches.
We may also note the entry in the Annals for 745 in which, amongst ‘kin-
slaying at Les Mór and a ‘slaughter of the Southern Úi Briúin by Fergal’, reports of a
‘violation of sanctuary at Domnach Pátraic, six captives being hanged’. Here we have
not only an example of Several attacks by Christian kings on monasteries could only
be explained by subscribing to the view that monasteries, which should be seen as
large working communities were an integral part of the complex socio-political power
struggle of early medieval Ireland. Indeed, such an integral part that these monasteries
would sometimes join with kings as allies in their campaigns. In 776 it seems the
monastery at Durrow played an important role in the war between Uí Neill and
Munster. Attacks on monasteries seem to increase in times of famine such as during
the famine of 773. Similarly, the cattle plague of 777 was followed by attacks on
Kildare, Clonmore and Kildalky. All in all, the annals record twenty-seven violent
incidents involving monasteries in one way or another. Surely in the face of such
evidence it is difficult to argue that the Vikings put an end to the immunity of the
71
Ó Corráin, Ireland before the Normans p. 85
72
AUL s.a. 783
28. 28
church in Ireland. Firstly, such immunity is fictional and secondly the impact of the
Vikings in the first forty years of raiding has been greatly over exaggerated.
In the first period of Viking Age violence in Ireland lay and ecclesiastical
violence continued unabashed. It may even seem that rival kings, dynasties and
monasteries, and any combination thereof, posed as much a threat to local
communities, both local and ecclesiastical, or perhaps even greater, than that posed by
invading Vikings. The annals claim ‘an innumerable slaughter of the ecclesiastical
men and superiors of Cork’ occurred when the monasteries of Cork and Clonfert
fought a pitched battle in 807.73 In 817 the religious community of Taghmon (Tech
Munna) joined a local king and defeated the community of Ferns in which 400 people
are said to have died. Ironically, when in 824 Kildare plundered Tallaght, Norwegian
Vikings chose the same year to plunder Bangor.74
In the interest of balance it is important for the historian not forget that
Vikings did have a violent impact in Ireland, however distorted and exaggerated.
After burning the monastery on the isle of Rechru in 795, the Vikings found time to
burn Inis Pátraic, rustle the cattle there and defile the shrine of Do-Chonna. In 833
the Vikings ravaged Lismore in Co.Waterford and South Munster generally, and in
835 they attacked the community of Mungret in Co. Limerick ‘and other churches of
West Munster’.75 The great crescendo of Viking activity in the Annals comes in 836
where there is ‘a most cruel devastation of all the lands of Connaught by the
heathens’. Later, in 837, a new phase of activity is heralded with the arrival of a new
fleet, centred on the Liffey and Boyne rivers that ‘ravaged churches, fortresses and
farms of the vale and the Bréga’. Similarly, in 841 ‘communities and churches were
73
AUL s.a. 807
74
Ó Corráin, ‘Afterthoughts’ p.430
75
AUL s.a. 835
29. 29
ravaged as far as Sliéve Bloom’ from longphorts at Dublin.76 It is the reserved nature
of the Annals of Ulster that suggests that theses entries are valid: they are mentioned
alongside other developments in Ireland and do not depart from the same undramatic
mode throughout, using short entries which give only the briefest of accounts. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, in contrast, reports of little else throughout the entire ninth
century, and attempts to give as much detail as it can in often-lengthy passages,
especially when recounting Alfred the Great’s campaigns against the Danes in the
latter part of the century.77
Also, there is evidence to suggest that despite the church’s involvement in
warfare, there was in Ireland as in England a tendency to spare ecclesiastical property
if at all possible. An oft-quoted passage to this end in the Annals is the entry for 833
in which the cleric king of Munster Feidlimid Mac Crimthainn ‘burned (the
monastery of Clonmacnoise’s)…area of inviolable sanctuary up to the door of the
church’ (my italics).78 It is well worth pointing out that before doing this Feilimid is
reported to have killed half the population of the monastery and ‘torched the monastic
lands up to the door of the church (my italics)’. Further, is it not suggestive that
Feidlimid had burned at least some amount of the ‘area of inviolable sanctuary’? To
