Vikings (45 page)

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Authors: Neil Oliver

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Floki Vilgertharson
The second Norwegian to make landfall on Iceland, according to the
Historia Norwegie.
It was he who named it ‘Iceland’.

Garthar Svavarsson
A Swede who led an expedition to Iceland around the same time as Floki Vilgertharson.

Godfred
A powerful Danish king who in
AD
808 occupied the trading port of Hedeby in Jutland and, having destroyed the
Slavic port of Reric, forcibly transplanted all its merchants to Hedeby. He subsequently commissioned his own Hadrian’s Wall, called the Danevirke, which stretched from the Baltic to the North Sea. He was a constant menace to the Byzantine emperors before being assassinated by one of his own men. It was during Godfred’s reign that a sense of identity, a unified country, first emerged.

Gorm the Old
Generally recognised as the first King of Denmark. Claimed descent from Ragnar Lodbrok, father of Ivarr the Boneless. Came to power in 936 and died in 958. His sons were Canute, who was killed fighting in Ireland, Harald ‘Bluetooth’, who succeeded his father as King of Denmark, and Toke. He erected the rune stone to his wife which first mentions Denmark as a nation: ‘King Gorm made this monument in memory of Thyre, his wife, Denmark’s grace’.

Grimur Kamban
First Viking settler on the Faroe Islands, around 800 according to the fourteenth-century
Flateyjarbók
, ‘the Flat Island Book’.

Gunnbjörn Ulfsson
Blown off-course in a storm, visited Greenland in 900.

Guthrum
Together with the Viking leaders Oscetel and Anwend, led one half of the breakaway force of the Great Heathen Army, which for ten years terrorised England in the latter half of the ninth century and which had split in two at Repton. He masterminded the defeat of Alfred the Great at Chippenham in the winter of 877/8. Alfred defeated Guthrum’s forces at the Battle of Edington in May 878. The subsequent settlement saw Guthrum baptised a Christian, and the acquisition of territories which became known as the Danelaw, where the Norse legal system held sway.

Haakon Sigurdsson
King of Norway in all but name who was overwhelmed by Olaf Tryggvasson in 995.

Halfdan the Black
c. 810–60, King of Vestfold in Norway. A Ynglinga, he was founder of the Norwegian royal dynasty and father of King Harald Fairhair.

Halfdan Ragnarsson
King of part of Northumbria. Sources are contradictory but he was possibly the brother of Ivarr the Boneless, leader of the other half of the Great Heathen Army which first landed in England in 865. Ruler of London 871–2 where he minted coins in his name. He took his army north to Northumbria, where he is described by The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 876 as king of part of Northumbria, where he ‘shared out the land of the Northumbrians’ amongst his followers. He died in 877.

Harald II
King of Denmark 1014–18. Son of Svein Forkbeard and brother of Cnut the Great.

Earl Harald
The twelfth-century
Orkneyinga
saga describes his voyage from Stromness when bad weather forced him to take shelter in Maes Howe, where he and his party carved graffiti into the stone walls.

Harald ‘Bluetooth’ Gormsson
c. 935–985 or 986. King of Denmark from 958 to 985 or 986 and parts of Norway around 970. Son of Gorm the Old. Famous for welding the disparate Danish tribes into a unified whole and uniting them with their Norwegian neighbours. He converted to Christianity in 965 and erected a rune stone in Jelling which states he ‘made the Danes Christian’. He died of wounds received in an uprising against him in 985 or 986 and was succeeded by his son Svein Forkbeard.

Harald Fairhair
King of Norway between 872 and 930. Son of Halfdan the Black. His rule, according to later sagas, may have caused many of his opponents to seek new lands to settle in Iceland, Orkney, Shetland, the Western Isles and the Scottish mainland. The
Orkneyinga
saga recounts Harald making a gift of Orkney and Shetland to Rognvald, a chieftain from the
west of Norway, whose son Einar’s descendents were the earls of Orkney until 1231. His grandson was Olaf Tryggvasson, King of Norway, who invaded England in 991.

