Danelaw

Coordinates: 54°12′03.86″N 2°21′38.08″W / 54.2010722°N 2.3605778°W / 54.2010722; -2.3605778
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 70.171.236.188 (talk) at 04:24, 5 February 2010 (rv obstinate refusal to countenance wikilink legitimacy...or else all Wikipedia is worthless on such grounds). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Danelaw, as recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (also known as the Danelagh; Old English: Dena lagu; Danish: Danelagen), is a historical name given to the part of England in which the laws of the "Danes" held sway[1] and dominated those of the Anglo-Saxons. It is contrasted with "West Saxon Law" and "Mercian law". The term has been extended by modern historians to be geographical. The areas that comprised the Danelaw are in northern and eastern England. The origins of the Danelaw arose from the Viking expansion of the 9th century, although the term was not used to describe a geographic area until the 11th century. With the increase in population and productivity in Scandinavia, Viking warriors sought treasure and glory in nearby Britain.

Danelaw is also used to describe the set of legal terms and definitions created in the treaties between the English king, Alfred the Great, and the Danish warlord, Guthrum the Old, written following Guthrum's defeat at the Battle of Ethandun in 878. In 886, the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum was formalised, defining the boundaries of their kingdoms, with provisions for peaceful relations between the English and the Vikings.

The Danish laws held sway in the Kingdom of Northumbria and Kingdom of East Anglia, and the lands of the Five Boroughs of Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Stamford and Lincoln.

The prosperity of the Danelaw, especially Eoferic (Danish Jórvík, modern York), led to its becoming a target for later Viking raiders. Conflict with Wessex and Mercia sapped the strength of the Danelaw. The waning of its military power together with the Viking onslaughts led to its submission to Edward the Elder in return for protection. It was to be part of his Kingdom of England, and no longer a province of Denmark, as the English laid final claim to it.

History

Gold: Danelaw

From about AD 800 waves of Danish assaults on the coastlines of the British Isles were gradually followed by a succession of Danish settlers. Danish raiders first began to settle in England starting in 865, when brothers Halfdan Ragnarsson and Ivar the Boneless wintered in East Anglia. They soon moved north and in 867 captured Northumbria and its capital, York, defeating both the recently deposed King Osberht of Northumbria, as well as the usurper Ælla of Northumbria. The Danes then placed an Englishman, Ecgberht I of Northumbria, on the throne of Northumbria as a puppet.[2]

King Æthelred of Wessex and his brother, Alfred, led their army against the Danes at Nottingham, but the Danes refused to leave their fortifications. King Burgred of Mercia then negotiated peace with Ivar, with the Danes' keeping Nottingham in exchange for leaving the rest of Mercia unmolested.

Under Ivar the Boneless, the Danes continued their invasion in 869 by defeating King Edmund of East Anglia at Hoxne and conquering East Anglia.[3] Once again, the brothers Æthelred and Alfred attempted to stop Ivar by attacking the Danes at Reading. They were repelled with heavy losses. The Danes pursued, and on 7 January 871, Æthelred and Alfred defeated the Danes at the Battle of Ashdown. The Danes retreated to Basing (in Hampshire), where Æthelred attacked and was, in turn, defeated. Ivar was able to follow up this victory with another in March at Meretum (now Marton, Wiltshire).

On 23 April 871, King Æthelred died and Alfred succeeded him as King of Wessex. His army was weak and he was forced to pay tribute to Ivar in order to make peace with the Danes. During this peace the Danes turned to the north and attacked Mercia, a campaign that lasted until 874. Both the Danish leader Ivar and Mercian leader Burgred died during this campaign. Ivar was succeeded by Guthrum the Old, who finished the campaign against Mercia. In ten years the Danes gained control over East Anglia, Northumbria and Mercia, leaving only Wessex to resist.[4]

Guthrum and the Danes brokered peace with Wessex in 876, when they captured the fortresses of Wareham and Exeter. Alfred laid siege to the Danes, who were forced to surrender after reinforcements were lost in a storm. Two years later, Guthrum again attacked Alfred, surprising him by attacking his forces wintering in Chippenham. King Alfred was saved when the Danish army coming from his rear was destroyed by inferior forces at Countisbury Hill. Alfred was forced into hiding for a time, before returning in the spring of 878 to gather an army and attack Guthrum at Ethandun. The Danes were defeated and retreated to Chippenham, where King Alfred laid siege and soon forced them to surrender. As a term of surrender, King Alfred demanded that Guthrum be baptised a Christian; King Alfred served as his godfather.[5]

This peace lasted until 884, when Guthrum again attacked Wessex. Alfred defeated him, with peace codified in the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum.[6] The treaty outlined the boundaries of the Danelaw and allowed for Danish self-rule in the region. The Danelaw represented a consolidation of power for Alfred; the subsequent conversion of Guthrum to Christianity underlines the ideological significance of this shift in the balance of power.

