DK Eyewitness Books - Viking

(C. Jardin) #1
Who’s who?

TȩȦȭȦȢȥȪȯȨȧȪȨȶȳȦȴ in the Viking world tend to fall

into one of three categories: rulers (at home and abroad),
who held the power and made the laws; adventurers,

who set off to find and colonize new lands; and writers
and historians, who laid the groundwork for our
knowledge of this remarkable civilization.

RULERS


s.ƂƇƀ*ƎƍƁƋƎƆ
Danish ruler of East Anglia in the latter
part of the 9th century. In 878, Guthrum
signed the Treaty of Wedmore with Alfred
the Great. This treaty divided England into
two, and made Guthrum overlord of the
northern lands under Alfred’s theoretical
control. The area controlled by the Danes
became known as Danelaw.

s(ƋƂż%ƅƈƈŽźƑž
King of Norway during the 930s, Eric was
expelled for extreme cruelty. He is thought
to have murdered his seven brothers. Eric
Bloodaxe later became the last Viking ruler
of Northumbria in England.

66


s.ƂƇƀ2ƅźs+źƋźƅŽƌƌƈƇ2ƅźs,,
Ruler of Norway from 1015, Olaf II completed
the process begun by his predecessor, Olaf I,
and made Norway a Christian country in
around 1024. He was killed in battle by his
own chieftains, who were backed by King
Cnut of Denmark. In 1164, he was declared
his country’s patron saint.

s.ƂƇƀ+źƋźƅŽ+źƋŽƋźŽź
Harald III of Norway, known as Harald
Hardrada, led a large Viking army that
invaded Northumbria in England in
September 1066. This army was defeated
by the English king, Harold II, who was
himself defeated by William the
Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings
in October of the same year.

s:ƂƅƅƂźƆƍƁž&ƈƇƊƎžƋƈƋ
Leader of the Norman conquest of England
in 1066, William was descended directly
from Vikings who, under the chieftain
Rollo, settled in northwestern France
during the first part of the 10th century.

s.ƂƇƀ+źƋźƅŽ%ƅƎžƍƈƈƍƁ
Ruler of Denmark during the 10th
century, Harald Bluetooth converted
his country to Christianity in the 960s. A
great innovator, he commissioned the first
bridge in Scandinavia and the biggest and
most splendid of Viking memorial stones at
Jelling, in Jutland. Harald’s parents, King
Gorm and Queen Thyre, are thought to
be buried at Jelling. Queen Alexandra, the
Danish wife of the 20th-century British
king Edward VII, is thought to have been
descended from Harald Bluetooth.

s.ƂƇƀ6ƏžƂƇ)ƈƋƄŻžźƋŽ
Danish leader who besieged London in
994 until he was paid by King Ethelred II
to withdraw. This payment was known
as the Danegeld. In 1013, Svein Forkbeard
returned, launching a successful invasion
of England, and seizing the throne. He
died in 1014 and was succeeded by his
son Cnut.

s.ƂƇƀ&ƇƎƍ&źƇƎƍž
Born in Denmark to Svein Forkbeard, the
Christian King Cnut inherited his father’s
crowns in 1014, but was deposed in England
by Saxon nobles who restored the previous
king, Ethelred. When Ethelred died two
years later, however, Cnut fought his son
Edmund Ironside for the throne. Eventually
Cnut and Edmund agreed to divide the
country between them. However, Edmund
died soon after, and Cnut became sole
English king, as well as king of Denmark
and, from 1028, of Norway. His reign was
stable and prosperous, and he died in 1035,
after which date his empire collapsed.

King Harald Bluetooth’s Jelling Stone

The king’s memorial
inscription to
his parents
in runes

St. Olaf, patron
saint of Norway

Gold brooch from the time of King Cnut

William the Conqueror in a manuscript illustration
Free download pdf