When Did the Viking Age REALLY Begin?

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  • Опубликовано: 8 окт 2021
  • Go to nordvpn.com/hilbert or use code hilbert to get a 2-year plan plus 4 additional months with a huge discount.
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    When it comes to the Viking Age and what started it all off, the Raid on Lindisfarne and the year 793 loom large in people's minds. But was this REALLY the beginning of it all? Find out more in this video about the beginning of the Viking Age in England, The Netherlands, Denmark and Norway.
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    #Vikings #Danmark #History

Комментарии • 217

  • @historywithhilbert146
    @historywithhilbert146  2 года назад +26

    Go to nordvpn.com/hilbert or use code hilbert to get a 2-year plan plus 4 additional months with a huge discount.
    Thanks for watching everyone! Let me know your thoughts in the comments below and leave me a like if you enjoyed!

    • @dgmembernr
      @dgmembernr 2 года назад +2

      viking are cool :)

    • @Uncle_T
      @Uncle_T 2 года назад +4

      WOW at 13:00 my speakers almost blew up! MR Z VERY LOUD! :)
      Great video though.

    • @Excommunicated-ei1ep
      @Excommunicated-ei1ep 2 года назад +2

      The Pagan Anglo-Saxon’s were
      going “Viking” for Hundreds of years before the actual “Vikings” did . . . just saying . . .

    • @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
      @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 2 года назад

      Hilbert, I know you present the facts, did you get vax yet?

    • @Baraodojaguary
      @Baraodojaguary 2 года назад

      @@Uncle_T same here also i dont like that mister z fella he is clearly far right

  • @OCinneide
    @OCinneide 2 года назад +111

    13:00 , well thanks for nearly blowing out my ear drums mate.

    • @jonbojsenkvrndrup8180
      @jonbojsenkvrndrup8180 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, that was really rough...

    • @heretohear1847
      @heretohear1847 2 года назад +9

      tbf i think we all raise our volume for hilbert cuz his audio is so soft so when someone else with a proper mic comes on it blows our ears out.

    • @caseyjones6677
      @caseyjones6677 2 года назад +3

      @@heretohear1847 it's not the mic that's to blame here, reformatting to EBU or any other standard is like one button click.

    • @jeppe5942
      @jeppe5942 2 года назад +4

      I almost fell out of my chair.

  • @hamsh-il4ei
    @hamsh-il4ei 2 года назад +27

    8:04 'Aethelred net-connection not ready',
    Subtle Hilbert, subtle

  • @dingusdean1905
    @dingusdean1905 2 года назад +31

    Honestly I don't really think there was a definitive viking age start and end because the vikings changed over time a lot, going from large chevauchee type raids lead by kings, then as the practice became entrenched many smaller bands of sea raiders sprang up as it became easier to sail and attack the decentralized and feuding post-Carolingian realms who were too busy fighting each other to respond to raids. After everyone realized just how lucrative and poorly defended these lands were, the Vikings stopped being plunderers or pirate-traders and shifted to colonizing conquerors, establishing the danelaw, settlements in ireland and the kingdom of the isles.

    • @nataliekennedy4646
      @nataliekennedy4646 2 года назад +5

      And the normans were there descendants that lived in France

    • @muhammadadeel8639
      @muhammadadeel8639 Год назад +1

      I guess we can say that vikings eventually evolved into British and Russian empires. British especially developed sophisticated piracy (Privateers, East India company etc.) and colonization (Americas, Australia, India etc.)

  • @loke6664
    @loke6664 2 года назад +10

    I can't give you an exact date but I can tell you where it started somewhere in 670-700: In Ösel, Estonia.
    They have found 2 viking ships and 42 skeletons who were buried there after a raid or battle. They were buried like vikings so the vikings would have won but with rather large losses.
    That is the earliest known evidence for a viking raid, it was however in the East by Swedish vikings and since we don't have any written records of it it is often being glossed over. It was likely not the first raid so the true range would be around 650-700.
    The sail technology was known in Vendel around the year 550 (they are mainly known for making cool helmets including the Suttton Ho helmet) so that is the theoretical earliest possible time but unless some new evidence show up I wouldn't go that early myself.
    The Salme ships in Ösel was found in 2008 so new finds are popping up changing our views when the viking age started.
    I could see the English argument for 793 though, it was the first time the vikings really made an impact on England even if they raided a bit earlier. Lindisfarne made both the Saxon nobles and regular people notice them.
    In fact, you should research the Ösel ships and made a vid about them, they are really interesting.

