Summary
After the fall of the Roman Empire, Germanic tribes established kingdoms throughout Europe. With help from monks and missionaries, the Roman Catholic Church spread Christianity across Western Europe. During the Middle Ages, invasions by Germanic tribes weakened kingdoms, and peasants looked to nobles rather than kings for protection.
Textbook online
Frankish Kingdom 500-800AD - Maps in Motion
Invasions of Europe 800-1000AD - Maps in Motion
Online Vocabulary Practice
Spotlight Video - The Early Middle Ages
Spotlight Video Transcripts
Male Narrator: It is 991. Ninety-three Viking long ships are advancing up the black
water estuary on the Essex coast. This is the
biggest raid England has
seen for almost forty years, but these Vikings are no motley collection of
pirates, they’ve raised a powerful organized fleet to threaten the shores of England once
again. The terror has returned. In the previous years of peace England
has become rich, but now it is ruled by Ethelred the unready, a young and
militarily inexperienced king and the Vikings can sense an opportunity. They
sailed towards Maldon and land on Northby
Island to prepare their
attack, but on the mainland the English are waiting for them. Under the command
of Bertnot, a veteran military leader. The Viking herald steps forward and makes
demands not for land but for tribute, money, to go away and leave the English
in peace. The Vikings have turned to extortion. The two armies have to wait
until low water to fight it out. Then Bertnot makes a tactical error. He and
his men stand back and allow the Vikings to cross the causeway.
He wanted to bring this lot
to battle, if not they could sail away up the estuary and strike at will up and
down the coast, and it could be weeks or months before the English army had a
chance to get at them again.
And so the battle of Maldon
begins in earnest. The poem becomes very dramatic, centering on the heroism of
the English and their loyalty to their leader Bertnot, but there was no
denying, the English had lost.
In the end King Ethelred had
no choice but to give the victorious Vikings exactly what they wanted. He
handed over £10,000 pounds in silver, a huge amount of money in those days in
the hope that they would go away and stay away.
It was a vain hope, because
once the English paid up it was inevitable that the Vikings would be back
again. With each fresh attack the Vikings demanded more and more and the
English meekly paid up. The payments became known as Dane gold; money for the Danes
and in today’s prices would eventually total hundreds of millions of pounds.
The Anglo-Saxon chronicles tell of a rocketing extortion racket which lasted
for 20 years.
Male Speaker: 994A.D. and all the raiding army came to South
Hampton and they were paid £16,000 pounds.
Male Speaker: 997A.D. the raiding army brought indescribable war booty…..
Male Speaker: 1002A.D. here in this year they were paid £24,000 pounds.
Male Speaker: 1007A.D. the tax to the hostile raiding army was £30,000 pounds.
Male Speaker: 1012A.D. £48,000 pounds.
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