suggest that this was an act of mercy or a display of Christian faith is very misleading:
when we consider that Feilimid slaughtered half an ecclesiastical community and
destroyed the probably quite sizeable land on which it lived, it hardly seems like this
Irish king respected the church. Both Foot and Halsall put his caution down to ‘some
recognition of the holiness of the church building itself’,79 though it seems to me that
either something stopped him in progressing further with his rapine or he simply felt
76
Ibid.s.a.. 837 and 841
77
See for example ASC s.a 871, s.a 877 and s.a 894
78
AUL s.a.833
79
Halsall, ‘Playing by whose rules?’ p.8
30. 30
that he had caused enough destruction for one day. Christianity was of course the
norm par excellence in Irish society on which all others, including those of warfare
and violence were based. It is therefore unsurprising that there are instances of Irish
armed bands allowing their consciences govern their actions in this respect – it is
interesting to note that historians often attest to the immunity of the church, and the
Viking’s destruction of it, yet can only find one or two instances of restraint like the
833 entry in the Annals. Let us not forget that Feilimid, something of a career church-
burner, gave the same treatment to the great monastery of Durrow the same year!80
There is therefore abundant evidence to show that violence by and against
monasteries was intrinsically linked to secular politics and warring, perhaps feuding,
dynastic families The beginnings of this system predate the Viking raids by at least a
century and survive it by another two. This may be an adequate way of explaining
why in the first quarter century of Viking raids in Ireland there are only twenty-six
attacks recorded in the Irish Annals and eighty-seven violent acts between the Irish
themselves.
In the words of Dáihbí ó Cronín, when it came to murder and mayhem, the
Irish needed no instruction from anyone.81
80
Dáibhí Ó Cronin, Early Medieval Ireland (1995, Dublin) p.236-7
81
Ibid p.262
31. 31
Violence and Communication: a ‘grammar’ of warfare?
Having discussed the nature of violence in Ireland and England, we are now
faced with answering our central question: if the medieval West was so violent, and
Viking violence not much more than a simple ‘extension of normal Dark Age
behaviour’, why then was Viking violence interpreted in such a different way to that
by Christian westerners? The answer lies in the differing nature of the cultures that
collided in the last decade of the eighth century, pagan and Christian, Northern and
Western. English and Irish communities and kings were all too used to opportunistic
cross-border raiding, so the outrage in contemporary and later sources must stem not
just from what the Vikings were doing but also from what they were not doing, i.e.
following the established laws, rules and codes of conflict. We now shall argue for a
discernable ‘grammar’ of early medieval violence in Ireland and England.
There was a broad spectrum of the different levels of violent conflict in the
early Middle Ages. These ranged, according to Halsall whose study into Anglo-Saxon
violence can be taken as a loose model for violent activity in Medieval Europe in
general, from the endemic, secular ‘feud’82 between one or more localised
communities, rules and laws for which are included in some rulers’. As well being
able to determine different levels of violence, a crucial distinction can also be made
between ‘legitimate’ and ’illegitimate’ violence, as decided by rulers, kings, priests,
annalists and communities.83 The legitimacy of violent action is entirely relative to
different peoples and areas and the rules are heavily ‘culturally specific’.84 The rules
82
The question of the existence of the blood feud in Middle Age Western Europe is beyond the scope
of this paper but is discussed at length in Wallace-Hadrill, J.M, ‘The Bloodfeud of the Franks’, in The
Long Haired Kings (1966, London) and Halsall ‘Anthropology and pre-conquest warfare and society’.
We may at least assume that feuding was usually a standard ‘legitimate’ form of conflict given it
followed the rules and laws set down by kings.
83
Halsall, G, ‘Warfare and society’ pp.159, Here Halsall points out that King Ædmund of Northumbria
devoted an entire law-code to the regulation of feuds, therefore setting out in clear the terms the ‘rules’
his subjects had to follow regarding violence. Like the Lombard king Rothari he probably felt he could
only limit the violence of feuds rather than stop them entirely.
