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The Viking Great Army in Britain

2025/2/28
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@Matt Lewis : 我主持了本次播客节目,并与@Dawn Hadley @Julian Richards 两位专家讨论了维京大军对英格兰的影响。维京大军在865年登陆东盎格利亚,并在接下来的15年里对英格兰的政治、经济和社会产生了深远的影响。他们与盎格鲁-撒克逊国王进行了激烈的战斗和政治谈判,最终征服了三个盎格鲁-撒克逊王国。与之前的维京袭击不同,维京大军常年驻扎,这使得他们对英格兰的影响更加深远和持久。考古证据揭示了维京大军的营地位置、贸易和工业活动等信息,这些信息丰富了我们对维京大军生活的了解。 Dawn Hadley: 维京大军是9世纪来到英格兰最大的维京军队,他们在英格兰北部和东部地区进行了长达十多年的袭击、战斗和政治谈判,最终征服了三个盎格鲁-撒克逊王国,并在那里定居。这标志着斯堪的纳维亚人在英格兰定居的开始。维京大军与之前的维京袭击不同,他们会过冬,不会返回斯堪的纳维亚,而是持续在盎格鲁-撒克逊英格兰各地活动,这使得他们对英格兰的影响更加深远和持久。 Julian Richards: 我主要研究了维京大军在林肯郡的托克西和北约克郡的奥尔德沃克两个主要的营地。通过金属探测器发现的文物,我们了解到这些营地的规模和活动。托克西营地遗址面积约为55公顷,奥尔德沃克营地也规模巨大。这些营地中发现了大量的贵金属、金属制品和砝码,这表明维京大军在这些营地中进行金属加工和贸易活动。营地中还发现了来自爱尔兰、法兰克王国和卡洛林王朝的文物,这表明维京大军成员来自不同的地区,他们将从这些地区获得的战利品进行加工和再分配。营地的规模也表明维京大军规模远大于之前的估计,其组织结构类似于一个城镇,这表明维京大军不仅仅是战士,还包括妇女和儿童。

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The Viking Great Army landed in East Anglia in 865, initiating 15 years of battles across Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. This army's sustained presence marked a significant shift from previous Viking raids, influencing England's political and social landscape.
  • The Viking Great Army arrived in East Anglia in 865 and stayed for 15 years.
  • Battles occurred across all four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, leading to treaty negotiations and the deposition of at least three kings.
  • Unlike previous Viking raids, this army remained year-round, deeply impacting England's political, economic, and social structures.

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Hello, I'm Matt Lewis. And I'm Dr. Eleanor Janaga. And we're just popping up here to tell you some insider info. If you would like to listen to Gone Medieval ad-free and get early access and bonus episodes, sign up to History Hit. With the History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of hours of original documentaries. Such as my new series on everyone's favorite conquerors, the Normans. Or my recent exploration of the castles that made Britain.

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Hello, I'm Matt Lewis. Welcome to Gone Medieval from History Hit, the podcast that delves into the greatest millennium in human history. We've got the most intriguing mysteries, the gobsmacking details and latest groundbreaking research from the Vikings to the printing press, from kings to popes to the crusades. We cross centuries and continents to delve into rebellions, plots and murders to find the stories, big and small, that tell us how we got here.

Find out who we really were with Gone Medieval. Late in the year 865, the Viking Great Army landed in East Anglia. For the next 15 years, battles were fought in all four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Peace treaties were made and broken, and at least three Anglo-Saxon kings were deposed or killed and replaced.

While previous Viking armies had raided only in the summer months, the Great Army was a constant presence during the period, which would change the political, economic and social landscape of England forever. Yet, historical sources say very little about it. Now, archaeological evidence is revealing the locations of two of the Great Army's camps and at least 50 other places that it visited.

It feels like a great day to be speaking about this. I'm sitting here in the midst of Storm Eowyn with the gales blustering about me, speaking about the arrival of this hostile force that would change England forever.

I'm joined by Dawn Hadley and Julian Richards, whose book Life in the Viking Great Army, Raiders, Traders and Settlers, explores what the treasure, tools and weapons found in the camps reveal about how the groups that made up the army lived and the activities they undertook, including the processing and trading of loot, the minting of coins and the manufacture of jewellery.

What emerges is evidence of a rich and diverse community whose impact on England can be traced to the present day.