The reasons for the waves of immigration were complex and bound to the political situation in Scandinavia at that time; moreover, they occurred when Viking settlers were also establishing their presence in the Hebrides, Orkney, the Faroe Islands, Ireland, Iceland, Greenland, France (Normandy), Russia and Ukraine (see Kievan Rus').[7] Polabian Slavs (Wends) settled in parts of England, apparently as Danish allies.[citation needed]

The Danes never gave up their designs for England. From 1016 to 1035 the English kingdom was ruled by Canute the Great as part of a North Sea Danish Empire. In 1066, two rival Viking factions led invasions of England. Harald Hardrada took York but was defeated at the Battle of Stamford Bridge. William of Normandy and his Normans defeated Anglo-Saxon armies at the Battle of Hastings in Sussex and accepted the submission of the child Edgar, last in the line of Wessex kings at Berkhamsted.

The Danelaw appeared in legislation as late as the early twelfth century with the Leges Henrici Prime, being referred to as one of the laws together with those of Wessex and Mercia into which England was divided.

Danish-Norwegian conflict in the North Sea

In the years between the Sack of Lindesfarne in 793 and the Danish invasion of East Anglia in 865, Norwegian settlers founded the site of modern Dublin and fought as mercenaries in Irish tribal wars, liberally intermarrying with their Irish allies. Some 10 years later a Danish fleet probably from Great Heathen Army in Anglia arrived and attacked the settlement with the Irish and Norwegian enemies of the Hiberno-Norse, but were repulsed. It is also said in Irish and northern English oral history that Ivar the Boneless, and in some accounts also Ubbe Ragnarsson, died not in the Mercian campaign, but drowned fighting the Hiberno-Norse in the Irish sea. Dublin and other major Irish towns were under Danish rule for the next 100–200 years.

The haste with which the Danes resumed their attack on Norse Dublin before consolidating their control of Saxon England indicates that the entire Danish invasion was not primarily aimed at the conquest of Saxon England, but to secure a North Sea base of operations to use as a springboard in the conflict with the Norwegians, who controlled an extensive trade network in the Orkneys, the Hebrides, the Isle of Man, the Isle of Wight, and Ireland, which exported goods as the Danes did, from the British Isles south-east through Kievan Rus as far as Constantinople and Baghdad, following the Dniepr from the Baltic to the Black Sea.

In the 11th century, when King Magnus I had freed Norway from Cnut the Great, the terms of the peace treaty provided that the first of the two kings Magnus (Norway) and Harthacnut (Denmark) to die would leave their dominion as an inheritance to the other. When Edward the Confessor ascended the throne of a united Dano-Saxon England, a Norse army was raised from every Norwegian colony in the British Isles and attacked Edward's England in support of Magnus', and after his death, his brother Harald Hardråde's, claim to the English throne. On the accession of Harold Godwinson after the death of Edward the Confessor, Hardraada invaded Northumbria with the support of Harold's brother Tostig Godwinson, and was defeated at the Battle of Stamford Bridge the week before William I's victory at the Battle of Hastings.

Timeline

Danish period

800 Waves of Danish assaults on the coastlines of the British Isles were gradually followed by a succession of settlers.

865 Danish raiders first began to settle in England. Led by brothers Halfdan and Ivar the Boneless, they wintered in East Anglia, where they demanded and received tribute in exchange for a temporary peace. From there they moved north and attacked Northumbria, which was in the midst of a civil war between the deposed king Osberht and a usurper Ælla. The Danes used the civil turmoil as an opportunity to capture York, which they sacked and burned.

