<h2>CHAPTER II<br/> THE VIKING MOVEMENT DOWN TO THE MIDDLE<br/> OF THE 9TH CENTURY</h2>
<p>England was possibly the scene of the earliest
Viking raids, but after the Dorchester raid, the sack
of Lindisfarne in 793 (<i>v. supra</i>, p. <SPAN href="#Page_5">5</SPAN>), and the devastation
of the monastery of St Paul at Jarrow in 794 we
hear nothing more of Vikings in England until 835.
The fate of Ireland was different. Attacks began
almost at the same time as in England and continued
without intermission. Vikings sailed round the west
coast of Scotland. Skye and then Lambay Island off
Dublin were invaded in 795, Glamorganshire was
ravaged in the same year and the Isle of Man was
attacked in 798. Iona was plundered in 802 and again
in 806. In 807 invaders appeared off the coast of
Sligo and made their way inland as far as Roscommon,
and in 811 Munster was plundered. In 821 the
Howth peninsula near Dublin and two small islands
in Wexford Haven were ravaged. The Vikings had
completely encircled Ireland with their fleets and
by the year 834 they had made their way well into
the interior of the island so that none were safe from
their attacks. They no longer contented themselves
with isolated raids: large fleets began to visit
Ireland and to anchor in the numerous loughs and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
harbours with which the coast abounds. Thence
they made lengthy raids on the surrounding country
and often strengthened their base by building forts
on the shores of the loughs or harbours in which
they had established themselves. It was in this way
that Dublin, Waterford and Limerick first rose to
importance.</p>
<p>Of the leaders of the Vikings at this time there is
only one whose figure stands out at all clearly, and
that is Turges (O.N. Ðorgestr) who first appeared in
832 at the sack of Armagh. He had come to Ireland
with a great and royal fleet and 'assumed the
sovereignty over the foreigners in Erin.' He had
fleets on Lough Neagh, at Louth, and on Lough Ree,
and raided the country as far south as the Meath
district. Turges was not the only invader at this
time: indeed so numerous were the invading hosts
that the chronicles tell us 'after this there came
great sea-cast floods of foreigners into Erin, so that
there was not a point thereof without a fleet.' The
power of Turges culminated in 841, when he drove
the abbot of Armagh into exile, usurped the abbacy,
and exercised the sovereignty of North Ireland. At
the same time his wife Ota (O.N. Auðr) profaned
the monastery of Clonmacnoise and gave audience,
probably as a <i>völva</i> or prophetess, upon the high
altar. Three years later Turges was captured by the
Irish and drowned in Lough Owel (co. West Meath).</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The early attacks on England and the first invasion
of Ireland were alike due to Norsemen rather than
Danes. This is evident from their general course,
from the explicit statement of the Anglo-Saxon
chronicle, and from the fact that the first arrival of
Danes in Ireland is definitely recorded in the year
849. The attack on Dorchester (c. 786-802), lying as
it does near the centre of the south coast of England,
is somewhat strange if it is assigned to the traditional
date, viz. 787, but there is no authority for this, and
if it is placed at any date nearer to 802 (before which
it must have taken place), it is probable that the
attack may be explained as an extension of Viking
raids down St George's Channel and round the S.W.
corner of England.</p>
<p>In 835 the attacks on England were renewed after
an interval of 40 years, but as they now stand in
close connexion with contemporary invasions of
Frankish territory there is every reason to believe
that they were of Danish rather than of Norse origin.
The attacks began in the south and west but they
soon spread to East Anglia and Lindsey. In 842 the
same army ravaged London, Étaples and Rochester.
In 851 Aethelstan of Kent defeated the Danes at sea
in one of the rare battles fought with them on
their own element, and in the same year they remained
for the winter in Thanet, probably owing to the loss
of their ships. The size and importance of these<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
attacks may be gauged from the fact that in this
year a fleet of some 350 Danish ships sailed up
the Thames. It was probably that same fleet, with
slightly diminished numbers, which in 852 ravaged
Frisia and then sailed round the British Isles, came
to Ireland, and captured Dublin. In 855 the Danes
wintered for the first time in Sheppey and we reach
the same point in the development of their attacks
on England to which they had already attained in
Ireland. We pass away from the period of raiding.