32. 32
do not of course exist as concrete entities but as part of a society’s cumulative
‘memory bank’ of all previous actions. For Halsall this is part of what he calls the
‘complex relationship between structure and action’: there is a set structure that
governs violent conflict, when someone breaks the rules the structure changes and the
new action is added to the memory bank, altering what will be considered legitimate
in the future. There is a further distinction in Halsall’s work - two ‘dimensions’ of
defining violence: vertical, encompassing rulers’ attempts to ‘legitimise’ violence
through law-codes, and horizontal, encompassing the ways in which communities’
reacted to and decided on the legitimacy of violence.85 We are principally concerned
here with ‘vertical’ element though are conscious that the two are not ‘rigorously
opposed’.
On the simplest level, rulers attempted to distinguish between violence they
approved of and violence they had not. A common intention of this legitimisation
seems to be the ‘upholding of the royal peace within the kingdom’.86 Such laws also
protected the church. Fighting was often not acceptable for example in a town where
the king was residing. Such violence was condemned in Charlemagne’s Francia with
words like seditio or praesumptio and punished with fines or even the death penalty.
In an attempt to curb to Viking menace Louis the Pious outlawed all public meetings
of the armed unfree. In seventh-century England Ine of Wessex made a similar
attempt at establishing the legitimacy of armed gatherings. He wrote in his royal law-
codes: ‘We call up to seven men thieves, between seven and thirty-five is a band,
beyond that is an army’.87 Although sometimes taken wrongly by some to be
84
Halsall, Violence and Society in the Early Medieval West p.11
85
Ibid p.7
86
Ibid p.7
87
Ibid p.8
33. 33
confirmation of Sawyer’s claims that warring bands in the Middle Ages often
numbered no more than thirty-five men, this according to Halsall is a royal attempt to
outlaw unofficial groupings of armed men by assigning appropriate levels of crime –
and punishment – to gatherings of various sizes.88 Keynes has observed that the
similarities between Ine’s laws and that of Wihtred of Kent (esp. Ine 20 and Wihtred
28) show that the law may have been part of a cross-kingdom attempt at making
peace.
Aside from law codes, there seem to have been some more simple and
universal unwritten cultural laws governing warfare in the Christian West. Old
English topography for example suggest that there was a set route armies were
expected to take on their way to battle, hence the two occurrences of the place-name
Hereford (meaning literally ‘Raiders Ford’) and the one instance of Fyrdstraet
(‘Militia Street’). 89 We may ask as other historians have whether there is a link here
to the evidence that armies entering a country or kingdom were met by a royal official
who would ask them their business. In Beowulf Hrothgar’s thegn does just this and we
know that Brihtric of Wessex had at least one reeve, Beaduheard at Dorchester, who
did the same. The death of Beaduheard at the hand of visiting Norsemen is of course a
very real example of how different cultural norms can be destructive, though it well
worth mentioning that only later editors of the Chronicle, each one keen to do their bit
for the enhancement of the Viking Myth, add that he thought his visitors were
traders.90
One of the most basic and fundamental aspects of the arrangement of warring
kings in the Christian West is that if attacked, as they often were, kings could
88
Ibid p.8
89
Halsall, ‘Anthropology and pre-conquest War and Society’ p.164
90
Ibid p.164
34. 34
reciprocate. They understood exactly who their enemies were, why they were
attacking and where to find them. When in 796 the Mercians lead by their king
Cynwulf attacked the people of Kent, captured their king Edbert Pryn, and, according
to a particularly ‘eager’ Norman interpolator of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, ‘suffered
men to pick out his eyes and cut off his hands’,91 the people of Kent knew exactly
who was to blame and where they could be found – and Mercia would surely have
expected an attack and would already be preparing for it. The dynastic violence of
Ireland and inter-kingdom fighting of the Anglo-Saxon ‘heptarchy’, which both
demanded as we have said that kings should undertake a campaign immediately after
acceding to the throne, receives no moral condemnation in either the Irish or English
sources as do the Vikings raids – although the Chronicle tries its best to show Wessex
as a more powerful entity than its rivals. The system was an accepted and essential
way of life. We may also add that apart from the political necessity of inter-kingdom
warfare, there must have also been an economic element to it. We know for example
that Charlemagne’s plundering of the Avar ring in 795-6 led to such an influx of
silver that it may have resurrected the flagging Frankish economy – English and Irish
raiders were after similar wealth. There is Felix’s statement that Gunthlac returned a
third of his plundered booty, assumedly to its rightful owners but there is of course the
very real possibility that Felix included such attacks of conscience to simply
exonerate his subject of some of his more devilish behaviour.