867 Following the loss of York, Osberht and Ælla formed an alliance against the Danes. They launched a counterattack, but the Danes killed both Osberht and Ælla and set up a puppet king on Northumbrian throne. In response, King Æthelred of Wessex, along with his brother Alfred marched against the Danes, who were positioned behind fortifications in Nottingham, but were unable to draw them into battle. In order to establish peace, King Burhred of Mercia ceded Nottingham to the Danes in exchange for leaving the rest of Mercia undisturbed.

869 Ivar the Boneless returned and demanded tribute from King Edmund of East Anglia.

870 King Edmund refused, Ivar the Boneless defeated and captured him at Hoxne and brutally sacrificed his heart to Odin in a so-called “blood eagle ritual”, in the process adding East Anglia to the area controlled by the invading Danes. King Æthelred and Alfred attacked the Danes at Reading, but were repulsed with heavy losses. The Danes pursued them.

871 On January 7, they made their stand at Ashdown (on what is the Berkshire/North Wessex Downs now in Oxfordshire). Æthelred could not be found at the start of battle, as he was busy praying in his tent, so Alfred led the army into battle. Æthelred and Alfred defeated the Danes, who counted among their losses five jarls (nobles). The Danes retreated and set up fortifications at Basing in Hampshire, a mere 14 miles (23 km) from Reading. Æthelred attacked the Danish fortifications and was routed. Danes followed up victory with another victory in March at Meretum (now Marton, Wiltshire).

King Æthelred died on April 23, 871 and Alfred took the throne of Wessex, but not before seriously considering abdicating the throne in light of the desperate circumstances, which were further worsened by the arrival in Reading of a second Danish army from Europe. For the rest of the year Alfred concentrated on attacking with small bands against isolated groups of Danes. He was moderately successful in this endeavor and was able to score minor victories against the Danes, but his army was on the verge of collapse. Alfred responded by paying off the Danes in order for a promise of peace. During the peace the Danes turned north and attacked Mercia, which they finished off in short order, and captured London in the process. King Burgred of Mercia fought in vain against the Ivar the Boneless and his Danish invaders for three years until 874, when he fled to Europe. During Ivar’s campaign against Mercia he died and was succeeded by Guthrum the Old as the main protagonist in the Danes’ drive to conquer England. Guthrum quickly defeated Burgred and placed a puppet on the throne of Mercia. The Danes now controlled East Anglia, Northumbria and Mercia, with only Wessex continuing to resist.

875 The Danes settled in Dorsetshire, well inside of Alfred’s Kingdom of Wessex, but Alfred quickly made peace with them.

876 The Danes broke the peace when they captured the fortress of Wareham, followed by a similar capture of Exeter in 877.

877 Alfred laid siege, while the Danes waited for reinforcements from Scandinavia. Unfortunately for the Danes, the fleet of reinforcements encountered a storm and lost more than 100 ships, and the Danes were forced to return to East Mercia in the north.

878 In January Guthrum led an attack against Wessex that sought to capture Alfred while he wintered in Chippenham. Another Danish army landed in south Wales and moved south with the intent of intercepting Alfred should he flee from Guthrum’s forces. However, they stopped during their march to capture a small fortress at Countisbury Hill, held by a Wessex ealdorman named Odda. The Saxons, led by Odda, attacked the Danes while they slept and defeated the superior Danish forces, saving Alfred from being trapped between the two armies. Alfred was forced to go into hiding for the rest of the winter and spring of 878 in the Somerset marshes in order to avoid the superior Danish forces. In the spring Alfred was able to gather an army and attacked Guthrum and the Danes at Ethandun. The Danes were defeated and retreated to Chippenham, where the English pursued and laid siege to Guthrum’s forces. The Danes were unable to hold out without relief and soon surrendered. Alfred demanded as a term of the surrender that Guthrum become baptized as a Christian, which Guthrum agreed to do, with Alfred acting as his Godfather. Guthrum was true to his word and settled in East Anglia, at least for a while.

884 Guthrum attacked Kent, but was defeated by the English. This led to the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum, which established the boundaries of the Danelaw and allowed for Danish self-rule in the region.

902 Essex submits to Æthelwald.

903 Æthelwald incites the East Anglian Danes into breaking the peace. They ravage Mercia before winning a pyrrhic victory that saw the death of Æthelwald and the Danish King Eohric; this allows Edward the Elder to consolidate power.