Dawn and Julian, welcome to Gone Medieval. Hello. Great to be here. So we're going to talk in depth about the Great Viking Army. I wonder if you could just root us a little bit in when are we and what are we talking about when we talk about the Viking Great Army? Well, we are talking about what appears to have been the largest Viking army to come to England in the 9th century. And it arrived in the autumn of 865 and then it spent years

a decade or so, raiding many parts of northern and eastern England. It engaged in lots of battles, peace treaties, all sorts of political negotiations with English kings. And then it began to settle. It conquered three of the four English kingdoms and it divided out the land amongst many of its followers. And that

really is the starting point for Scandinavian settlement in England. It's worth saying as well that this was very different from a lot of the previous Viking raids, and that's what marks it out as quite

special, probably not just in its size, but the previous Viking raids that started right at the end of the 8th century were much more like hit-and-run raids with a force of probably a small number of ships focusing on coastal sites and then going away with their loot. The difference with what we know as the Viking Great Army from how it's referenced in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is that it overwintered

And so the forces didn't go back to Scandinavia, but they were moving rapidly around Anglo-Saxon England and staying in different parts, exploiting weaknesses in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms as they chose where to attack next. So just as England had got used to being hit in the summer but getting a break in the winter, all of a sudden this army arrives and you don't get that break anymore. Yeah, exactly. That's basically it. It is a year-round problem to deal with. Yeah.

And how far did they reach into England? I think we associate them most predominantly with the North East and maybe the East Midlands, but how much further than that were they able to spread?

Well, I mean, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which is our main broadly contemporary written source for this period, the Great Army is raiding all over England. We particularly associate them, you're right, with northern and eastern England because that's eventually where they conquer and settle. But yeah, they're raiding all the way down into the southwest and into Devon and Cornwall, into the western Midlands.

really all over England. And there is

traces of them recorded as fighting with the Strathclyde Brits as well right up into the north of England and what's that obviously now Scotland. Wow, so they really did get into every corner. You mentioned that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is our main account of the presence and the activity of the Viking Great Army. Are there any other ways that we've known about where they were, where they came from, what they got up to? Yeah, I mean there are other written sources and the main one is

Asser's Life of King Alfred, which has a lot in common with what is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, but it amplifies some of the accounts because it is particularly interested in recording the role of King Alfred in responding to the Great Army. So we've got quite a lot of information from the broadly contemporary written sources, but there are lots and lots of things those sources don't tell us, which is what we've been looking at with the archaeological record.

When we think about the Viking Great Army, which part of Scandinavia did this particular force arrive from? Do we know? Ah, well, that's a really good question and probably not quite the right starting point because this army,

army had probably not come directly from Scandinavia. It had almost certainly had some of its members, at any rate, raiding on the northern part of the continent. They'd probably been there for many years. Some members of the great army came from Ireland.

They've been raiding there and others will have come from Scandinavia. In terms of precisely where, it's a little bit difficult to tell. There are similarities in some of the archaeological evidence with material we find in southern Scandinavia, in Denmark, but also further afield in Scandinavia. So it's probably quite widely spread, its members. They came from a variety of different regions. I think it's important to...

Remember that it's not an army in the sense that we would regard a modern army. This was an army of convenience made up of groups from different parts of Scandinavia and from Europe, where, as Dawn said, they'd been raiding before. So it was an army of convenience, and each group with its own leader. We believe that probably the ship was the organising group

principle, the ship's company, both in sailing and in battle. And each ship would have had its own leader, and then there would have been higher level leaders above that. But it was an army that came together and then fragmented at different points. And there are references in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle to it splitting up at various points and then also being joined by other forces. Is there any suggestion then that

the fact that it's lots of different disparate groups coming together who have been raiding in different parts of Europe and Ireland. Could that have been a driver for this change in direction rather than the hit and run for staying? Were we seeing the Viking forces doing that in places like Ireland and Northern Europe? Or was this entirely new in England? Well, no. I mean, there had been Viking armies present year round already in Ireland and already on the continent. So this is just a new experience in England.

In terms of what brought together those disparate groups, that's really quite difficult to tell. Maybe it's an opportunity that was spotted, a weakness in Anglo-Saxon royal organisation that they thought that they could exploit by coming together. But we know that they still had their sort of separate identities. And as Julian has said, they divided up at various points and went back off

in directions that suited their own interests. They do seem to have been very well informed about not just the geography of England, but also its political geography as well and contemporary events. So when they arrive in East Anglia in 865, we're told that they very rapidly move northwards and we believe this

They must have had a treaty with the East Anglian king, and we're told that they're supplied with horses. So he may have paid them to move on. And their immediate focus then was Northumbria, because they moved rapidly up to York, where there was a separate kingdom at the time.

