They didn't wear horned helmets?!?!?!?!Coito ergo sum wrote: This article is about as groundbreaking as an article taking the position that vikings didn't really wear horned helmets.


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They didn't wear horned helmets?!?!?!?!Coito ergo sum wrote: This article is about as groundbreaking as an article taking the position that vikings didn't really wear horned helmets.
Bollocks. In 1066 Harald Hardrada won the Battle of Fulford resulting in his capture of York. The victory was shortlived, of course, because he was later defeated in a subsequent battle at Stamford Bridge, but that doesn't take away the victory. In 991, the Anglo-Saxons were defeated by vikings at the Battle of Maldon. In the Battle of Thetford in 870, the Danes defeated the Angles, and King Edward was killed. In the Battle of Reading in 871, the Danes defeated the Saxons. Same in the Battles of Basing and Merton in the same year. The Battle of Dollar saw the vikings defeat the Albans in 875. The annals of St. Vaast set forth many viking raids and the devastation they wrought all over France for many years.Svartalf wrote:You folk are aware that viking forces never won an engagement when there was anything like a sizeable or reasonably organized opposition, right? (even when it was adjudged more expeditious to buy them off than to actually fight them down)
Full scale military ventures were exceedingly rare for everyone in those days, not just vikings. Armies and fleets were smaller. Harald Hardrada is said to have had about 300 ships in his war against Sweyn of Denmark. And, these ships, though, didn't have many men on them, because they were small. They had several thousand men. That was a big army back in the day. Even The Great Heathen Army referred to in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is thought to have only numbered in the thousands.Svartalf wrote:Actually, "sending armies" is pretty much a malapropism when speaking of the Norse... Sure, every chief had a band or armed retainers, and kings had large bands of warriors in their service, but to call any such band an "army" would be like calling the pond in your backyard a sea. Full scale military expeditions were exceedingly rare.
Most of the viking raids in history were from bands of merchants who noticed places with a large amount of riches (gold and silver items, pacifistic slave stock) completely unguarded.
"Pillage, plunder and rape" easily fits in a text message alright ...Clinton Huxley wrote:Big on Twitter. Just plundering Holy Island. Lol.
Depends on which meaning of the word is meant. There is quite a variety of them.Pappa wrote:Isn't the initial premise that they were "savage" a bit retarded?
They weren't really "troops" from the 9th to the 11th centuries. They didn't have the capacity to maintain armies. They mustered them when necessary. So, yes, the Holy Roman Empire had more men, and therefore could muster a bigger mass of men, but they did not have the capability to supply them or feed them for anything but temporary periods. One cannot picture a 9th century "army" like one pictures 17th and 18th century Holy Roman Empire armies. The Rennaissance brought leaps and bounds of advancement. In the 9th century, most armies were woefully deficient even as compared to 3rd century Roman armies.Svartalf wrote:Even a simple count had enough troops at his beck and call to deal with a full fledged viking military expedition, as count Eudes showed when Ragnarr Lodbrokkr besieged Paris in 885.
Perhaps, but not all viking armies were dealt with. The allegation that the Vikings never won a battle where anyone fought back is easily disprovable. Not only did I provide a list of many battles won by Vikings, but I could also provide many more. I barely scratched the surface.Svartalf wrote:That does not change the fact that a count (provincial governor) had enough armed retainer and potential levies to deal with a viking attack.
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