enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Anglo-Saxons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxons

    Anglo-Saxon-Viking coin weight. Material is lead and weighs approx 36 g. Embedded with a sceat dating to 720–750 AD and minted in Kent. It is edged with a dotted triangle pattern. Origin is the northern Danelaw region, and it dates from the late 8th to 9th century.

  3. History of Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Anglo-Saxon_England

    Anglo-Saxon-Viking coin weight. Material is lead and weighs approx 36 g. Embedded with a sceat dating to 720–750 AD and minted in Kent. It is edged with a dotted triangle pattern. Origin is the northern Danelaw region, and it dates from the late 8th to 9th century.

  4. Viking activity in the British Isles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_activity_in_the...

    The Chronicle is, however, a biased source, acting as a piece of "wartime propaganda" written on behalf of the Anglo-Saxon forces against their Viking opponents, and, in many cases, greatly exaggerates the size of the Viking fleets and armies, thereby making any Anglo-Saxon victories against them seem more heroic. [54]

  5. Great Heathen Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Heathen_Army

    The Anglo-Saxon historian Æthelweard was very specific in his chronicle and said that "the fleets of the viking tyrant Ivar the Boneless landed in England from the north". [34] [35] The Vikings had been defeated by the West Saxon King Æthelwulf in 851, so rather than land in Wessex they decided to go further north to East Anglia.

  6. Vikings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikings

    The Vikings witnessed the violent subduing of the Saxons by Charlemagne, in the thirty-year Saxon Wars of 772–804. The Saxon defeat resulted in their forced christening and the absorption of Old Saxony into the Carolingian Empire .

  7. Battle of Edington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Edington

    The first Viking raid on Anglo-Saxon England is thought to have occurred between 786 and 802 at Portland in the Kingdom of Wessex, when three Norse ships arrived; their men killed King Beorhtric's reeve. [3] At the other end of the country, in the Kingdom of Northumbria, the island of Lindisfarne was raided in 793. [3]

  8. The Anglo-Saxon Peace Treaty of 991 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Anglo-Saxon_Peace...

    The Anglo-Saxon peace treaty between Æthelred II of England and the vikings was established following the defeat of the English forces against a viking army at the Battle of Maldon (August 11, 991), after which viking invaders raided and tormented the regions of Kent, Hampshire and western Wessex for a period of four months. [1]

  9. Viking expansion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_expansion

    Viking expansion was the historical movement which led Norse explorers, traders and warriors, the latter known in modern scholarship as Vikings, to sail most of the North Atlantic, reaching south as far as North Africa and east as far as Russia, and through the Mediterranean as far as Constantinople and the Middle East, acting as looters, traders, colonists and mercenaries.