911 The English defeat the Danes at the Battle of Tettenhall. The Northumbrians ravage Mercia but are trapped by Edward and forced to fight.

917 In return for peace and protection The Kingdoms of Essex and East Anglia accept Edward the Elder as their suzerain overlord.

Æthelflæd (also known as Ethelfleda) Lady of the Mercians, takes the borough of Derby.

918 The borough of Leicester submits peaceably to Æthelflæd's rule. The people of York promise to accept her as their overlord, but she dies before this could come to fruition. She is succeeded by her brother, the Kingdoms of Mercia and Wessex united in the person of King Edward.

919 Norwegian Vikings under King Rægnold (Ragnald son of Sygtrygg) of Dublin take York.

920 Edward is accepted as father and lord by the King of the Scots, by Rægnold, the sons of Eadulf, the English, Norse, Danes and others all of whom dwell in Northumbria, and the King and people of the Strathclyde Welsh.

954 Eric Bloodaxe driven out of Northumbria, his death marking the end of the prospect of a Northern Viking Kingdom stretching from York to Dublin and the Isles.

1016 Cnut the Great grants Jarldom of East Anglia to the Dane Thorkell the Tall and Jarldom of Northumbria to the Norwegian Eiríkr Hákonarson. Cnut also retains Eadric Streona as his Earl of Mercia, but plants himself and the Danish royal family at Winchester in Wessex.

1066 Battle of Stamford Bridge is fought by Harald III of Norway with the aid of Tostig Godwinson and both die at the army of Harold II of England.

After 1066

1069 William I of England conducts the Harrying of the North under his lieutenants. Hereward the Wake lasts for a very long time in the Fens.

1071 Alan Rufus is granted the Honour of Richmond, which is based in Yorkshire (which at that time included Lancashire and Westmorland), Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Norfolk, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, Hertfordshire, Essex, Hampshire and Dorset. Most of the Breton honour is thus clearly based in the Danelaw, whilst the Norman holdings are based in Wessex as the royal demesne. Rufus is known as the 'magnate of East Anglia', in addition to Richmondshire being known as the 'land of Count Alan'. The chief port of Richmond was Boston, Lincolnshire. Rufus is interred within Bury St Edmunds Abbey, Suffolk where he had made grants to the religious order there.

1135 This area of England remains aristocratic and the source of baronial opposition to the Empress Matilda (whose strength lay in the West Country), siding with Stephen of England in the Anarchy, which lasts until 1154. Gilbert de Gant, Earl of Lincoln and Alan, 1st Earl of Richmond are present at the Battle of Lincoln (1141). The latter also assaults William Fitzherbert, Archbishop of York, at Ripon Minster.

1173 The Revolt of 1173–1174 incites Geoffrey, Earl of Richmond to stir unrest throughout the Danelaw in his English fief. Richmond Castle is held by the Gant family against Henry II of England, despite a summons to deliver.

1215 The First Barons' War is fought partly as a reaction towards the murder of Arthur I, Earl of Richmond, whose forts shut out and whose tenants and allies oppose John of England at Runnymede. The Danelaw becomes under the sway of Capetian influence via Louis, "King of England"'s cousin Peter, Earl of Richmond. King John loses the Crown Jewels in the Wash. It is about this period that Robin Hood stories chronologically begin, in Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire, while he and his people wear Lincoln green and Scarlet (cloth), manufactured in the East. Robin's status of yeoman is a broad representation of most of the commons in the Danelaw, never having been serfs because of the region's laws.

1267 The Second Barons' War is be fought by Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, whose title to Montfort-l'Amaury descends to Montfort of Brittany, foreign holders of the title Earl of Richmond in much of England's Danelaw parts, intermittently actual or claimant holders of this fief until Anne of Brittany. Montfort is supported by Peter II, Count of Savoy, holder of Richmond estates who invests in Boston and builds Savoy Palace.