Harold Godwinson
King of England in succession to Edward the Confessor. Defeated the invading army of Harald Hardrada at the battle of Stamford Bridge on 25 September 1066 and was himself killed by Duke William of Normandy’s forces at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066. William was crowned King of England on 25 December.

Harald ‘Hardrada’ Sigurdarsson
1015–66. King of Norway from 1046. Known as ‘Hardrada’ (Hard-ruler), he was the last true Viking to attempt an invasion of England. He had served in the Varangian Guard before returning to Norway in 1045 where he seized the throne. Invading England in the uncertainty after the death of Edward the Confessor, he was killed at Stamford Bridge by the forces of Harold Godwinson, Edward’s successor as King of England in 1066.

Harthacnut
c. 1018–42. King of England 1040–42 and Denmark from 1035–42. Son of Cnut the Great and his wife Emma, daughter of Richard Duke of Normandy and widow of Aethelred.

Horik
Sole King of Denmark 827–54 (he had taken power in 811 with one of his brothers). Son of Godfred. Although a confirmed pagan, he allowed in 850 the Christian missionary Ansgar to build churches in the Danish towns of Hedeby and Ribe.

Ingolfr Arnarson
The first Viking settler, originally an outlaw, to put down permanent roots in Iceland. He made his home in 874 in a place he named Reykjavik – ‘smoky bay’. It is likely that monks from Ireland had preceded him but had abandoned the island.

Ivarr the Boneless
A king in Ireland who may have been one of the leaders of the Great Heathen Army before it split in two
at Repton. Ivarr died in 873 and some archaeologists believe he was interred at Repton.

Lord of Kivik
According to archaeologist Sir Barry Cunliffe a sixteenth-century
BC
chieftain who led his band of warriors on an epic journey, scenes from which were later carved on the stones of his burial chamber.

Naddodd
Or Nadd-Oddur, a Norwegian who, according to the
Historia Norwegie
, first set foot on Iceland around 850 or 860. Probably headed for the Faroe Islands, he was blown far off-course.

Olaf Guthfrisson
King of Dublin, co-leader with the Scots king Constantine, a Welsh contingent under Owain and the Britons of Strathclyde of an invasion force which was convincingly defeated by Aethelstan and his half-brother Edmund according to The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle at the Battle of Brunanburh in 937.

Olaf Sigtryggsson
Cousin of Olaf Guthfrisson, King of Dublin, ruled Dublin and a swathe of surrounding territory between 950 and 980 until his defeat by Máel Sechnaill II brought Viking supremacy to an end.

Olaf Tryggvasson
960s–1000, King of Norway 995–1000. Grandson of Harald Fairhair. Exiled as a child, he was brought up amongst the Rus. He was a formidable warlord. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records his invasion of England in 991 with a fleet of 93 Viking ships. His forces defeated the English army at the Battle of Maldon and Aethelred agreed to pay Danegeld of 10,000 pounds (in weight) of silver. This was to increase dramatically in future years until twenty years later, in 1012, it was 48,000 pounds. 60,000 English coins of the period have been found in Scandinavia by comparison with only 10,000 in England. In 994 he returned again with Svein Forkbeard, now King of Denmark.

Olaf the White
Ruled Dublin with his kinsman Ivarr c. 853 to
870, when Ivarr the Boneless ruled alone until his death in 873.

Oleg of Kiev
A leader of the Rus who moved their capital from Novgorod to Kiev, on the banks of the Dniepr. The emergent state was to become known as Russia. In 907 he set out to attack Constantinople. Faced with a force many times the size of the expedition of some forty years before, the inhabitants sued for peace, which established Rus trading rights in the city.

Ongendus
A powerful Danish king who, according to written records, violently opposed the attempts made by the Frankish Christians to convert him and his people in the early decades of the eighth century.

