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Camp Viking is a British military facility located in Øverbygd, northern Norway which opened in March 2023 to support military operations in the High North. It primarily hosts the Royal Marines and Army Commandos .
Red Beach Base Area (also known as Camp JK Books, Camp Haskins, Camp Viking, Paddock Compound or Red Beach Camp) is a complex of former U.S. Marines, Navy and Army and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) logistics and support bases northwest of Danang.
Camp Viking is a British military training establishment inside the Arctic Circle in northern Norway. Camp Viking may also previously refer to: Camp Viking, part of the Red Beach Base Area during the Vietnam War; Camp Viking, the Danish section of Camp Bastion during the War in Afghanistan
In 1960 the camp received a bronze bell, dated 1891. Howard Fowler, Editor of The Mansfield News and former Council President, was instrumental in procuring the bell from the Mansfield Fire Department. It came from an old firehouse on West Church St In Mansfield. Camp Norse was the sole camp of the council located at 112 Parting Ways Rd ...
Danish Camp is an Iron Age fortified settlement in Shoeburyness in Essex. It is a Scheduled Monument under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 , list number 1017206. [ 1 ] The site is in the Gunners Park and Shoebury Ranges nature reserve, which is managed by the Essex Wildlife Trust .
A Viking ring fortress, Trelleborg-type fortress, or trelleborg (pl. trelleborgs), is a type of circular fort of a special design, built in Scandinavia during the Viking Age. These fortresses have a strictly circular shape, with roads and gates pointing in the four cardinal directions.
The camp is currently the second largest Scout camp operated by the Northern Star Council, is composed of approximately 1,669 acres (675 ha), and borders the 43,000-acre (17,000 ha) Tamarac National Wildlife Refuge. Many Point is further divided into six sub-camps which serve troops, Venturing crews and families.
The army marched up before the fortified Viking camp named in one source as Ascloha (Asselt in the Annales Fuldenses, 882). [19] Another contemporary source, however, refers to Haslon as the place of negotiation, which is often equated with Elsloo an der Maas ( Regino of Prüm , Chronica , 882, specifically mentioned in the entry for the year 881).