Another ‘rule’ of warfare seems to be the paying of geld to one’s opponent – a
custom that did not begin with the Danish invasions. In 655 Oswy only decided to go
to war with Penda when he failed ‘to buy the old savage off’, 92 and Oswy is also
91
ASC s.a. 796 p56. Ingram here amusingly adds that such a wanton act of barbarity could only exist in
the depraved mind of the Norman interpolator. He is of course right, however, as the act is only attested
to in that version of the ASC.
35. 35
recorded having ‘come and taken tribute’ in 658.93 This seemed to be a legitimate
‘move’ to take in a conflict, perhaps undertaken in the face of defeat or to end a long-
running series of conflicts. Two further rules in Anglo-Saxon warfare discussed
briefly by Halsall are firstly the custom of the ‘hazelled field’, which the opposing
army may not pass until the battle is won or lost though there is little evidence for this
and only Egil’s Saga, a source far too late to be reliable, makes specific reference to
it. Secondly, though not necessarily evidence of a law of warfare as such, the location
of battles in England must also be examined, for there seems to be a discernable
pattern. Of the 28 occurrences of battle in the English sources between 600 and 850,
of those that can be reasonably established, the location was by a river crossing or
ancient monuments.94 These monuments often include Roman cities, whose walls
were mostly intact, such as Chester, Cirencester and York, all of which played host to
battles in the seventh century. The reason for this is most probably a matter of custom,
and not, as it may be seem, one of tactics. The ancient walls may appear to have given
the Anglo-Saxons a defence against their enemies in the manner of a later fortification
but if this is the case then we must then ask the question why is there no evidence
for the construction or renovation of hill-forts or burhs until the time of Alfred the
Great, deep within the Viking Age of the ninth century. The more likely explanation,
as Halsall points out, is that at a time of impending war the abiding custom was to
occupy an important regional landmark, one known to both sides, by way of
provocation; a challenge to be answered.95 When added to the route that armies were
92
Ibid p.164. The phrase is Wallace-Hadrill’s.
93
Ann.Cam s.a. 658
94
Halsall, ‘Anthropology and Pre-conquest War and Society’ p.165.
95
Ibid p.165. Though the material evidence for this custom is scant, and we may not be as willing as
Halsall to accept it, the Chronicle entry for 1006 describes how a Danish army encamped at the
monument of Cwichelmslow at Ashdown in Berkshire for two weeks, only to march away again when
no English army could muster the men, or the courage, to openly face them. This particular part of
Halsall’s argument seems be a case of the historian searching for instances that support their theories,
rather than the other way around. Whilst in some cases Halsall discards evidence as late as the eleventh
36. 36
apparently expected to take in some parts of the country, e.g. Fyrdstraet, this body of
evidence suggests that on some level at least there was a common understanding
between rival forces of the customary conditions of battle in terms of location.
As we can see, from law-codes legislating for the armed meeting of men to the
traditional cultural norms of ritual and endemic violence there was a strict culture
governing violence in the medieval west. There were laws and rules relating to
individual kingdoms, and commonly rules that were shared and understood more
widely throughout England. Warfare though not by any means a permanent state for
any medieval people; it was never more than a generation away. As we approach our
final section, we shall argue that the Vikings are conspicuous in the sources because
they fail to fit in to this picture of ordered conflict – they had their own ‘rulebook’.
century as irrelevant, in others such as this he chooses to use it to support his ideas. Furthermore,
Halsall bases his entire work upon the monastic annals, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and other more
minor annals, yet is keen to remind the reader how at various junctures just how inaccurate the sources
really are when in comes to wars and conflict.