Riurik
The eldest of three brothers of the Rus who, according to the Russian Primary Chronicle (also known as the Tale of Bygone Years), compiled about 1113, went to rule the tribal federation of Slavs in north Russia at their invitation and established a capital in what is now Novgorod (the ‘new fortress’), beside the Volkhov River, in 860. Riurik’s brothers Sineus and Truvor founded towns also but within a short time died, leaving Riurik to rule the Slavs alone.

Rodolf
Or Rothlaibh. His long port, a Viking fortress beside a river, probably Dunrally near modern-day Vicarstown in County Laois, was described in the Annals of the Four Masters as being destroyed in 862. In 863 the Rhine Valley was targeted by a Viking fleet, and it was possibly the same Rodolf who in 864 exacted tribute from the Frankish King Lothar II to prevent his followers from further depravation. According to some scholars Rodolf was the son of Harold, a former King of Denmark who was expelled in 827 and settled in Frisia.

Rollo
Charles the Simple, King of France from 898, ceded the town of Rouen and a tranche of surrounding territory
to Rollo, a Viking leader of either Norwegian or Danish descent, in about 911 in return for feudal allegiance. This territory was to become the land of the Northmen – the
Nor manni
that is known today as Normandy. Rollo’s descendants became Dukes of Normandy and in due course, through his great-great-great grandson William, kings of England.

Sihtric
King of York. Married the sister of Aethelstan, King of the Angles. Died in 927.

Snæbjörn Galti
An outlaw who led a party of adventurers to Greenland about 980. The survivors headed back to Iceland after enduring the extreme rigour of a Greenland winter.

Svein Asleifsson
Born before 1135, described in the
Orkneyinga
saga as making annual raiding trips to the Hebrides and Ireland, returning home to Gairsay in the Orkneys for the yearly round of farming duties, perhaps behaviour typical of many Viking raiders.

Svein Forkbeard
960–1014, King of Denmark after the death of his father Harald Bluetooth in 896 or 897, and first of the Viking kings of England. Involved in continual raids against England in the first decade of the tenth century, he commanded a fleet which invaded England in 1013. He drove Aethelred into exile in Normandy and was proclaimed King of England on Christmas Day 1013 but died a few weeks later. Father of Cnut the Great.

Thorfinn Karlsefni
Led the third expedition from Greenland to North America c. 1010 (after Leif Eiriksson and his brother Thorvald). Three ships and several hundred settlers set sail. After three years a combination of severe winters, attacks from hostile natives and tension between Christians and pagans amongst the group caused the settlement to be abandoned and the survivors returned to Greenland. The remains of this settlement were uncovered on the eastern coast of Newfoundland by archaeologists in the 1960s though the site
of ‘Vinland’, thought to be further south, still remains to be discovered.

Thorgeirr
The ‘law speaker’ of Iceland who proclaimed in 1000 that the country would convert to Christianity to prevent hostility between pagans and Christians.

Thorkell the Tall
A
Jomsviking
, or mercenary, Torkell led a force of Vikings which ravaged eastern England until Aethelred paid them off with 48,000 pounds in weight of silver. In 1010 his men raided Canterbury and carried off many high-status captives including the archbishop, who was beaten to death. Appalled, Thorkell abandoned his colleagues and served Aethelred instead, helping defend London against an attack by Svein Forkbeard in 1013.

Thorvald
Brother of Leif Eiriksson. Following the exploits of his brother led an expedition to North America where he was killed by the
skraelingar
– ‘ugly people’ – either North American Indians or Inuit.

Turgesius
Or Thorgils, a Viking warrior described by
Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh
, or ‘The War of the Irish Against the Foreigners’, as conducting a reign of terror through Ireland and who was eventually captured by King Máel Sechnaill, sewn into a sack and thrown into the waters of Loch Owel, near Mullingar.

Vladimir
the Great Successor to Riurik as ruler of the Rus. After sampling Christianity, Islam and Judaism, in 988 he had statues of the old pagan gods torn down and thrown into the River Dnieper and converted his subjects to Christianity.