It's sort of a pooling of resources and a pooling of knowledge. And all of a sudden, they've got a new insight and a new method to deal with England. Yeah. And I think another point I would make is the Great Army always seemed to find local allies. It was always in somebody's interests.

either to pay them to go away, to bother some other kingdom, or to make use of them. Because, you know, if you're in a rivalry with another claimant to the throne in your kingdom, and this army might side with you and assist you in fighting against your rival, you know, that was an opportunity that was clearly, I think, taken away.

up. And the fact that we do have examples of the Great Army disposing of one king and then replacing them with somebody else from what appears to be the local aristocracy or another royal lineage, I think confirms that interpretation that I've just offered to you. We know that that happened, for example, when they went to Repton,

over the winter of 873 to 474, they drove out the existing king of Mercia, Burgred. And then they replaced him with a man called Cherwolf. We don't know a lot about him, but he seems to be a member of a rival branch of the Mercian royal lineage. So presumably, he benefited. Perhaps he was already seeing an opportunity to gain authority in Mercia by siding with the great army.

I guess it's quite often tempting to see it as the Vikings versus the Anglo-Saxons, but there's so much more depth to what's going on that local rivalries, as you say, are being played out and either using the Vikings to do that or hoping that they'll pass you by. There's so much more nuance to it than just thinking it's the Vikings attacking Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Yeah.

Julian, your research in the book sort of focuses on two main camps that were used by the Viking Great Army. Can you tell us a little bit about where those camps were and why they're important and how they were identified? So the two camps in question which weren't really identified before are Torksey in Lincolnshire and Aldwark in North Yorkshire near York. Now Torksey is referenced in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle

as a place where the Viking Great Army overwintered in 872-3, the year before Repton. But we had no idea where that was. Torksey is now just a sort of fairly small, sleepy town in Lincolnshire by the Trent. And up to about 20 years ago, there was no knowledge of where the camp was. Then a few metal detectorists showed some of their finds to Mark Blackburn, who was then key

keeper of numismatics at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge. And he recognised that these are unusual finds because of their richness, particularly the amount of silver, broken silver there,

Dawn and I became involved because Mark recognised that this needed archaeological interest. So we went along, looked at the site, made contact with the metal detectorists, persuaded them to start recording their finds in much more detail, exactly where they were coming from.

And this led us to realize that the finds were coming from a very large area, about 55 hectares. In fact, that's about 75 football pitches along the side of the Trenton, an area of higher ground. And we realized that we discovered this was where the Viking winter camp that we'd known about from the Chronicle was in 872-3. And then...

From collecting all the information from these finds, we recognise what we now regard as a signature of the Viking Great Army. And we've started to see that in other places. And Aldwark is one of the primary ones, again by a river, by the river Uves, northwest of Bjorg.

And there a similar assemblage had been discovered by a different group of metal detectorists reported eventually to the British Museum, who'd become aware of the importance of the site. And comparing the two assemblages from Alderwalk and Torksey, we can see that they represent the same group of activities.

activities probably just a few years apart we believe the old war camp is later than the torxi one may relate to when one of the leaders of the army returned north in the mid 870s

So in the book, we've been able for the first time to do a detailed comparison of the finds from both of these camps and to illuminate the sorts of people that were on the camps, where they'd come from, and the sorts of activities that were taking place.

Incredible. Dawn, I wonder if you could talk just a little bit about what it is that makes those sites so different, so particular, and that identifies them as these main camps for the army. The archaeological evidence from Torksey and Awark does look rather different from the kinds of archaeological remains that you get from any other contemporary settlement site, whether that's a rural site or an urban site. And

I think it's characterised by the fact that there is, first of all, a lot of precious metal. There's a lot of silver, there's gold as well on those sites. There's lots of pieces of really quite elaborate decorative jewellery and dress accessories here.

So that's one component that stands out. Another is the way in which that material is treated. A lot of it is actually very fragmentary and it's not just broken, it's cut up. So it's being processed in some way. Alongside that, then we have items that you really don't tend to see on many contemporary sites and that are in the form of melted down metal to form ingots.

of silver and gold, but also copper alloy as well. And some of those ingots are whole and some of them, most of them actually, are fragmentary. They've been cut up. So again, it looks like they're being processed, perhaps weighed out for their metal content.

Now alongside that, we have a really large assemblage of weights. These are either lead weights, sometimes plain, sometimes decorated with little bits of those chopped up bits of elaborate and decorative metalwork. And we also have

Little copper alloy weights as well, eight-sided weights that ultimately owe their origins to the Islamic world and to their trading materials and the weights that they used. So again, you know, that marks the sites out as being different. And that is telling us that what we have in operation on these sites is a bullion economy.

