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  2. Viking raid warfare and tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_raid_warfare_and...

    Vikings, according to Clare Downham in Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland, are "people of Scandinavian culture who were active outside Scandinavia ... Danes, Norwegians, Swedish, Hiberno-Scandinavians, Anglo-Scandinavians, or the inhabitants of any Scandinavian colony who affiliated themselves more strongly with the culture of the colonizer than with that of the indigenous population."

  3. Great Heathen Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Heathen_Army

    The Great Heathen Army, [a] also known as the Viking Great Army, [1] was a coalition of Scandinavian warriors who invaded England in 865 AD.Since the late 8th century, the Vikings [b] had been engaging in raids on centres of wealth, such as monasteries.

  4. Jomsvikings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jomsvikings

    In Tim Severin's Viking series, Thorgils spends time amongst the Jomsvikings, although they are a smaller, older, and weaker force. The Long Ships by Frans G. Bengtsson retells an episode from the sagas, where a band of defeated Jomsvikings, about to be executed in Norway, are proud, undaunted and defiant to the end - winning their captors ...

  5. Viking raid on Seville - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_raid_on_Seville

    The Viking raid on Išbīliya, then part of the Umayyad Emirate of Córdoba, took place in 844. After raiding the coasts of what are now Spain and Portugal, a Viking fleet arrived in Išbīliya (now Seville) through the Guadalquivir on 25 September and took the city on 1 or 3 October. The Vikings pillaged the city and the surrounding areas.

  6. Wartime sexual violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wartime_sexual_violence

    The Vikings' "rape and pillage" image is disputed, and it may have arisen due to "exaggeration and distortion "in the Middle Ages. [ 69 ] Female slavery was common during the medieval Arab slave trade , where prisoners of war captured in battle as well as commercial slave trade from non-Arab lands sometimes ended up in sexual slavery as ...

  7. Holmgang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holmgang

    The story's two protagonists – feuding spacemen of the future who are of distant Scandinavian origin and one of whom (the villain) is historically conscious – decide to revive this Viking tradition, resorting to a deadly holmgang on a lonely asteroid instead of a sea island, in order to settle their irreconcilable differences over a tangled ...

  8. Blood eagle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_eagle

    Roberta Frank reviewed the historical evidence for the rite in her "Viking Atrocity and Skaldic Verse: The Rite of the Blood-Eagle", where she writes: "By the beginning of the nineteenth century, the various saga motifs—eagle sketch, rib division, lung surgery, and 'saline stimulant'—were combined in inventive sequences designed for maximum ...

  9. Siege of Dumbarton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Dumbarton

    Conquering Dumbarton would make it possible for the Vikings to sail upriver into the central lowlands of Scotland. [4] Dumbarton Rock was an extremely strong defensive position and had previously survived several sieges, [ 5 ] [ 6 ] including a co-ordinated assault by Angles and Picts in 756.