CHRONOLOGY
793
According to The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle the first of the Viking raids on England. Lindisfarne Abbey on the coast of Northumberland is destroyed.
795
First recorded raids on the Irish coast. Skye, Iona and Rathlin are raided.
800
Godfred reigns as King of Denmark, until 810. He sets up a new trading centre at Hedeby and extends the system of defensive walls, the Danevirke, to protect his territories.
c. 800
Grimur Kamban the first Viking settler of the Faroe Islands.
802
The monastery at Iona is burnt and in the following years monasteries in Scotland and Ireland are abandoned as the Viking attacks intensify.
806
Vikings return to Iona for the third time and nearly 70 members of the community are killed.
810
A large Danish fleet attacks Frisia, a coastal region just south of Denmark.
827
A Danish king, Horik the Elder, a son of Godfred, is mentioned for the first time in chronicles.
835
The Thames estuary raided.
836–7
Fleets of Viking ships begin to travel inland in Ireland via the rivers Boyne and Liffey on the eastern seaboard.
840s
Vikings begin to over-winter in Ireland. They go on to found towns such as Dublin, Limerick, Arklow, Waterford, Wexford and Wicklow.
841
A fleet of Viking ships raids the Seine valley in
northern France.
Vikings over-winter for the first time in Dublin.
841
First references to a Viking settlement in Dublin.
844
Monasteries in the Midlands of Ireland raided.
845
Horik the Elder sails up the Elbe with a fleet of 600 ships and destroys Hamburg in retaliation for the attack by the Holy Roman Emperor, Louis the German, on the Viking allies, the Obrodites, a Slavic tribe which had migrated from Ukraine to Germany.
Vikings under the leadership of Ragnar Lodbrok attack Paris but withdraw after receiving a ransom of 7,000 pounds of silver.
848
Bordeaux captured after a siege.
850 or 860
Naddod, a Norwegian, first sets foot in Iceland.
852
First raids on the Welsh coast begin.
853
Olaf first Viking King of Dublin; reigns until c. 870.
853–1052
Twenty kings of Viking origin rule Dublin. They do so again 1072–4 and 1091–4.
859
Björn ‘Ironside’ Jarnsida and his brother Hastein sail down the River Loire with a fleet of 60 ships and, via the French and Spanish coasts and the Straits of Gibraltar, enter the Rhône and from there raid settlements along the coasts of France, Italy and North Africa.
c. 860
Riurik, with his two brothers, moves from what is thought to be Roslagen in eastern Sweden to rule the tribal federation of the Slavs at their request and establishes a new capital at what is now Novgorod beside the Volkhov River. He later brings 200 shiploads of soldiers to attack Constantinople.
Death of Halfdan the Black, King of Vestfold in Norway, regarded as the founder of the Norwegian royal dynasty and father of King Harald Fairhair.
865
The ‘Great Heathen Army’ first lands in England and the following year occupies York.
868
Aethelred of Wessex and his brother Alfred confront
unsuccessfully the invading Danish army in Mercia led by Ivarr the Boneless.
869
Edmund, King of the East Angles, is killed in battle against the Great Heathen Army.
871
A year of battles against the Danes in Wessex. All other Saxon kingdoms have fallen to the Vikings’ Great Heathen Army and Wessex alone fights on. Aethelred is killed at the Battle of Marston and Alfred succeeds to the throne.
871–2
Halfdan Ragnarsson rules London and issues coins in his name.
872
Harald Fairhair, son of Halfdan the Black, first King of Norway.
874
Ingolfr Arnarson the first Viking settler on Iceland. Makes his home in a place he names Reykjavik.
876
Halfdan Ragnarsson takes his army north to Northumbria where The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes him as King of part of Northumbria.
876–8
The Danish army under their leader Guthrum harry the English army under Alfred and he is forced to flee to the Somerset Levels, where he regroups and wins a decisive battle at Edington.
c. 880
The treaty of Alfred and Guthrum, preserved at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, divides up the old kingdom of Mercia giving Guthrum an enlarged kingdom of East Anglia known as the