So we are seeing the people occupying the camps at Torksey and at Aldwark. They're processing metal, they're chopping it up, they're melting it down, they're reprocessing it and they're weighing it out. And I think then there were other things that are a little bit more subtle that we began to see when we looked in real detail at these assemblages. That, for example, the proportions of types of artefacts are different.

unusual. So if we take something quite humble like dress accessories and the strap ends that we would find at the end of belts and the pins that people used in the 9th century to fasten their clothing, normally we would expect to find probably either roughly equal amounts or more pins than strap ends because you have more need to have pins than strap ends. Whereas it's the other way around on these cams. There are much more

higher proportions of strap ends than we might normally find. And many of those have been chopped up and are being processed. So we think it's something to do with the way in which they're gathering together material for melting down and the strap ends are sort of bigger and chunkier and they've got more metal that they can work with and process. So it's a range of things, a really striking evidence for gold and silver and the ingots and the balloon economy, and then more subtle differences between the assemblages and their characteristics

and those of contemporary settlements. Perhaps what's most striking, though, is we haven't strangely got huge amounts of Scandinavian or clearly Scandinavian material culture on these sites. And we think it's part

partly to do with the fact that we've got an assemblage that's representing processing and they're actually chopping up and reprocessing materials that they've got locally. Whereas, you know, perhaps a fancier Scandinavian material culture, like the big oval brooches that a woman may have worn in her costume, they're less easy to lose casually. So they're less likely to be found on a site and they're clearly not being chopped up and processed on the site.

I think it's also the nature of those finds and where they have come from that tells us about the mixed origins of the army, because we've got objects that come from Ireland, from Francia, from the Carolingian Empire, as well as Anglo-Saxon artifacts. So that gives us that information about where the army had been before and the loot that they'd brought from those places to start chopping up in England.

So there's almost a sense in which these are operating as processing plants for the plunder that they're gathering and that they're repurposing or redistributing amongst themselves rather than it being them bringing lots of stuff over from home and shedding that stuff while they're at the camps. Yes, indeed.

What we don't see, though, archaeologically, is probably another important part of what they were trading and processing, because we know that slave trading was very important at this period. And they were collecting slaves as well. And they may have been held at the camps and then moved on. But archaeologically, they are invisible. Yeah.

And does the operation of that kind of bullion economy, does that tell us anything about what the Vikings are doing during this period? Is it different from the way that they've previously operated?

In Scandinavia in this period, in sort of the 860s, the 870s, that is a period when we're starting to see evidence for this kind of metalweight economy. So that is about the same period that these kinds of weights that we see at Torksey and Old Walk are appearing in Scandinavia as well. It's when we're starting to see, you know, chopped up silver. It's when we're starting to see ingots on settlements as well.

So, you know, what we're seeing at the Great Army camps in England is something that has already begun to emerge in Scandinavia. Now, one other consideration is whether or not

members of the Great Army who gathered from the continent and from Ireland were also engaged in this kind of activity in the places they had been before they came to England. And that's a slightly tricky question to answer. And that's because the regions which the Great Army had gathered together from are places where it is on the whole not legal to undertake metal detecting. So we've got a methodological issue.

issue there. The sort of amateur enthusiasm metal detecting that is legal to be undertaken in England is not possible in the Republic of Ireland or in most parts of the northern regions of the continent. So we've got a bit of a

difference in evidence types that we can work with? I made it slightly difficult to answer that question. There is one site at Woodstown in Ireland where we have got some similar material. And this is a site that was actually identified by excavation. In the first instance, it was discovered during road building excavations.

But there, the archaeologists were permitted to use metal detectors on site. So that was kind of part of a controlled archaeological investigation. And then as a result of doing that, they found some material that is similar to what we have at Torksey and Ordwalk. The dating on that is a little tricky. It is probably a little bit earlier than

than the sites that we see at Torxay and Alderwalk, but probably also much longer-lived. So it's a little tricky to work out precisely when the sorts of practices we see at Alderwalk and Torxay may have started at Woodstown.