1340 John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster is granted the Richmond honour at the expense of the Anglo-Breton alliance and hunts at the Gant estates of the Yorkshire Dales, also taking the Savoy Palace for himself. Gaunt supports John Wycliffe of Wycliffe and nevertheless, his Lollards destroy the Savoy during the Peasants' Revolt. Gaunt's "state-within-a-state" continues to provide the Danelaw with a distinct identity apart from the establishment based in Norman Wessex, under Edward III of England. Gaunt's brother Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, is made Earl of Cambridge. Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence, also has his base of lands in Clare, Suffolk. Much like the Breton lords before them, the new nationalist English aristocrats are largely absentee, run by local barons and gentry who wear their liveries and exact taxes or fight in their suits.

1414 This region is confirmed to increase as a large part of the Royal Family's properties. John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, is made Earl of Kendal and of Richmond, to prolong the links between the East and North of England. At this time, all of the coastal shires are impressed for naval service in the Hundred Years' War with France, a country that Bedford is made regent of, for Henry VI of England.

1455 When the English are expelled from France, the Wars of the Roses start, exacerbated by the Percy-Neville feud in the Scottish Marches. Lancastrians based at Richmond, North Yorkshire and Yorkists based at Cambridge, implode the baronial infrastructure of the Danelaw and concentrate more land and power in the Crown, causing jealousy. England's immense mercantile woolens trade and mercenary service with Burgundy, through such ports as Richmond's Boston, become the special concern of the Yorkists, whilst the Lancastrians rest upon their feudal agricultural estates and retainers. During their holds on the Monarchy, special privileges were afforded the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge under the Lancastrians and Yorkists respectively.

1485 The wars are ended with status quo antebellum; Lancastrian supremacy and Yorkist junior status, through the marriage of Richmond's Henry of Lancaster and Elizabeth of York. Breton assistance in this matter prevents the King of France, despite his marriage to Anne of Brittany, from asserting titulary rights to the Richmond holdings of the Danelaw and the ties of international feudalalism are officially broken.

1536 The country people of the Danelaw, incensed by the vast increase in royal power over rents and ecclesiastical properties, erupt in the Lincolnshire Rising and Pilgrimage of Grace. The Duke of Norfolk, although charged with putting down this insurrection, soon leads England with his Howards achieving "second family" status in recusancy.

1553 The Dukes of Northumberland and Suffolk conspire to place the Crown under their influence in the body of Protestant Lady Jane Grey, but the Commons of North and East Anglia, notwithstanding, support the accession of Catholic Mary I of England.

1569 These frustrations weaken and split, between a Rising of the North with ties to the Stuart court in Scotland and an Eastern alliance, with exiles at English Jesuit colleges in the Spanish possession of Burgundian Flanders; both parts of the Danelaw increasingly seek to overturn royal power in matters of politics and religion, although their foreign connections are stigmatised by the nationalising establishment.

1586 Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, is made Governor-General of the Dutch Republic and the Dutchmen proceed to return the favour by draining the Fens, inland from the Wash.

Since 1603

1605 The Gunpowder Plot fails to dislodge the newfound British establishment in the body of absolutist James I and the populace of the Danelaw becomes radicalised to opposite spiritual convictions from what they held dear previously, unhappy by the Hampton Court Conference, with Pilgrim Fathers and the Winthrop Fleet seeking voluntary exile in their train, first in Leiden, then in North Virginia, accompanied later by their Dutch confederates.

1649 Oliver Cromwell, a distant nephew of Thomas Cromwell, with the Eastern Association, triumphs in the English Civil War and finally dislodges the Monarchy for a space. Throughout the war, concentrations of forces are markedly similar to that between forces loyal to Alfred of Wessex and Guthrum of the Danelaw so many years earlier. In this case, Charles I of England had his loyalties mostly in the what was Wessex-Mercia and Bernicia, with Parliament based in what was East Anglia-Five Boroughs and Deira. Liberties won by Parliament in this period are secured in the New World.

1651 The setting of Robinson Crusoe of York is a romantic caricature of the Danelaw man in the New World. Men such as him and John Smith (explorer), Martin Frobisher, Henry Hudson and Christopher Levett typify a counter establishment which is based throughout New England and Massachusetts in particular, proving to form the character of the English colonies, despite the establishment of Royalty in Virginia and disaffected colonists of Pennsylvania who are disillusioned with either party.

