The British Isles - Vikings 793 AD Mac OS

Throughout the Viking Age – which started in 793 AD with the raid on Lindisfarne Monastery and ended app. 1100 AD – Scandinavian immigrants had flocked to the British Isles where they had conquered territory to live on. Ireland was at that time not a united country, it comprised of some 200 tribal kingdoms and the Vikings found it easy to. 3,915 likes 9 talking about this 1 was here. Livres PDF telecharger gratuit. They scared many, were welcomed by many, helped the anglo-saxons or at least anglos in the north and east get back to their germanic-scandinavian paganism and back off a bit from christianity. They put pressure on anglo-saxon england as a whole to.

The Battle of Clontarf was the culmination of hundreds of years of animosity and hostility between the Celts in Ireland and the Viking invaders on the Island. The Battle also became the greatest show of strength between the two factions and effectively ended the Viking dominance in Ireland.

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According to author Gwyn Jones: “Clontarf… was too important to be left to historians, so passed into the legend maker’s hands.”

It is true that the great battle of Clontarf between Danish Vikings and Irish forces under Brian Boru, has been re-written and twisted by balladeers and poets through the ages, but historians still have an idea of how this great battle was played out on the beach and in the forests surrounding Dublin Town.

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Throughout the Viking Age – which started in 793 AD with the raid on Lindisfarne Monastery and ended app. 1100 AD – Scandinavian immigrants had flocked to the British Isles where they had conquered territory to live on. Ireland was at that time not a united country, it comprised of some 200 tribal kingdoms and the Vikings found it easy to settle down in the counties of Ulster, Connaught, Leinster, Munster and Meath. Many of the Vikings inter-married with Irish families and alliances were both made and broken by both parties.

The Battle of Clontarf was the culmination of hundreds of years of blood-feuds, skirmishes and minor wars between the Vikings and their allies, who always sought new land, and the Irishmen who still clung onto their own governments, headed by the High king at Tara.

Brian Boru was born in Munster in 941 AD, his real name was Brian Mac Cenneidigh and he was the youngest of 12 brothers who all save two died in battle against the Vikings. All through his life Brian fought with the Viking-invaders and their Irish allies from Leinster. However he was betrayed by his own brother Mahon who, after being made provincial King, made a treaty with the Vikings; Brian fled and led guerrilla warfare against his brother and the invading Vikings.

In 976 AD Brian’s brother, King Mahon was assassinated and Brian was crowned as his successor. After a long line of victories Brian soon brought Southern Ireland under his rule.

Then followed 20 years where Brian and his ally, the High king of Ireland Malachi led a bloody war against the Viking occupation. By 1002 Malachi abdicated the throne and Brian became High king of Ireland in his place.

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In the beginning of 10th century Brian had gathered most of the Irish tribes under his banner and now the stage was set for a monumental show of strength which would decide whether Ireland would remain Celtic or become Scandinavian.

In the winter 1013-1014, Sigtrygg Silkbeard the King of Dublin gathered Viking chieftains from far and wide around him and mustered all his Irish allies to build an army strong enough to contend with Brian Boru. Among his allies was the legendary Brodir of Man, a feared Viking warrior and also Sigurd the Earl of the Orkney Islands.

When Brian heard this news he gathered up his own army, which also comprised his old ally Malachi. However on the march to Dublin, Brian suffered a severe set-back; Malachi withdrew his forces, possibly as a payback for the time Brian had half-forced, half-demanded the High kingship from Malachi.