Danelaw
, where Viking laws and customs are to prevail.
889
Death of Guthrum (known as Aethelstan after his conversion to Christianity), Danish King of East Anglia.
892 or 3
A large Danish fleet of over 300 ships invades Kent and over the next four years is continuously pursued by Alfred (now with a reorganised and more effective army) and his allies until they are forced to disband and disperse.
899
Death of Alfred the Great, self-styled King of the Anglo-Saxons and the dominant English ruler of his time.
900
Gunnbjörn Ulfsson, blown off-course, lands on Greenland.
907
Oleg of Kiev, leader of the Rus, sets out to attack Constantinople. The city sues for peace and grants the Rus trading rights.
c. 911
Charles the Simple, King of France, cedes the town of Rouen and the countryside around it to Rollo, a Viking leader, in return for feudal allegiance. This territory becomes known as the land of the Northmen (the
Nor manni
), and in due course Normandy.
Snæbjörn Galti leads a party of adventurers from Iceland to Greenland where they survive the winter before returning home.
936
Gorm the Old recognised as first King of Denmark.
937
Battle of Brunanburh, when Aethelstan defeats a huge Viking force.
947 or 8
Eirik ‘Bloodaxe’ Haraldsson, King of Norway, ‘taken as king’ by the people of Northumbria.
954
Eirik Bloodaxe, it is thought, dies at the Battle of Stainmore in Cumbria whereupon Edgar of England disbands the Norse kingdom based on Jorvik (York) and subsumes it under the earldom of Northumberland.
958
Harald ‘Bluetooth’ King of Denmark. Son of Gorm the Old. Succeeds in unifying the Danish tribes and uniting them with their Norwegian neighbours.
975
Death of Edgar, King of England.
Edward (Edward the Martyr after his murder) succeeds his father as King of England.
c. 978
Aethelred the Unready becomes King of England as Aethelred II until 1013, and again 1013–16.
980–2
Viking raids on coastal towns of England.
c. 982
Eirikur Thorvaldsson, known as Eirik the Red, sails west from Iceland to explore the west coast of Greenland.
985 or 6
Bjarni Herjólfsson, a Norwegian, blown off-course on
a voyage to Greenland. The first Viking to sight North America – the coast of Labrador.
986
Eirik the Red leads a party of settlers between 500 and 1,000-strong to Greenland. He goes on to pioneer a direct route of some 2,000 miles between Greenland and Norway. His exploits are celebrated in the Saga of Eirik the Red.
986 or 7
Svein Forkbeard King of Denmark in succession to his father Harald Bluetooth.
988
Vladimir the Great, successor to Riurik as the leader of the Rus, has the old pagan gods torn down and thrown into the River Dniepr and converts his subjects to Christianity, having first sampled Judaism and Islam. Viking raids in the south-west of England.
991
Peace treaty signed between England and Normandy at Rouen following English hostility at the Norman sanctuary offered Viking raiders.
Olaf Tryggvasson, King of Norway from 995 and grandson of Harald Fairhair, invades England with a fleet of 93 ships and defeats the English army at the Battle of Maldon the same year. He is paid off by Aethelred with a Danegeld of 10,000 pounds in weight of silver.
994
Olaf returns again to England together with Svein Forkbeard. Peace treaty signed between Aethelred and Olaf Tryggvasson in which Olaf is paid to return to Norway.
997–1000
Continuous raids on England by Danish armies.
1000
Olaf Tryggvasson is killed in a battle against Svein Forkbeard, who is now ruler of most of Norway.
The law speaker of Iceland Thorgeirr proclaims the country will convert to Christianity to prevent hostility between pagans and Christians.
1001–2
A Danish fleet returns to raid west Sussex and other targets but is paid a Danegeld of 24,000 pounds.
1002
St Brice’s Day Massacre. The ‘ethnic cleansing’ of Danes
in England ordered by Aethelred the Unready. Svein Forkbeard’s sister Gunnhild reputed to be amongst the dead, possibly prompting retaliatory raids by Svein in the following years.
1002–5
Raids against England led by Svein Forkbeard, King of Denmark. Severe famine in England is the probable reason the Danish army returns to Denmark in 1005.