1688 The Danelaw and its stereotypical characteristics immensely subside within the larger body politic of England, for whilst it once stood apart from the rest in its biases and the forces of geopolitics, despite its landlords absenting elsewhere for quite some time, the English on a whole, thenceforth accord the English speaking Scots a similar subsequent "other" position within the united realm between them. Pastoral and urban areas alike see in their Englishness something reconciled to their usual social critics and opponents among the elite of the old establishment. Consequently, this region, no longer the underdog, is happy to enforce submission of the Jacobites, amongst other Scottish and Irish insurrectionists, who ironically, drew their own inspiration for dissent towards the establishment from them.

The actual conceived distinction of the Danelaw had disappeared long before the time of William and Mary, but social forces did not become inert until now. Despite the initial opposition to centralist governmental changes over the past few hundred years, it was this very reorganisation which benefited them the most, by their economic and ethnic proximity to revived sources of the establishment, foreign and domestic. The Glorious Revolution reestablishes North Sea priorities for the nation, whereas the old West Saxon-Norman grip had been dependent upon the English Channel and it is a testament to the latter's persistence in the face of French efforts otherwise, that the Channel Islands remain with England--and Britain, overall, for the Danish and Breton quality of the region would insist upon democracy and Nordic Insularity, to stay aloft from absolutism and Mediterranean Continentalism.

Ironically, the Monarchy which this Danelaw region had so despised for its French conspiracies, caused this to happen, for the earlier union of James I with Anne of Denmark set in motion a new alignment in Europe, which was to forever direct national affairs. The Georgian Crown was to unite the Isle of Man with England under the same person, which profited old Danelaw society even more in its constitutional health. This progressed, even into the time of the 20th century, when, although Germanic culture was in vogue, the Monarchy went forward and took a big step in its Windsorian reconciliation to the Commons by the abdication of Edward VIII, who married an American descendent of those who fought for the rights of Common Englishmen so long ago by that time. Simultaneously, the Empire became Commonwealth and League of Nations became United Nations. Part of the English participation in these events was due to the pressures and convictions of the people in the old Danish parts of England. Now, the Monarchy's next dynasty, although with an immediately Greek base, owes its place in England not only to the collateral descent of Prince George of Denmark, but also to the Danelaw heritage of England. There is from this dynasty, presently an Earl of Wessex, a significant Anglo-Saxon recreation, since the absorption of that royal demesne and possession by the Normans. The Mountbatten heirs to the Throne owe their descent to ancient Saxony, from whence they had ruled the Danes and other Scandinavians. In the New Millenium, it may be possible to look at these affairs as coming round full circle.

Geography

The Five Boroughs and the English Midlands in the early 10th century[8]

The area occupied by the Danelaw was roughly the area to the north of a line drawn between London and Chester, excluding the portion of Northumbria to the east of the Pennines.

Five fortified towns became particularly important in the Danelaw: Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, Stamford and Lincoln, broadly delineating the area now called the East Midlands. These strongholds became known as the Five Boroughs. Borough derives from the Old English word burg (which in turn derives from the German word Burg, meaning castle), meaning a fortified and walled enclosure containing several households—anything from a large stockade to a fortified town. The meaning has since developed further.

Four of the five boroughs became county towns — of the counties of Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. However, Stamford failed to gain such status—perhaps because of the nearby autonomous territory of Rutland.

The influence of this period of Scandinavian settlement can still be seen in the North of England and the East Midlands, most evidently in placenames: name endings such as "howe", "by" or "thorp" having Norse origins.

Legal concepts of the Danelaw

The Danelaw was an important factor in the establishment of a civilian peace in the neighbouring Anglo-Saxon and Viking communities. It established, for example, equivalences in areas of legal contentiousness, such as the amount of reparation that should be payable in weregild.

Many of the legalistic concepts were compatible; for example the Viking wapentake, the standard for land division in the Danelaw, was effectively interchangeable with the hundred. The use of the execution site and cemetery at Walkington Wold in East Yorkshire suggests a continuity of judicial practice.[9]

Enduring impact of the Danelaw

Old Norse and Old English were still mutually comprehensible to a small degree. The mixed language of the Danelaw caused the incorporation of many Norse words into the English language, including the word law itself, sky and window, and the third person plural pronouns they, them and their. Many Old Norse words still survive in the dialects of Northeastern England. Around 600 English words we speak today come from old Norse for example ‘ill’ ‘egg’ ‘die ‘knife’ and ‘take.’