37. 37
The Vikings as ‘mis-communicators’
Alcuin’s panicked statement shortly after the attack on Lindesfarne in 793,
‘never before has such a terror appeared in Britain’, has for many come to represent
contemporary opinion and outrage. Although Alcuin, a Northumbrian himself, wrote
his five letters to the monks of Lindesfarne at least five years after 793 and may not
be regarded as a completely contemporary account, there is still much in them to be
considered. The shock in the Northumbrian scholar’s words however stems not from
the ferocity of the invaders but that ‘such an inroad from the sea might be made’ (my
italics).96 Aside from the obvious shock of the attacks like the one on Lindesfarne,
what really distinguished Viking violence in this period is a difference in cultural
values and an ignorance of the rules and norms discussed above. If we see warfare
itself is a form of communication; it is necessary that both sides understand the same
language, or ‘grammar’, of violent of conduct to enter a meaningful discourse.97
Churches undoubtedly suffered in secular wars in England and were made the target
of several attacks in Ireland – but to make ecclesiastical property the sole primary
target of a military campaign would have seemed as alien an idea as any the
Christians could have thought of. In a time when armies relied on ‘God’s will’ to get
them through a conflict, it must have seemed that the Vikings were giving themselves
an unfair advantage in war against paganism by attacking their source of spiritual
power.
When an army or polity cannot understand the meaning behind an attack
against it, especially when the enemy is transient and in every sense alien, the reaction
would naturally be to describe their torturers as far worse than they are, if only to try
96
EHD pp. 776
97
Halsall, Warfare and Society p.9
38. 38
and make sense of what is going on. When two cultures collide in warfare with a
differing set of norms and rules of war the results are inevitably going to be dramatic.
One will not be able to understand the other, ‘put them into perspective, or know how
to respond’.98 This is a very useful model for understanding the reaction of the West
to the Vikings. The diplomatic overtures and legislation that were associated with
wars in the medieval West, for example it seems both in a conflict sides kept in touch
with each other and made peace through agreements and treaties during disputes,
were simply not possible with these foreign invaders speaking a strange language,
worshipping strange Gods and following no single king. The Anglo-Saxons, though it
must be said the Irish not to nearly the same degree, at least attempted at establishing
a legitimacy of violence through law-codes. How would they go about dealing with a
foreign warband? We cannot but resist invoking the image of Brihtric of Wessex’s
reeve, Beaduheard, who went out to meet the visiting seaman at Dorchester, only to
find in the most unfortunate way possible that the particular custom of meeting
landing ships was not shared across Europe. Whereas this is for Alfred Smyth as
example of the Vikings’ depravity and malice against the English, and we are
obviously not prepared to deny the brutality of such an attack and many others, it
seems odd to put the incident down to simple cruelty. There is no doubt that the
Vikings came to the west for plunder and booty at the expense of the native peoples,
but it is a reciprocal misunderstanding rather than premeditated hate that caused much
of the violence.
This may explain why Christian leaders tried as hard as they could, sometimes
with success and to the clear joy of chroniclers, to get Viking leaders baptised in order
to enter them into their own social and political world. In the Frankish Royal Annals
98
Halsall, Violence and Society p.12
39. 39
Vikings are often referred to as ‘infidels’ or in some way dishonest and there are
many instances of them ’brushing off their oaths’ or ignoring agreements they had
made – their treachery surely resulting from a difference in culture. Oaths were sworn
in the ninth century ‘in the presence of God’ and ‘by his grace’. Why should a pagan
warrior swear on a Christian God or keep the promise he has made in His name?
Oaths may not have played such a part in Scandinavian society, but we should not
doubt that on occasion Viking bands agreed to such a peace oath and broke it
maliciously, often threatening violence unless a payment is made – nor should we
doubt such duplicity was carried out by Anglo-Saxons either.