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The British Isles - Vikings 793 AD Mac OS

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The British Isles - Vikings 793 AD Mac OS
III - NORSE VIKING RAIDS ... THE SCOTS TAKE OVER
The Roman departure from the British Isles was partly due to the invasion of Europe and the Roman Empire by the Huns (372 AD - 453 AD). Attila's hordes were also responsible for the dispersal of many Teutonic tribes. Among these were the people who would populate Scandinavia: the Norse (Norwegian) Vikings and the Danish Vikings and the Swedes. Unlike the Picts, the Scandinavians had remained in Europe long enough for their Runic language (Old Futhark) to be greatly influenced by the steady incursion of the linguistically-ancestral peoples from the Balkan peninsula and the grassy steppes north of the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea between 4000 and 2000 BC, and to be classified as strongly Indo-European.
The Norse looted Western Scottish monasteries (793 - 806), established resorts in the Inner and Outer Hebrides until they settled Skye and Lewis at the beginning of the 9th century AD, settled parts of northeast Ireland, evicted Danish Vikings from the Shetlands and Orkneys, and went on to settle Iceland (870 AD) and Greenland (900 AD) before exploring the Atlantic Coast of Canada (1000 AD). The Danes slowly established settlements in England and, in general, none of the native Britons or Angles were able to stop these Northmen in any significant way. The northern Picts and Scots seemed to have something in common with the Norse Vikings; intermarriages, common in Caithness and Sutherland, were even more extensive throughout the Western Isles.
The 8th century British historian, Bede, noted that Pictish royal succession was through the female royal line. Pictish kings were not succeeded by their sons, but by their brothers or nephews or cousins in this rare matrilineal society, which was complicated by a series of intermarriages between seven royal houses. [This is also corroborated by The Pictish Chronicle.] These traditions and others would eventually be carried forward into the new Scotland.

The Annals of Ulster record a battle near Perth in 839 AD between the Picts and Norsemen, in which the Pictish King Uven Mac Angus (son of Oengus II), his brother Bran, kinsmen and chief nobles were all slain. Left leaderless, the Picts of the southern kingdom passed swiftly in 845AD under the control of Kenneth Mac Alpin, the king of Scots of Dalriada. Since Kenneth I was the son of Alpin and a Pictish princess descended from the royal house of Fortrinn, he had a claim to the Pictish throne through the Pictish matrilineal law of succession. [Alpin's kingship over the Scots had been taken over by Pictish King Oengus I, who was the first king of both Picts and Scots from about 741 to 761 AD.] A rival Scots kindred, the Cenel Loairn, took over the role of the Pictish high kings in Moray and Ross, and his descendants challenged the successors of Kenneth I for the right to rule Scotland until the 13th century, by which time the Pictish society and culture had been completely assimilated by the Scots. Pictish 'Symbol Stones' and art would come to an end.
Meanwhile, Easter Ross had become a borderland, a unique zone where Picts, Scots and Norse intermingled and collided. The sagas around 890 AD tell of 'resorts' under Norse control as far south as Loch Ness and of a further extension of their influence to Moray from 1014 to 1064 AD. Places, such as Cadboll, Arboll, Bindal 'sheaf-valley', Shandwick 'Sand-vik or Sandy Bay', Dingwall 'Thing vollr or Place of the Parliament', Falls of Rogie 'Roke-_ or splashing foaming river', Gizzen Briggs, and other sites, retain Viking names.
Legend has it that Port an Righ (Bay of the Kings) on the Black Isle is the site where a ship holding three Viking kings was wrecked in the 10th century. Cairn Irenan still marks the spot on the Kilcoy estate (Killearnan Parish, Black Isle), where the Viking prince Irenan was felled in battle and buried.
In or around the year 995, Norseman Sigurd the Stout was challenged to a pitched summer's battle in Caithness by Findlaec, mormaer of Moray [and father of Macbeth, the future King of Scots]. Three men who carried his finely embroidered raven-banner were killed, but Sigurd was able to claim a victory of sorts.

History was to demonstrate how much influence the 'Northern Teutonic tribes' would have upon the British Isles. The Norse were credited with forays as far as the Mediterranean and Baltic seas around 700 AD. In 910, they settled the Normandy area of France more permanently and, as Normans, they invaded the Angles in 1066.
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