  • @MonsieurDean
    @MonsieurDean 2 года назад +89

    This cross-over was a long time coming!

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. 2 года назад +57

    It's certainly interesting... that the Vikings had such problems with the Wi-Fi connection. After all weren't they quite technically advanced, one guy named Harald inventig Bluetooth or something? 😏

  • @superlitin1
    @superlitin1 2 года назад +15

    An even earlier possible start for the Viking age might be between 700-750 AD. Two clinker-built Scandinavian ships were found near the village of Salme in Saaremaa, an island off the coast of Estonia. These boats were dated to around 700-750 AD, and contained more than 40 Scandinavian warriors, as well as artefacts and weapons.
    This only takes into account a raid, and not the other factors mentioned in this video, like trading links etc., but if we go by the term víkingr meaning someone who raids as an occupation, or someone who comes to/from the "Vik" (fjord, inlet, cove/might possibly refer to the area around Oslo, called Víkin in the viking age) to raid, then it is by definition the start of the viking age.
    It's worth checking out, here's the source: ------------------------------------------------------------
    Curry, Andrew (10 June 2013). "The First Vikings - Archaeology Magazine"

    • @jeppesodemann6206
      @jeppesodemann6206 2 года назад +4

      In Denmark we just found Odin, and some runes engraved in a stone which is from about 463

    • @superlitin1
      @superlitin1 2 года назад +3

      @@jeppesodemann6206 Yeah, Norse religion is thought to predate the Viking age, at least many of its aspects. It is most likely a conglomeration of neolithic shamanic animism, as seen in their divinatory practices, like oneiromancy; Indo-European bronze age ideas and its roster of gods, with its own unique Germanic twist; hero cults that deify certain historical or legendary figures, like Atilla; and a whole mish-mash of more specific gods with similar traits, yet distinct differentiation, scattered across a geographical area, which are then later incorporated into one god as cultural transmission and higher forms of societal unification becomes more present.

    • @Kramplarv
      @Kramplarv 2 года назад +4

      I like to think of the Hall culture as the most important part of viking era. The great halls of the nobles, the gods and so on are more important I believe for the cultural development of viking era than ships or warfare. The latter are important results of the hall culture.
      So I like to think of the viking age from around 300ad to 1300ad when the first (that we know of) and the last great halls are constructed and later abandoned. I got this very speculative idea from reading Ekeros book about Gamla Uppsala

    • @superlitin1
      @superlitin1 2 года назад +5

      @@Kramplarv Interesting take. Though, in the end it all comes down to how you define the word viking.

    • @Kramplarv
      @Kramplarv 2 года назад +2

      @@superlitin1 Yes, I agree 100%. I try to personally avoid using viking as much as possible.
      When I do I mostly use it as a job activity so to speak. Because there are some sources talking about "vikings" from the eastern coasts of the baltics raiding parts of "sweden" I feel that it is safe to say so. :)

  • @particular101
    @particular101 2 года назад +5

    As a Dutch woman, with frysian ancestors, as a great great great great granddaughter of king Rêdbâd (and probably Ragnar Lothbrok), and as a woman with a huge passion for everything related to Scandinavia and the Viking area... I sincerely enjoy your videos. 💙

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier 2 года назад +3

    13:07
    Holy cow was that volume difference huge...

  • @obsc3n3skull
    @obsc3n3skull 2 года назад +2

    Heads up for SUPER LOUD voice at 13:01

  • @daviddickey9182
    @daviddickey9182 2 года назад +10

    You mentioned Charlemagne and the Saxons, perhaps it’s time for the Saxon wars to get their own video!

  • @R8V10
    @R8V10 2 года назад +27

    Would love to see you do a video on Ibn Fadlan and the Vikings.

    • @meginna8354
      @meginna8354 2 года назад +2

      Ibn Fadlan meet Rus didn't meet qny vikings he met Rus who propably didn't speak any Old Norse and in most respects resembleled Eastern Europeans and even Scythians than any norseman in Scandinavia.

