Sievert-Siefred-Cnut coin (York Mint) in the Ashmolean Museum
Coins - Danelaw
Sievert-Siefred-Cnut group coin, Northumbria (York Mint). 895-902. HCR7871 & HCR7920
The Ashmolean Museum
The World-Tree Project
2016
Administrator
(c) University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum
<a href="http://www.ashmolean.org/">http://www.ashmolean.org/</a>
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Still Image
HCR7871 & HCR7920
England
York
Viking Age
St Edmund Memorial Coinage in the Ashmolean Museum
Coins - Danelaw
Saint Edmund Memorial Coinage, produced in East Anglia 896-910 by the East-Anglian Vikings, and imitating coins produced during Edmund's reign. HCR7805 and HCR7803
The Ashmolean Museum
The World-Tree Project
2016
Administrator
(c) University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum
<a href="http://www.ashmolean.org/">http://www.ashmolean.org/</a>
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Still Image
HCR7805 and HCR7803
East Anglia
England
Viking Age
Coin of Guthrum in the Ashmolean Museum
Coins - Danelaw
Coin of Guthrum (christened Æthelstan II) from East Anglia, 880-890.
The Ashmolean Museum
The World-Tree Project
2016
Administrator
(c) University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum
<a href="http://www.ashmolean.org/">http://www.ashmolean.org/</a>
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Still Image
HCR7801
England
East Anglia
Viking Age
Viking Imitations of King Alfred Coins in the Ashmolean Museum
Coins - Viking
Viking imitations of King Alfred the Great coins, from around 880. HCR7915 and HCR7916
The Ashmolean Museum
The World-Tree Project
2016
Administrator
(c) University of Oxford - Ashmolean Museum
<a href="http://www.ashmolean.org/">http://www.ashmolean.org/</a>
jpg
Still Image
HCR7915 and HCR7916
England
Viking Age
Invasion: Vikings and Normans podcast
Viking-Age History
Podcast on the BBC website in the series 'The Matter of the North' looking at the impact of the Vikings and Norman invasions on the North of England.
Presented by Melvin Bragg
Contributors
Professor Judith Jesch, University of Nottingham
Dr Matthew Townend, University of York
Professor Nick Higham, University of Manchester
Professor Keith Stringer, Lancaster University
Bill Lloyd
Producer: Faith Lawrence.
BBC Radio 4
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07q94w1
BBC Radio 4
Admin
(c) BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07tczl3/episodes/player
podcast
English
hyperlink
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07q94w1
England
Viking Age
22. Vikings / The European Prospect, 1000
Lectures and lecturing
The Early Middle Ages, 284--1000 (HIST 210)
In the first part of this lecture, Professor Freedman discusses the emergence of the Vikings from Scandinavia in the ninth and tenth centuries. The Vikings were highly adaptive, raiding (the Carolingian Empire), trading (Byzantium and the Caliphate) or settling (Greenland and Iceland) depending on local conditions. Through their wide-ranging travels, the Vikings created networks bringing into contact parts of the world that were previously either not connected or minimally so. Professor Freedman concludes the lecture, and the course, by considering what's been accomplished between 284 and 1000. Although Europe in the year 1000 experienced many of the same problems as did the Roman Empire 284 where we began -- population decline and lack of urbanization, among others -- the end of the early Middle Ages also arguable heralds the emergence of Europe and Christendom as cultural constructs and sets the stage for the rise of the West.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Introduction
13:52 - Chapter 2. The Vikings in England and on the Continent
21:05 - Chapter 3. The Vikings in the East
29:20 - Chapter 4. The Vikings in the West
37:09 - Chapter 5. Conclusion: What's been accomplished?
Complete course materials are available at the Yale Online website: online.yale.edu
This course was recorded in Fall 2011.
YaleCourses
http://YouTube.com
YaleCourses<br />published via YouTube.com
05/04/2012
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https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4EY_qnSeAP1xGsh61eOoJA
Youtube video
English
MovingImage
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8a9Sn6k3DCU
Modern, Viking Age
Danish Invader pub in Stamford, Lincolnshire, England
Statues
Statue of a Danish Viking (with horns) outside the Danish Invader pub, Empingham Road, Stamford, Lincs. Stamford was one of the five Danish burghs in the Danelaw. Danish Invader built in 1968
Pubsgalore.co.uk
Pubsgalore.co.uk
Pubsgalore.co.uk
2011
David HOLLINS (my DNA says I am about 3% Norwegian Viking through my Dublin g-g-grandmother, Charlotte Hughes.
Pubsgalore.co.uk http://www.pubsgalore.co.uk/images/display/21501_22000/21870_f21b9d37.jpg
jpg
StillImage
Stamford, England, Lincolnshire, 1968, Modern