In the very earliest raids by far the most important rule of western warfare the
Vikings broke was that a kingdom or community could reciprocate following an
attack. How would an English king or Irish overlord go about seeing revenge for a ‘hit
and run’ raid on a lonely monastic island? The Vikings were experts in naval warfare
and made their escape after raiding island monasteries, their initial targets, apparently
just as quick as they had arrived. They arrived from their bases in the Hebrides and
Orkneys and began their raids in areas that had probably not seen such violence,
obviously being unaware of the Fyrdstraet. The English in 793 found themselves in
much the same difficult situation as Charlemagne in his wars with the continental
Saxon in the late eighth century: how does one subjugate a ferocious tribal enemy
without an eminent king or leader or one established centre to attack? The problem
was of course worsened by the fact that England was not the relatively stable empire
Charles’ Francia was, and the Vikings encompassed two nationalities, Danes and
Norwegians, travelling in many different war bands led by a mixture of legitimate and
self-styled kings, and often forming alliances and particularly in Ireland sometimes
40. 40
warring against each other. It must be said however, as Sawyer once pointed out, the
Saxons may have been fast movers over land and could strike into the heart of the
regnum Francorum with ease, but news of the attack would travel fast and probably
even precede the attack itself. This problem did not beset the Vikings, travelling
sleekly along coastlines from their bases in the Hebrides and Orkneys, unseen to all
until it was too late.
The frustration of the English in this respect must in some way contribute to
the negative representation of Vikings in Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. In the ‘heathen
armies’’ second appearance in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 794 when they ‘spread
devastation among the Northumbrians, and plundered the monastery of King Evereth
at the mouth of the Wear’, they successfully ravaged the land but met disaster on their
escape. Some of their leaders were killed, their ships destroyed by bad weather and
the crew that were not killed by drowning were ‘soon dispatched at the mouth of the
river’. So, here we have a Viking band, probably Danish and possibly the same
warriors that caused such ‘lamentable havoc’ at Lindesfarne the previous year, that
was strong enough to sack two large monasteries and spread enough devastation
throughout a kingdom for the annalist not to list all the places attacked.99 Can we
trust the annalist in this matter? Although it is possible that the annalist(s) were
simply not informed of all the places attacked in 794 (the Chronicle was not
contemporaneous at this point) and may simply be exaggerating the destruction, the
idea that this writer was adding a victory in the English column for posterity is an
attractive one when we consider how difficult it would have been to successfully
pursue and destroy a people so talented in warfare and far advanced in marine
technology.
99
ASC s.a. 794, p55
41. 41
The Viking acts of violence against churches attracted the most vitriolic
commentary in the western sources. This is a result of the churches inability to restrict
or control the Viking attacks. Though we have just argued that Christians also
attacked church property, these do seem to come in times of war and are only really a
factor in Ireland. The church and the king combined often had quite strong powers to
stop ecclesiastical attacks. Violence by Christians against churches could be
‘alleviated limited and punished, and reparations enforced, by threats of divine
retribution, eternal damnation and hellfire…’.100 Even in Ireland where the church
was involved in secular politics and wars, it could threaten dissenters with religious
sanctions – a benefit of a shared culture and religion. The church’s sanctity and its
ability to use excommunication as a weapon against aggressors are for Halsall some
of the most important norms and conducts of Anglo-Saxon society. This would
therefore go some way to explaining why the monastic sources in both Ireland and
England describe Viking attacks on ecclesiastical property as far worse than similar
attacks by Christians. The Vikings probably knew what Christianity was through their
trading activities both during and prior to the Viking Age, but they showed about as
much respect for it as Charlemagne, the pious Christian king, did for the elusive
Saxon Irminsul.