    • @R8V10
      @R8V10 2 года назад +1

      @@meginna8354Norse in original but still had the same customs.
      ruclips.net/video/4-74nZZkAaY/видео.html

    • @Melle06aa
      @Melle06aa 2 года назад +3

      @@meginna8354 the rus where Scandinavian tho

    • @meginna8354
      @meginna8354 2 года назад +5

      @@Melle06aa No they weren't. The first generation was. Then they became way more Slavic in every respect over time.

    • @Melle06aa
      @Melle06aa 2 года назад

      @@meginna8354 they where Viking until 988

  • @robertohlen4980
    @robertohlen4980 2 года назад +22

    And before the Viking Era there were the Vendel Era, and before that the Roman Iron Age and before that the Nordic Bronze Age. All one long common tradition.

  • @Jobe-13
    @Jobe-13 2 года назад +54

    I heard that the Russian vikings turned down Islam because of it’s prohibition of drinking alcohol.

    • @OldieBugger
      @OldieBugger 2 года назад +12

      That sounds like a good reason to reject a religion.

    • @moritamikamikara3879
      @moritamikamikara3879 2 года назад +17

      By the time this occured, it'd be a bit of a stretch to call the people involved vikings (in any measure)
      But yeaaup, that did indeed happen.

    • @nataliekennedy4646
      @nataliekennedy4646 2 года назад +6

      You mean the kiven rus

    • @Oldvergr
      @Oldvergr 2 года назад +7

      The later ruler of Rus' region Vladimir I who was a grandson of prince Igor (Ingvar) according to a very nice legend from Primary Chronicle indeed turned down Islam as he didn't want to give up drinking.

    • @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
      @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 2 года назад

      They did, however, but when someone said something, about a cleric and since that no more alcohol I don't know the whole story but it has something to do with a party

  • @alfredthegreatkingofwessex6838
    @alfredthegreatkingofwessex6838 2 года назад +21

    I appreciate your research, Hilbert. But I’m pretty sure the Vikings age started January 28th 1960. In Minneapolis MN

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 2 года назад +5

      Lol

    • @Uncle_T
      @Uncle_T 2 года назад +2

      FACT! ;)

    • @Ragatokk
      @Ragatokk 2 года назад +2

      This was about the viking age, not the vikings!
      What I don't get is how the viking age ended before the vikings were founded.

    • @edwardblair4096
      @edwardblair4096 2 года назад

      Richard the Lionheart had a comment about this in his Epic Rap Battle. : -)
      Go to 1 :59 here: ruclips.net/video/kgJMaP4msTs/видео.html

  • @Uncle_T
    @Uncle_T 2 года назад +18

    The Vikings did not use WiFi, they used ViFi. And of course Bluetooth ;)

  • @lennutrajektoor
    @lennutrajektoor 2 года назад +7

    750 AD, in Salme, Estonia. It's easy! Even an exhibition of the Salme ship burial is open in Kuressarre castle museum.

    • @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
      @cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 2 года назад

      WElsh Viking would say this was FAKE

    • @lennutrajektoor
      @lennutrajektoor 2 года назад

      @@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 Estonians, at least on Saaremaa based on per current knowledge, were regarded by Vikings as their own kind. Also Vikings never were able to establish any outposts or settlement in Estonia unlike in Latvia. There might have been mutual trading but Estonians were so brutal to Vikings that they rather respected than tried to conquer, and they truly tried. The Salme ship burial is one of those testimonies.

  • @andyreginald6272
    @andyreginald6272 2 года назад +2

    Keep up the good work!

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 2 года назад +7

    It began when Raid Shadow Legends dropped in the app stores.

  • @HS-su3cf
    @HS-su3cf 2 года назад +2

    Actually, in some areas in western Norway, you can farm the land on both sides.

  • @aarondemiri486
    @aarondemiri486 2 года назад +1

    I've got so many viking sagas to read I can't wait

  • @jorgebahia7009
    @jorgebahia7009 2 года назад

    Excellent video !! A hug from Brazil 🇧🇷

  • @RubberToeYT
    @RubberToeYT 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely love your videos, this topic is so good too!

  • @anthonyhayes1267
    @anthonyhayes1267 2 года назад

    I just wanted to say, I love the shield designs you showed in the illustrations

  • @KimHojbergJensen
    @KimHojbergJensen 2 года назад

    Nice video - also the add!