The Danes now came prepared to stay for several
years at a time and to carry on their attacks with
unceasing persistency.</p>
<p>The course of events in the Frankish empire ran
on much the same lines as in England and Ireland
during these years except that here trouble arose on
the land boundary between Denmark and the Franks
as well as on the sea-coast.</p>
<p>Alarmed by the conquest of the Saxons the
Danish king Guðröðr collected a fleet at Slesvík and
in 808 he crossed the Eider and attacked the
Abodriti (in Mecklenburg-Schwerin), a Slavonic tribe
in alliance with the Franks. He also sent a fleet of
some 200 vessels to ravage the coast of Frisia, laid
claim to that district and to Saxony, north of the
Elbe, and threatened to attack Charlemagne in his
own capital. The emperor was preparing to resist
him when news arrived (810) of the death of Guðröðr<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
at the hands of one of his followers and the consequent
dispersal of the Danish fleet.</p>
<p>Soon after disputes over the succession arose
between the family of Guðröðr and that of an earlier
king Harold. Ultimately the contest resolved itself
into one between the sons of Guðröðr, especially one
Horic (O.N. Hárekr) and a certain Harold. It
lasted for several years, the sons of Guðröðr for the
most part maintaining their hold on Denmark. At
one time during the struggle Harold and his brother
Ragnfröðr went to Vestfold in Norway, 'the extreme
district of their realm, whose chiefs and peoples were
refusing to be made subject to them, and gained
their submission,' showing clearly that at this time
Denmark and Southern Norway were under one rule
and rendering probable the identification of Guðröðr
with Guðröðr the Yngling who about this time was
slain by a retainer in Stifla Sound on the south coast
of Norway. This king ruled over Vestfold, half
Vingulmörk and perhaps Agðir. Both parties were
anxious to secure the support of the emperor Lewis
and in the end Harold gained his help by accepting
baptism at Mainz in 826. He promised to promote
the cause of Christianity in Denmark, while Lewis in
return granted him the district of Riustringen in
Frisia as a place of retreat in case of necessity. The
Danes thereby gained their first foothold within the
empire.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Sufficient has been said of the relation between
Denmark and the empire on its land boundary: we
must now say something of the attacks made by sea.</p>
<p>The first were made in 799 on the coast of
Aquitaine and they were probably due to raiders
from Ireland who followed a well-known trade route
from South Ireland to the ports of Southern France.
In 800 Charlemagne inspected the coast from the
Somme to the Seine and gave orders for the equipment
of a fleet and the strengthening of the coastguard
against Northmen pirates. When Guðröðr's fleet
plundered the islands off the Frisian coast in 810,
Charlemagne gave orders for his fleet to be strengthened
once more, but the results were meagre in the
extreme. The passage of the Channel was no longer
safe, and year after year, from some time before 819,
Vikings harried the island of Noirmoutier at the
mouth of the Loire, commanding the port of Nantes
and the extensive salt-trade of the district. The
Island of Rhé opposite La Rochelle, was raided in
similar fashion.</p>
<p>The Frankish empire was free from attack
between the years 814 and 833. During the same
time the English coast was also unvisited, and it is
probable that the struggles for the succession in
Denmark had for the time being reduced that kingdom
to inactivity. About the year 830 the Danish
king Hárekr seems to have established himself<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
firmly on the throne, while on the other hand the
emperor Lewis was troubled by the ambition of his
sons Lewis, Pippin and Lothair. It is probably no
chance coincidence that these events synchronised
with the renewal of Viking attacks on Frisia.
Throughout their history the Vikings showed themselves
well informed of the changing political conditions
of the countries which they visited and ready
to make the utmost use of the opportunities which
these might give for successful invasion.</p>
<p>Frisia was the main point of attack during the
next few years. Four times was the rich trading
town of Duurstede ravaged; fleets sailed up the
Veldt, the Maas, and the Scheldt; Antwerp was
burned and the Island of Walcheren plundered, so
that by the year 840 the greater part of Frisia south
of the Vlie, was in Danish hands and so it remained
till the end of the century. The Danish king Hárekr
repeatedly denied all complicity in these raids and
even promised to punish the raiders, but it is impossible
to tell how far his denials were genuine.
