Showing posts with label Mildred Downey Broxon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mildred Downey Broxon. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

The Viking Era

Poul Anderson, "THE NORSE" IN Poul Anderson & Mildred Downey Broxon, The Demon Of Scattery (New York, 1980), pp. 200-207.

(The title page of this edition says "SF ace books," which is inaccurate.)

According to Anderson's historical note:

The "Vikings" were not a people and the word should not be capitalized. The earliest recorded viking raids on England and Ireland occurred in the late eighth century. (Thus, Hrolf Kraki, in the mid-sixth century, was much earlier. See "The History of Hrolf Kraki: a Foreword by Poul Anderson" IN Poul Anderson, Hrolf Kraki's Saga (New York, 1973), pp. xvii-xxi AT p. xviii.)

The viking period lasted for about three centuries:

England, Ireland, France, Germany and the Low Countries were attacked repeatedly;
in 845, Paris and Hamburg were captured;
at least one expedition plundered in the Mediterranean;
Finns, Lapps and Balts were attacked but had no one to record it;
the attackers were from Scandinavia or from their colonies, including Iceland;
the probable causes were population pressure, ambition and greed;
some bands would sow, go in viking and return for harvest;
"viking" is probably derived from "...'vik,' meaning a narrow bay..." (p. 202), because raiders would wait in such a bay to attack passing cargo ships;
"viking" rhymed with "seeking";
kings and jarls discouraged such attacks at home but did not object to attacks on foreign countries;
some huge fleets wintered abroad, then colonized in England, Ireland, Normandy etc.