English styles of art and craft were also affected by the Vikings, the Vikings style of stone carving was adopted by the English, and as the Vikings became Christian, the combined style of decoration can be found on many stone crosses and hog back (stone carved grave markers.) gravestones in The Danelaw. There are the remains of more than 500 such gravestones and crosses in Yorkshire alone.

Genetic heritage

In 2000 the BBC conducted a genetic survey of the British Isles for its program 'Blood of the Vikings'. It concluded that Norse invaders settled sporadically throughout the British Isles with a particular concentration in certain areas, such as Orkney and Shetland[1]. This finding referred to Norwegian Vikings only, as descendants of Danish Vikings could not be distinguished from descendants of Anglo-Saxon settlers.[citation needed]

Archaeological sites and the Danelaw

Major archaeological sites that bear testimony to the Danelaw are few. The most famous is the site at York, which is often said to derive its name from the Old Norse Jórvík. (That name is itself a borrowing of the Old English Eoforwic; the Old English diphthong eo being cognate with the Norse diphthong jo, the Old English intervocalic f typically being pronounced softly as a modern v, and wic being the Old English version of the Norse vik.) Eoforwic in turn was derived from an earlier name for the town, spelled Eboracum in Latin sources. Another Danelaw site is the cremation site at Heath Wood, Ingleby, Derbyshire.

Archaeological sites do not bear out the historically defined area as being a real demographic or trade boundary. This could be due to misallocation of the items and features on which this judgment is based as being indicative of either Anglo-Saxon or Norse presence. Otherwise, it could indicate that there was considerable population movement between the areas, or simply that after the treaty was made, it was ignored by one or both sides.

Thynghowe was an important Danelaw meeting place, today located in Sherwood Forest, Nottinghamshire, England. The word "howe" often indicates a prehistoric burial mound. Howe is derived from the Old Norse work Haugr meaning mound.[10]

The site's rediscovery was made by Lynda Mallett, Stuart Reddish and John Wood. The site had vanished from modern maps and was essentially lost to history until the local history enthusiasts made their discoveries.

Experts think the rediscovered site, which lies amidst the old oaks of an area known as the Birklands in Sherwood Forest, may also yield clues as to the boundary of the ancient Anglo Saxon Kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria.

English Heritage, recently inspected the site and believes it is a national rarity. Thynghowe[2] was a place where people came to resolve disputes and settle issues. It is a Norse word, although the site may older still, perhaps even Bronze Age.

References

  1. ^ "The Old English word Dene ‘Danes’ usually refers to Scandinavians of any kind; most of the invaders were indeed Danish (East Norse speakers), but there were Norwegians (West Norse [speakers]) among them as well." —Lass, Roger, Old English: A Historical Linguistic Companion, p.187, n.12. Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  2. ^ Flores Historiarum: Rogeri de Wendover, Chronica sive flores historiarum, p. 298-9. ed. H. Coxe, Rolls Series, 84 (4 vols, 1841-42)
  3. ^ Haywood, John. The Penguin Historical Atlas of the Vikings, p.62. Penguin Books. ©1995.
  4. ^ Carr, Michael. "Alfred the Great Strikes Back", p. 65. Military History Journal. June 2001.
  5. ^ Hadley, D. M. The Northern Danelaw: Its Social Structure, c. 800-1100. p. 310. Leicester University Press. ©2000.
  6. ^ The Kalender of Abbot Samson of Bury St. Edmunds, ed. R.H.C. Davis, Camden 3rd ser., 84 (1954), xlv-xlvi.
  7. ^ The Viking expansion
  8. ^ Falkus & Gillingham and Hill
  9. ^ J.L. Buckberry & D.M. Hadley, "An Anglo-Saxon Execution Cemetery at Walkington Wold, Yorkshire", Oxford Journal of Archaeology 26(3) 2007, 325
  10. ^ Guide to Scandinavian origins of place names in Britain

In literature

  • Types of Manorial Structure in the Northern Danelaw, Frank M. Stenton, London, 1910.
  • The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, Tiger Books International version translated and collated by Anne Savage,1995.

External links

  • [3] News Item: BBC Blood of the Vikings
  • [4] BBC Viking History Links

See also

54°12′03.86″N 2°21′38.08″W / 54.2010722°N 2.3605778°W / 54.2010722; -2.3605778