  • @shanebattles6132
    @shanebattles6132 2 года назад

    Great show man big fan

  • @hakanpersson6524
    @hakanpersson6524 2 года назад +1

    I am really looking forward to watch your video about the Vikings in the east. Here in Sweden there is a discussion if the Viking era began as early as when the Vendel era began 550 ad. The boat graves from Vendel indicates that they were doing trading and had connections very far away. The usage of a boat was a must if you wanted to travel in Scandinavia at that time and had been so since the bronze age. The big forests mountains and fjords made it very difficult to travel by foot or horse. The waterways was at that time the highways that made it much easier to take you from one place to another.

  • @farisamarneh9032
    @farisamarneh9032 2 года назад +2

    A cool topic would be investigating the Viking age in the Baltics where the Norse began developing a cross sea raiding culture

  • @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506
    @konradvonschnitzeldorf6506 2 года назад +1

    Good one

  • @Luredreier
    @Luredreier 2 года назад +2

    16:49
    There's trade lanes going to Denmark, Southern Sweden and Southern Norway already during the bronze age.

  • @srenclausen8534
    @srenclausen8534 2 года назад +2

    September 5.th they found a treasure near Jelling, denmark of about 1 kg gold. It was buried there around year 500. One of the gold items had runic inscriptions on it, and a picture of Odin, his horse and raven. The archeologists thinks that this can be evidence, that the norse mythology, and way of life of the later viking age, was more widespread than earlier thought already in year 500. The treasure is called vindelev skatten.

  • @perfectpixels6531
    @perfectpixels6531 2 года назад

    a remake of a classic, and im wearing my history with hilbert merch tonight

  • @axelschroeder6657
    @axelschroeder6657 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for this interesting video. I grew up near the town of Slesvig and the site of Hedeby (Haitabu) the
    Viking trading city in Southern Jutland. So I consider myself as a descendant of the Vikings. It is always
    great to understand more of your own history.

  • @kallebirgersson710
    @kallebirgersson710 2 года назад +2

    I'm not danish but that sounded a lot like real danish to me

  • @ladyliberty417
    @ladyliberty417 2 года назад +4

    The age began with the amazing ships that were built- this is what I was taught-
    But I enjoy all the speculation and ideas that are out there so much❗️thanks Hilbert ❗️

    • @user-cg2qs4vs4c
      @user-cg2qs4vs4c 2 года назад

      I think it's goal is repeating the date without losing interest. Even if he hadn't this in mind, it is a feature important for me, because usually I can remember only some facts and chronology is completely out of my comprehension.

    • @ladyliberty417
      @ladyliberty417 2 года назад

      @@user-cg2qs4vs4c
      Chronology is hard!😊

  • @cracker_jacked_jlu
    @cracker_jacked_jlu 2 года назад +3

    funny thing is the people of Scandinavia and England traded indirectly if not directly earlier then 700. the "Vikings" first ventured South and East to Germany, Poland, Gotland, and as far east as Klaipėda in Lithuania, Riga in Latvia and the area around Helsinki in Finland as early as the late 590's and early 600's so to set a date as to when it started would be very ethnocentric bases on who was doing the writing. Culturally we see solid evidence as far back as the early 600's in Scandinavia but have little physical evidence elsewhere until the 650's or so in Poland and the Baltic states. Even this early physical evidence dose not show war like raids but only prove they were there.

  • @cameroff
    @cameroff 2 года назад +1

    13:00 rip eardrums

  • @flawlessbinary7449
    @flawlessbinary7449 2 года назад +16

    Looks like Hilbert returns to tradition.

  • @haeleth7218
    @haeleth7218 2 года назад +2

    After watching this I am not sure exactly when the Viking era began in England. One thing I do know is that I am glad I was not around in 865AD (The Great Heathen Army).

  • @bobmcbob9856
    @bobmcbob9856 2 года назад +2

    Entirely unrelated to this video, but I’ve recently gotten into translating Germanic dithematic names into Slavic ones and Hilbert which as I’m 90% sure you’ve explained in a video means bright battle is slavicized to the best of my ability as Sviatibor, the sviat part in most Slavic languages today means sacred or holy but derives from words for light and may have been used as one or the other in naming, the nor suffix, though I’m sure some Serbocroatian speakers at least might think it derives from pine actually derives from fight or battle, hence luminous (or bright) battle

  • @owengar3117
    @owengar3117 2 года назад

    Æthrlred's server being not ready is the best part of this video 😂

  • @TTillahFK
    @TTillahFK Год назад

    13:00 HELLO SOUND

  • @joda7129
    @joda7129 2 года назад

    This is what I subscribed for

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz 2 года назад

    0:06 Vikings? plz YES, Hilbert!!!