It is important not to understate the achievements these Scandinavians made in
the field of warfare. They might be for Wallace-Hadrill nought but ‘long-haired
tourists who occasionally roughed up the locals’101, but there was skill and
sophistication behind Norse and Danish violence. Quite simply, very often the
English found themselves very soundly beaten by more experienced professional
fighters. The sources invariably reflect an impotency of Christian kings to deal with
100
Halsall, ‘Playing by whose rules?’ p.8
101
J.M. Wallace-Hadrill, Medieval History (1975, Oxford) p.220
42. 42
the Viking menace, the Chronicle’s entry of 794 being such an example. As Viking
bands spent more time in the west, and began in the 830s to stay over the winter, they
inevitably became more experienced and skilled as fighters. The part-time villagers
and nobles that made up Western armies cannot have been much of a match for the
micel here who landed in England in 856 and was led by at least seven Scandinavian
kings. Alfred Smyth has shown that it is more than likely that the Ivarr of the micel
here in England is the same person as Inwaer in the Irish sources. If this is true, and
the evidence more than suggests it is, then we have in Ivarr a king who successfully
campaigned in both Ireland and England over the space of ten years. Because the
Viking attacks came outside of the ritual system of reciprocal violence, the west was
caught completely unawares. Communities and kings could prepare themselves for
attacks they were expecting – for example if Mercia had attacked Wessex, it would
know a reciprocal attack was forthcoming. Also, it seems the secular warfare in both
England and Ireland hindered both peoples from putting up any organised resistance
to the raids until well into the 830’s. Furthermore, the Vikings ignored, or were
unaware of, the Anglo-Saxon custom of fighting at on a mutual site – a well-known
landmark. They would strike into the heart of communities and monasteries. They
also effectively used fortifications in battle, a tactic that neither the Irish nor English
had begun to exploit.
43. 43
Conclusion
Having attempted to demonstrate that England and Ireland were violent places
before and after the arrival of the Vikings, that these were societies both based on
secular and ecclesiastical violence, rules and cultural norms relating to violent
conduct and that the Vikings did not fit into the established pattern of violent conduct,
resulting in their unfair portrayal in the written sources, as a way of conclusion I
might return to a theme from my introduction. In a sense, the Vikings presented a new
kind of warfare. Though the physical manifestation and general nature of the Vikings’
actions were undistinguishable from that of the Christians, the Vikings’ presence in
Western Europe for more than forty years was one of battle and conflict. They may
see out the ninth century as conquering colonists in England, but they enter as raiders
and nothing else. If war was not, as we have said, a permanent state for the Christian
west, it very probably was for the Vikings in Western Europe. Seen from a twentieth-
century viewpoint their actions seem more or less indistinguishable from that of other
medieval peoples: warring band bands in a time of warring bands. But in a sense, as
much as we are heavily indebted with his contributions to the bias of written sources,
we must disagree with Peter Sawyer’s claim that the Viking’s represented nothing
more than an extension of normal Dark Age behaviour, that was made profitable by
special circumstances. The Vikings ushered in a new phase, a new era of warfare
simply because the unsuspecting Christians saw it as anything but normal. They
Vikings may have considered their own actions normal raiding behaviour, but they
broke the commonly accepted rules of warfare. As Halsall, quoting Foot, points out,
we must assume that the norms of the period are those set by those who create the
status quo – ‘Alcuin’s laments after the sack of Lindesfarne could not apply to any
44. 44
normal Dark Age activity’,102 because it is Alcuin’s definition of normality that we
must take as a starting point.
In any case, the treatment of the Vikings in the written sources is well known.
Less well considered is the work of those historians who have been prepared to view
the Viking attacks as more than simple acts of brutality, or even as raiding for the gain
of booty. They undoubtedly were both these things, nut they were also in the language
of warfare the beginning of a new conversion for which the Christian west could not
answer.