1006–7
Svein returns again to England. A Danegeld of 36,000 pounds is paid.
1009–12
Thorkell the Tall with his brother Hemming invades England with a formidable Viking force until paid off by Aethelred with 48,000 pounds in weight of silver.
1010
Followers of Thorkell the Tall raid Canterbury and beat the archbishop to death. Appalled, Thorkell abandons his colleagues and sides with Aethelred instead, helping him defend London against an attack by Svein Forkbeard in 1013.
c. 1010
Thorfinn Karlsefni leads the third expedition from Greenland to North America. After three years the survivors return to Greenland.
1013
Full-scale invasion of England by Svein Forkbeard which leads to Aethelred being sent into exile in Normandy with his sons Edward and Alfred. On Christmas Day Svein is declared first of the Viking Kings of England.
1014
Svein Forkbeard dies at his base in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire on 3 February and his body is returned to Denmark for burial. Aethelred is summoned to return as King and drives out Cnut the Great, son of Svein, who had displaced his brother Harald II as King of Denmark.
Battle of Clontarf. Brian Boru, titular High King of Ireland, defeats the King of Leinster backed by Sigtrygg Silkbeard, King of Dublin and Sigurd Lodvesson, Earl of the Orkney Islands, but is himself killed.
1015
Cnut returns to England with an invasion force of 200 ships and 10,000 men.
1016
At the Battle of Ashingdon Cnut routs the army of Aethelred and his eldest son Edmund Ironside. Thereafter the land of England north of the Thames is surrendered to the Danes – the return of the Danelaw. Aethelred dies and is buried in old St Paul’s Cathedral. Cnut the Great crowned King of England.
1018
Death of Harald II, King of Denmark and brother of Cnut. Cnut returns to Denmark to claim the Danish throne.
1027
Cnut visits Rome to attend the imperial coronation of Conrad II.
1028
By this date Cnut recognised as King of England, Denmark, Norway and parts of Sweden too.
1035
Death of Cnut the Great. He is buried in Winchester Cathedral.
Harold Harefoot, son of Cnut the Great, though technically regent for his half-brother Harthacnut, generally accepted as King of England until his death in 1040. Harthacnut, born c. 1017, son of Cnut the Great, King of Denmark as Cnut III until 1042, loses control of Norway to Magnus I. The agreement includes Magnus being appointed heir to Harthacnut which prompts Magnus’ claim to the English throne and that in turn of his son Harald Hardrada.
1040
Harthacnut King of England in succession to his half-brother Harald Harefoot, until his death in 1042. He is buried at Winchester, the last Danish King of England.
1042
Edward the Confessor, c. 1003–66, half-brother of Harthacnut (Edward was the son of Emma of Normandy by Aethelred the Unready, Harthacnut was Emma’s son by Cnut the Great) succeeds as King of England.
1046
Harald Hardrada, 1015–1066, King of Norway until 1066.
1047
Svein Estridsson, 1020–74, cousin of Harald Hardrada, King of Denmark until 1074.
1066
Edward the Confessor dies and is buried in Westminster Abbey.
Harold Godwinson, brother of Edward’s wife Edith, succeeds briefly to throne of England.
Harald Hardrada invades England but is defeated and killed at the Battle of Stamford Bridge by Harold Godwinson’s forces.
William of Normandy, 1027–87, great-great-great-grandson of the Viking chieftain Rollo, invades England with c. 7,000 men and defeats Harold Godwinson’s forces at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October, where Harold is killed. On Christmas Day he is crowned King of England in Westminster Abbey.
1069
Svein Estridsson, King of Norway, backs his brother Asbjørn’s expedition to York to raise an army against William. They are forced to abandon the expedition for lack of support.
1094
The last Viking King of Dublin, from 1091, Godfred ‘Crovan’ Haraldson is deposed.
1098
Magnus Barelegs, King of Norway, leads an expedition to Orkney and the Hebrides where his overlordship is recognised by the Scottish king.

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