Viking Age Raids & Wars
Norsemen raided and settled across Europe, the British Isles, Iceland, Greenland, and North America. The Danelaw in England, Normandy in France, and Kievan Rus all grew from Viking activity. Era ended at the Battle of Stamford Bridge (1066).
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Belligerents
- Norse/Danish/Swedish Vikings
- Frankish kingdoms
- Anglo-Saxon England
- Irish kingdoms
Casualties
Unknown — tens of thousands
Key events
- 793 — Lindisfarne raid
- 865 — Great Heathen Army invades England
- 911 — Normandy ceded to Rollo
- 1066 — Stamford Bridge ends Viking Age
Aftermath
Founded the Danelaw, the Duchy of Normandy, the Kievan Rus, the Kingdom of Sicily, settlements in Iceland, Greenland, Newfoundland (L'Anse aux Meadows). Viking-descended Normans then conquered England (1066), south Italy, and the Crusader States — long-lasting political consequences.
Weapons & matériel
- Dane axe
- Viking sword (pattern-welded)
- Round wooden shield
- Mail (the wealthy)
- Longships (15–60 oars, 6–8 knots)
Forces
Raiding bands of 30–300; Great Heathen Army peaked ~3,000–5,000
Technology
Longship — shallow draft (1m) allowed river raiding deep inland; clinker construction unmatched in Europe for 400 years
Economy
Danegeld: England paid ~167,000 lb of silver between 991–1018 to buy off raiders — drove silver coinage across northern Europe
Sources
- Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- Annals of St-Bertin
- Sagas of Icelanders