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 2 года назад +7

    Hello Hilbert. I always thought that the Viking age started earlier as you could look at the Jutes in Kent as like a previous generation.
    I always wondered whether the lack of Pictish history could have hidden Norse influence further north in Britain, long before the raid on Lindisfarne.
    With your linguistic hat on, do you think Yorick in Hamlet is a name or a version of Jorvik? Like you I checked Wikipedia, but it said both, or happen as we say in Yorkshire, where this age is said to have ended in 1066.

  • @TheStickCollector
    @TheStickCollector 2 года назад +3

    Neat

  • @foreskinh8ter
    @foreskinh8ter 2 года назад +1

    haha i love watching videos before going to work and stuff yeah

  • @JohnWilliams-wl2cf
    @JohnWilliams-wl2cf 2 года назад

    It started at six o clock yesterday

  • @dirgniflesuoh7950
    @dirgniflesuoh7950 2 года назад +2

    Yeah, I have a fascination for the Vendel Time right now, and the finds from Vendel and Valsgärde, and Sandbyborg ... and the theory that people went "viking" and trading around the Baltic, and to England and down in Europe, hired as mercenaries long before 793, the culture was there already. Just in smaller, less seaworthy boats.
    Btw that map! It has "Skåne" written straight over Västergötland and Östergötland, more or less making all Götaland into Skåne ... ?

  • @_OZZIE_RASCAL
    @_OZZIE_RASCAL 2 года назад +4

    I always heard that vikings,although pretty wild and fearsome.
    They were also smart and methodic.
    I look at modern day scandinavians, I don't the Ruthless but I do still see the smart and methodic 🇩🇰🇮🇸🇸🇯🇸🇪

  • @kohZeei
    @kohZeei Год назад +1

    how do you not mention the vendel era? i would argue that the vendel era ended around the time that the viking era began, essentially giving birth to it.

  • @specialnewb9821
    @specialnewb9821 2 года назад +1

    793 is still a good date with the obvious understanding that it's fuzzy.

  • @ReaperCH90
    @ReaperCH90 2 года назад +8

    What if vikings actually only were in search of better wifi?

  • @nathanaelsallhageriksson1719
    @nathanaelsallhageriksson1719 2 года назад

    In sweden we're taught the viking age was between c. 800 and c. 1100 ad.

  • @chrisblyth7354
    @chrisblyth7354 2 года назад +1

    Pls do a video about the Shetland bus (basically during ww2 fishermen from the Shetland isles would cross the North sea in small modified fishing boats rescuing Norwegian people when Germany invaded Norway) just think it would make a good vid :)

  • @TumpsBudGuy
    @TumpsBudGuy 2 года назад +1

    If you are going to switch people you have to remix the audio! You just blew out my ear drums. Your speaking voice and his are compleeeeetleyy different!!

  • @saniaamirbaaz8850
    @saniaamirbaaz8850 2 года назад

    Can you do a video on what Myanmar did in the Vietnam war.Thx

  • @erlinggaratun6726
    @erlinggaratun6726 2 года назад +1

    Great video. But I am surprised, considering your significant Frisian bias, that you do not mention the herulian pirate raids on the coast of Frisia in the late third century (280, ca) as reported by the romans. It has been speculated that the 'heruli' are also known as 'charudes', who were placed in Hordaland at the start of the current era...

  • @svenlaurens
    @svenlaurens 2 года назад

    Hey, reindeer have been farmed by Sami in Rogaland and Agder in the 50s or so(my dad found an antler while on a hike, I have it in my shed in NL). So it could be possible that they were this far south at the time of the vikingr.

    • @svenlaurens
      @svenlaurens 2 года назад

      Also, large parts of Rogaland (Jæren) are relatively flat (not relative to NL of course). Also Østfold has hills and not so much the fjords. But perhaps Kattegat formed a hinder getting west from there by boat.

  • @ZarlanTheGreen
    @ZarlanTheGreen Год назад

    That Danish Wikipedia article doesn't say "700". It says "the 700's".
    That is VEEEEERY different.

