The Battle of Assandun, fought in October 1016, was one of the final and most consequential clashes...
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.
The Anglo-Saxon centuries were shaped by ambition, belief, and a quite unnecessary number of axes.From the early...
Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord is so much more than just a strategy and combat sandbox. Beneath...
Pattern welding is one of those terms that sounds oddly modern, as if it belongs in a...
The Anglo-Saxons loom large in British history, half in the light of record, half in the shadow...
Before England became a single kingdom, it was a shifting network of rival realms and bloodlines. Kings...
Valhalla Rising is one of those films that lingers. It doesn’t tell you what to think, nor...
The raid on Lindisfarne in 793 AD is remembered as the moment Europe awoke to the Viking...
The world of Vikings: Valhalla presents more than battles and voyages. At its core lies a shifting...
Gunnar Hamundarson of Hlíðarendi is one of the most prominent figures in the Icelandic sagas, particularly Njáls...