Equally difficult is it to say how far Harold in his
Frisian home was responsible for these attacks.
The annalists charge him with complicity, but Lewis
seems to have thought it best to bind him by fresh
gifts and (probably about 839) granted the district
around Duurstede itself to him and his brother Roric
(O.N. Hrœrekr) on condition that they helped to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
ward off Viking attacks. All the efforts of the
emperor to equip a fleet or to defend the coast were
to no purpose, and there was even a suspicion that
the Frisian populace were in sympathy with the
Vikings. So great was the terror of attack that
when in 839 a Byzantine mission, including some
Rhôs or Swedes from Russia, visited the emperor at
Ingelheim, the Swedes were for a time detained
under suspicion, as spies.</p>
<p>On the death of Lewis the Pious in 840 things
went from bad to worse. The division of the empire
in 843 gave the coast from the Eider to the Weser to
Lewis, from the Weser to the Scheldt to Lothair, and
the rest to Charles, removing all possibility of a united
and organised defence, and soon these princes entered
on the fatal policy of calling in the Vikings to assist
them in their quarrels. Thus Lothair in 841 endeavoured
to bind Harold to his cause by a grant of
the Island of Walcheren and Harold is found in the
following year with Lothair's army on the Moselle.</p>
<p>The Viking expeditions to England and France
stand now in close connexion. In 841 the valley of
the Seine was ravaged as far as Rouen, in 842
Étaples in Picardy was destroyed by a fleet from
England, while in 843 Nantes fell a prey to their
attacks. From their permanent quarters at Noirmoutier
the Vikings sailed up the Garonne and penetrated
inland as far as Toulouse. In 844 we hear from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
Arab historians of their vessels swarming on the
coasts of Spain like 'dark red sea-birds,' but while
they effected landings at Lisbon and Cadiz and at
Arzilla in Morocco, and captured Seville, with the
exception of its citadel, the Mussulman resistance
was too stout for them to effect much.</p>
<p>As a result of this expedition the Emir of Cordova,
Abd-ar-Rahman II sent an embassy to the king of
the <i>Madjus</i> (i.e. the magi or the heathen, one of
the commonest Arab names for the Vikings). The
ambassador found the king living in an island three
days' journey from the mainland, but we are told that
the heathen occupied many other neighbouring isles
and the mainland also. He was courteously received
by the king and became an especial favourite with
the queen Noud (? O.N. Auðr). His companions were
alarmed at the intimacy and as a result the ambassador
paid less frequent visits to court. The queen
asked him why, and when he told her the reason she
said that, owing to perfect freedom of divorce, there
was no jealousy among the Madjus. The details of
the story are too vague to admit of certainty, but it
would seem as if the embassy had visited the court
of the great Turges and his equally remarkable wife
Auðr in Ireland, or perhaps that of Olaf the White
and his wife Auðr (<i>v. infra</i>, p. <SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN>).</p>
<p>In 845 Hárekr of Denmark sailed up the Elbe
and destroyed Hamburg, while in the same year the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
dreaded Ragnarr Loðbrók, most famous of all Vikings,
sailed up the Seine as far as Paris. While on its
retreat from Paris, after the usual devastation,
a strange and deadly disease, possibly some form of
dysentery due to scantiness of food resulting from
a hard winter, broke out in the Danish army.
Various legends arose in connexion with this event,
and it finds a curious echo in the story told by Saxo
Grammaticus of an expedition made by Ragnarr
among the Biarmians (in Northern Russia) when
that people by their prayers called down a plague of
dysentery upon the Danes in which large numbers
perished. In the end the historical plague was
stayed when Hárekr commanded the Vikings on their
return to Denmark to refrain from flesh and meat
for fourteen days. Whether as a result of the plague
or from some other cause Hárekr now showed himself
ready to come to terms with Lewis, and for the
next eighty years there was complete peace along the
Eider boundary. The whole of the coast was still
open to attack however; Frisia was hardly ever free
from invaders; Brittany was obliged to buy off
Danish attacks in 847, while Noirmoutier continued
to form a basis of attack against Southern France
in the Gironde district. The Viking invasions in
France had attained much the same stage as that to
which we have already traced them in England and
Ireland.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span></p>
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