  • @Sigismund74
    @Sigismund74 2 года назад +1

    I often think that the term "viking age" is arbitrary at best. If you look at the history of raids on, in this case specifically England, one can see a large amount of similarity between raids by Saxons, Angles and Jutes in late roman Brittain and the later , what we call, viking raids. Those three tribes, come from a very similar geographical location as the later Danes. In this light, given the arbitrary nature of terms like "viking age" or "age of migrations", how do you see the viking raids in comparison to the activities of the Saxons, Jutes and Angles?

  • @borisselbstadler3209
    @borisselbstadler3209 7 месяцев назад

    In some way was it not just a continuation of the raids and migrations of the anglo saxons? There was a norwegian princess found in a cemetery in northumberland from the 6th century.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 2 года назад

    In history, an age or period rarely starts or ends at a fixed date. I have seen the same kind of questions raised in videos about the demise of the West Roman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire.

  • @bendthebow
    @bendthebow 2 года назад +1

    I can see why the Danes only talk in terns of the Scandinavian iron age

  • @johnfenn3188
    @johnfenn3188 2 года назад +2

    Surely the Viking age in Britain will be different to the Viking age in Denmark or in France, won’t it?

  • @Must_Do_Better
    @Must_Do_Better 2 года назад

    I was really hoping you'd talk about about Friesland. I have 28.7% Scandinavian blood! Thanks!!

  • @Woeschhuesli
    @Woeschhuesli 2 года назад +2

    Do we need a date? We could say 8th-11th century… Having said that, I agree that a much earlier date could also be used, though perhaps that difficult definition of Viking might trip us up. What is the difference between Viking and Norse? Why do we not hear more about the fact that so many peoples originated on the Danish/German peninsula - they moved north (Vikings), west (Angles, Saxons, Jutes), south (Franks), eadt - and from there via Normandy to Sicily, Italy and so on, not to mention the Rus… Go back far enough and there do seem to be a lot of common origins!

  • @smpk9667
    @smpk9667 2 года назад

    Did the video skip a part in 7:00-7:02 or is it just a editing error?
    Edit: Also that is not a reindeer at 16:19

  • @buidseach
    @buidseach 2 года назад +2

    There is a record of Danish raiders that sailed up the River Tay in Scotland and built a Fort on Drummond Hill and stayed for 3 seasons and raided the local communities around Loch Tay in 644 AD.

  • @michael3088
    @michael3088 2 года назад

    i wonder if the tariff had anything to do with why the raids started

  • @Uncle_T
    @Uncle_T 2 года назад +4

    I'm pretty sure we were taught the Viking age as just a part of the Iron age in Sweden as well when I attended school in the 70's and 80's.

  • @thhseeking
    @thhseeking 2 года назад

    Mister Z was a bit sudden and loud! I was going to do the laundry anyway XD

  • @hans7856
    @hans7856 2 года назад +2

    Nice video but please adjust the sound of Mr Z. It is quite annoying when suddenly the sound becomes really extremely loud when you're for instance just ironing and watching this video on the TV.

  • @gabrielflecha9719
    @gabrielflecha9719 2 года назад

    I mean you could argue that a more significant time northern germanic/Scandinavian tribes made an impact with expeditions and conquest being with the massive migration of the Saxons, Angles and Jutes (2 of which being from or around what is now Denmark 🇩🇰) into the sourhern British isles as the western Roman empire was collapsing. Although I guess that would depend on your view of identity since they weren't exactly called vikings despite sharing the similar religion, political structure, military tactics, and language.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 2 года назад

    I've wondered this as well, glad i'm not the only one

  • @Wildschwein_Jaeger
    @Wildschwein_Jaeger 2 года назад

    Ahhh the Vikings...

  • @Captain_Copenhagen
    @Captain_Copenhagen 2 года назад +1

    Angel-saxon are also danish…

  • @jamiecorrigan3241
    @jamiecorrigan3241 2 года назад

    For Anyone Interested In Viking Age Swords They Should See 'The Viking Sword What It Was And Was Not' By Peter Johnsson Here On You Tube. But Read The Newest Comments First.

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 2 года назад

    "Marshy No-Man's Land."
    You just insulted my entire people. But yes.

  • @dannymactavish7993
    @dannymactavish7993 2 года назад

    It never truly began it always was there.

