Vikings Valhalla loves a larger than life warrior. It never pretended to be a quiet meditation on...
Vikings
The Viking Era, roughly late eighth to mid eleventh century, marks a restless chapter in European history. Norse sailors pushed out from Scandinavia not only to raid but to trade, settle, and argue loudly about law. Monks noticed first. “Never before has such terror appeared in Britain,” wrote Alcuin of York in 793, sounding like a man who had just lost his roof. Further east, Ibn Fadlan observed their funerals with fascination and clear discomfort. From longships to marketplaces, the Vikings were less chaos incarnate and more highly motivated neighbours with excellent boats.
There are elite units that live on mainly through legend, and then there are the Varangian Guards...
The Battle of Sherston sits in that interesting space where firm evidence is thin on the ground,...
The story of medieval warfare isn’t complete without the men who stood their ground on foot. Infantry...
Few Anglo-Saxon kings have had a better press agent than Alfred the Great. He’s remembered as a...
The Battle of Ashdown was fought in early January 871 AD, a time when Wessex faced relentless...
If you like your history loud, smoky and slightly muddy, 2026 in the UK will keep you...
The medieval and Renaissance eras have given cinema some of its most breathtaking stories, equal parts brutal,...
The Battle of Assandun, fought in October 1016, was one of the final and most consequential clashes...
The Anglo-Saxon centuries were shaped by ambition, belief, and a quite unnecessary number of axes.From the early...