102
Foot, ‘Violence against Christians?’ p.16
45. 45
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
Annales Regnum Francorum – ARF
Anglo-Saxon chronicle – ASC
Annales Cambriae – Ann-Cam
Annals of Fulda – Ful
Annals of Innisfallen – Ann.Inis
Annals of Ulster – AU
English Historical Documents – EHD
Medieval History – MH
Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings - OIHV
Transaction of the Royal Historical Society – Trans
Vita Anskarri – VA103
Select Bibliography
Primary Sources
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, (trans.) James Ingram (1938, London)
Anglo-Saxon Poetry (trans.) S.A.J Bradley
Annales Cambriae (ed. and trans.) John Williams (1860, London)
Annals of St. Bertin, (trans.) Janet Nelson (1992, Manchester)
Annals of Fulda (ed. and trans.) Tim Reuter (1992, Manchester)
Annals of Ulster (ed. and trans.) S. Mac Airt and G. Mac Niocaill (1983, Dublin)
English Historical Documents Volume 1, c.500-1042. D. Whitelock (trans.) 2nd
edition (1979, London)
Ine’s Laws, EHD, doc.32
‘Royal Frankish Annals’ (trans.) M. Schultz in Carolingian Chronicles; Royal
Frankish Annals and Nithard’s Histories (1970, Michigan)
Vita Anskari (trans.) Prof. Ian Moxon (unpublished)
Secondary Sources
Bacharach, B.S
103
See bibliography for references
46. 46
- ‘Early Medieval Demography: Some Observations on the Methods of
Hans Delbruke’ in Kagay, D.J. and Villalon, C.J.A (ed.s) The Circle of
War in the Middle Ages (1999, London)
Bradley, S.A.J
- Anglo-Saxon Poetry (1982, London)
Brooks, N
- ‘England in the ninth century: The Crucible of Defeat’ in Transactions of
the Royal Historical Society, 1978 p.1-20
DeVries, K
- Medieval Military Technology (1992, London)
- ‘God and Defeat in Medieval Warfare: some preliminary thoughts’ in
Kagay, D.J. and Villalon, C.J.A (ed.s) The Circle of War in the Middle
Ages (1999, London)
Einarsson, B
- ‘De Normanorum Atrocitate, or on the execution by the Aquiline method’
in Saga-Book of the Viking Society for Northern Research vol.22, pt.1
(1986) p.79-82
Foot, S
- ‘Violence Against Christians? The Vikings and the Church in ninth-
century England’ in MH, 1.3. 1991 p.3-17
Frank, R
- ‘Viking Atrocity and Scaldic Verse: the rite of the Blood-eagle’ in English
Historical Review, 1984 p.332-343
Halsall, G
- ‘Playing By Whose Rules? A Further Look at Viking Atrocity in the in
ninth century in MH 1991 p.3-16
- ‘Anthropology and the Study of Pre-Conquest Warfare and Society: the
Ritual War in Anglo-Saxon England’ in S. Chadwick-Hawkes, Weapons
and Warfare in Anglo-Saxon England (1989, Oxford) p.155-77
- Warfare and Society in the Barbarian West, 450-900 (2003, Woodbridge)
John, E
47. 47
- ‘English Feudalism and the structure of Anglo-Saxon Society’ in E. John
(ed.), Orbis Britanniae and other studies (1966, Leicester) pp.128-53
Logan, D.F
- The Vikings in History (1983, London)
Morris, D
- ‘Raiders, Traders and settlers: the Early Viking Age in Scotland’ in Clark
Ó Floinn and Ní Mhaonaigh (eds.) Ireland and Scandinavia in the Early
Viking Age (1998, Dublin)
Myhre, B
- ‘The Beginning of the Viking Age – Some Archaeological Problems’ in A.
Faulkes and R. Perkins (eds.) Viking Re-evaluations – Viking Centenery
Symposium (1993, London) p182-216
-
Nelson, J
- The Church’s military service in the ninth century: a contemporary view’,
in Studies in Church History, xx (1983), 15-30
Ó Corráin, D
- Ireland Before the Normans (1972, Dublin)
- ‘Irish Vernacular Law and the Old Testament’ in P. Ní Cathain and M.
Richer (eds.) Ireland and Christendom: the Bible and Missions (1987,
Stuttgart) p284-310
- ‘Afterthoughts’ in C. Ó Floinn and N. Mhaonaigh (eds.) Ireland and
Scandinavia in the early Viking Age (1998, Dublin) p.426
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Richer (eds.) Ireland and Christendom: the Bible and Missions (1987,
Stuttgart) p284-310
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Oxford illustrated history of the Vikings (Oxford, 2001) p83-109
Ó Cronín, D,
- Early Medieval Ireland (Longman, 1995)
Sawyer, P
- Age of the Vikings 2nd edition (1971, London, first printed 1962)
- From Roman Britain to Norman England (1972, London)
48. 48
- Kings and Vikings (1981, London)
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Chichester)
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Smyth, A.P
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Dark Ages (1984, London) p.105-16
Turville-Petre, G
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Wallace-Hadrill, J.M
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Wilson, D.M
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(1982, London)
Wormald, C.P
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