  • @thotarajaamogh6112
    @thotarajaamogh6112 2 года назад +1

    Yay

  • @jeffgraham9208
    @jeffgraham9208 2 года назад

    Super duper!

  • @RM-qn3ro
    @RM-qn3ro 2 года назад

    793 in Crusader Kings 2

  • @kimmogensen4888
    @kimmogensen4888 2 года назад

    The mostly peaceful Viking raids, was started early then 793. But smart people don’t right down, when there they make a mostly peaceful raid 👑💍💰😀

  • @interabang
    @interabang 2 года назад

    We know when it ended, in 1066 at Stamford bridge.
    The largest viking army ever assembled under the most feared leader, Harald Hardrada. They met an English army under King Harold and were wiped out. An entire generation gone.

  • @fifa4lifeunknow795
    @fifa4lifeunknow795 2 года назад

    When Ragnar sailed west

  • @Engehaugen82
    @Engehaugen82 2 года назад

    A vik is a small fjord in Norvegian.

  • @whiskeytangosierra6
    @whiskeytangosierra6 2 года назад +3

    When I lived in Norway they told me Viking meant vacationing. You know, get away from the boring old farm, see new things, meet new people, tear it all down.

  • @danielimmortuos666
    @danielimmortuos666 2 года назад

    Harald Baldur approves of this video

  • @runningbastards6715
    @runningbastards6715 2 года назад +6

    One question I've had a hard time finding answers for is that since the Angles, Saxons and Jutes originally migrated from Jutland (northern Germany / peninsula Denmark), why did the Great Heathen Army and subsequent Danish invasion seem so foreign to the Anglo Saxon kingdoms? The Anglos themselves, especially the Jutes, just left the continent from that region just a couple of hundred years prior. Did the language and culture change that much in that time? Did they not keep in touch with cousins on the mainland? I know it was the Dark Ages, but the distance doesn't seem that far away.

    • @MrMitchay
      @MrMitchay 2 года назад +1

      Ive wondered this myself, would love to see something explaining

    • @wijse
      @wijse 2 года назад +6

      Christianity. That erased their kinship.

    • @wijse
      @wijse 2 года назад

      @Vincent Liang You know celts and germanic people descend from the same corded ware people right? Both descend from the proto-indo-europeans who moved into Europe.

  • @owenmccord5078
    @owenmccord5078 Год назад

  • @dansoderberg4753
    @dansoderberg4753 2 года назад

    why not do a vid about the eastern viking age so much deals with the western

  • @imlaughinq7445
    @imlaughinq7445 2 года назад

    A better questions is when it ends, people don’t talk about Ensteins raid on northern England

  • @unitedstatesofamericaallha8475
    @unitedstatesofamericaallha8475 2 года назад

    949 ad

  • @lordhermis8718
    @lordhermis8718 2 года назад +3

    They would not have to hunt reigndeer since the Sami herded them. So they could just buy one.

    • @moritamikamikara3879
      @moritamikamikara3879 2 года назад +1

      They could... but the Sami and the Norse had very poor relations.
      The Norse were quite suspicious of the Sami seeing them as basically primitive magic men.

    • @lordhermis8718
      @lordhermis8718 2 года назад +1

      @@moritamikamikara3879 The Sami payed a tax to live i Norwegian land and they traded and gave gifts. I dont think they always was on good terms but it would be easier to just buy from a Sami i think.

    • @hanszickerman8051
      @hanszickerman8051 2 года назад

      At that time the Sami probably didn't herd reindeer but hunted them.

    • @lordhermis8718
      @lordhermis8718 2 года назад

      @@hanszickerman8051 i have read about a merchant talking about how rich the Sami were in animals. Referring to reindeer, i think they did.

  • @garethbrandt9163
    @garethbrandt9163 2 года назад

    Yes, earlier... Vendel age, early vikings a couple of centuries earlier

  • @yuichirohanma10
    @yuichirohanma10 2 года назад +1

    it started when hollywood put horns on em

  • @lonerangerv1224
    @lonerangerv1224 2 года назад

    when you get someone else on to a video actually sound balance it so the new person is not several times louder and not blowing out my ears

  • @samuel_boivin
    @samuel_boivin 2 года назад

    Bro you've been doing youtube for years... how come you didnt equalize voiceover levels? 🤯