the Danelaw: Vikings and Shaping of England
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Beschrijving
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The Danelaw: Vikings and the Shaping of England by Adrian E. Markham explores one of the most transformative periods in early English history, when Danish armies crossed the North Sea and reshaped the political and cultural landscape of England. From the first coastal raids on monasteries such as Lindisfarne to the establishment of Viking ruled territories across the north and east, the book traces the rise of the Danelaw and the long struggle between Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and Scandinavian war leaders. Markham follows the campaigns of figures such as Alfred of Wessex, Guthrum, Edward the Elder, Athelflaed, and Cnut, examining how warfare, diplomacy, and settlement altered the structure of the English realm. The fortified burhs of Wessex, the capture of York, and the emergence of new centers of trade and administration reveal a kingdom in the process of transformation. As Danish settlers established farms, towns, and trading networks, patterns of coexistence began to emerge alongside conflict. Drawing on the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, law codes, archaeology, and surviving place names, The Danelaw reveals how Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon traditions blended through language, governance, religion, and daily life. It offers a grounded and vivid portrait of how conquest gradually gave way to integration, shaping the foundations of England in ways that remain visible centuries later.
The Danelaw: Vikings and the Shaping of England by Adrian E. Markham explores one of the most transformative periods in early English history, when Danish armies crossed the North Sea and reshaped the political and cultural landscape of England. From the first coastal raids on monasteries such as Lindisfarne to the establishment of Viking ruled territories across the north and east, the book traces the rise of the Danelaw and the long struggle between Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and Scandinavian war leaders. Markham follows the campaigns of figures such as Alfred of Wessex, Guthrum, Edward the Elder, Athelflaed, and Cnut, examining how warfare, diplomacy, and settlement altered the structure of the English realm. The fortified burhs of Wessex, the capture of York, and the emergence of new centers of trade and administration reveal a kingdom in the process of transformation. As Danish settlers established farms, towns, and trading networks, patterns of coexistence began to emerge alongside conflict. Drawing on the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, law codes, archaeology, and surviving place names, The Danelaw reveals how Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon traditions blended through language, governance, religion, and daily life. It offers a grounded and vivid portrait of how conquest gradually gave way to integration, shaping the foundations of England in ways that remain visible centuries later.
AmazonPagina's: 212, Paperback, Independently published
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