So I guess there's good reasons for it being illegal in other places, but I guess it makes it more difficult for you to contextualise what you're finding in this country. Yeah, because we do, I think Dawn said it really, we don't have those assemblages really from Ireland and the continent. The other thing I was going to add, so I don't think we've covered it, is that the other importance of the...

at Aldwark and Torxay is the size of them because they've contributed to a very long-running debate about how large the Viking forces were that raided England. And for many years, many historians tended to underplay the accounts from the written sources and say that these were exaggerated and that the Viking forces were very small. And the only proof

previously archaeologically investigated camp at Repton had contributed to this because there a very small enclosure apparently had been excavated which would only have accommodated a force of a few hundred maybe about four ships but as we've indicated both

Torxie and now Ordwark are very large sites. And it's now become clear that that enclosure area at Repton is just part of the Viking camp there. Because again, through metal detecting, finds have been discovered over a much wider area, going all the way up to a Viking cremation cemetery I excavated a couple of decades ago. So again, it's a very large area. And this then tells us that we are dehumanising

dealing with a force that certainly is numbering into the thousands and also it tells us that that force is as larger than many of contemporary towns and it's operating almost like a town it's got to be structured it's got to be organized and there's not just warriors and traders there but there are going to be women and children who are traveling with the army in in the camp so it's a

a very different sort of community from what we'd previously envisaged a Viking army camp would have been like. Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment.

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Yeah, fascinating.

We talked a little bit about the metal finds, but is there evidence of anything going on and perhaps anything unusual going on in terms of manufacturing items of wood or less precious metal or textile or anything like that? And how different do we see those being from the surrounding Anglo-Saxon communities? Yeah, unfortunately, we can really only infer that Don...

metal objects. We certainly know there was a lot of manufacturing of metal objects. We have moles, so we know that they were even minting fake coins on the sites as well from test pieces of those. But for the other sorts of things going on, it has to be inferred. We know, for example, that they were probably repairing their ships as they were overwintering. These sites have floodplains nearby where the ships could have been drawn up out of the water. And

For the ship repair, we have the iron clench nails, which would have holed the plank together. And so we can infer that there was to be woodworking taking place. And we have the iron tools that we use to cut down trees, to shape the timbers, to replace rotten planks in the ships. We assume that they were also having to repair sails as well as presumably clothes as well, because we have textile working equipment.

These are, again, metal items that are surviving. So we have the lead spindle whorls, we have needles in metal. But unfortunately, because both of the excavated and examined sites are on the type of soil where, unlike in York, wood and textiles and leather doesn't survive. It all has to be inferred. Yeah, we also have fishing weights from both of the sites.

showing how they were provisioning themselves, not surprisingly, from the river next to which the army had camped. But I think these items make us think about the nature of the landscape around the site. I mean, Julian has mentioned there were woodworking tools and then you start to think to yourself, well, where were they getting the timber from? And then you realise that they must have been sending out groups into the wider landscape to transport

chop down trees, to process the timber there, to bring it back to the camp. So they must have had pretty good intelligence about the landscape around them. They must have had access to it. These are the kinds of activities that were probably going on when the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle tells us that they made peace with the Mercians or the Northumbrians. It doesn't tell us much more than that, but that would probably have provided the circumstances to be able to provision themselves, probably to trade as well as to...

to access the local natural resources. Because, you know, we've got to think about how this community provisioned itself is, you know, they've got to repair things. They've got to obviously provide food for members of the great army and its followers. So it's a really complex community that we're looking at. And I think it really just reinforced to you that, you know, they got good intelligence. They got good allies. They probably sent people

advanced forces ahead to select suitable places for the army to move to. We don't imagine they just sort of all up sticks one spring and they're all headed off, you know, hoping they might find somewhere suitable for the next year.

to spend the year, they must have had, you know, advanced parties that were sort of selecting these sites, you know, partly for their defensibility. You know, we know Tauksie is a raised up area above the floodplain of the river trend, but also they have to select places where there is, you know, the possibility of access to resources.

Often these camps seem to be quite close to major churches and royal sites as well. So we've always sort of assumed that what they are likely to have done is then to have accessed the tribute and the food renders and so on that would have been normally paid by the local community to those sites, which they got hold of when they turned up nearby.

It sounds like there's a really interesting juxtaposition between the macro, what this army is trying to achieve, why they're selecting the locations that they are and the political reasons for that, but also the insight into the day-to-day operation of something like that. You know, they are processing booty, but they're also fishing and having to live day-to-day. They're repairing their ships as they go. So there's this...

Big political element to what this army is in England to achieve, but there's also real insight into that day-to-day working of people living that kind of lifestyle. And we've also started to identify some of these foraging sites that Dawn mentioned as well. And this is via this signature of the Viking Great Army that comes to us from the camps at Torxian Aldwark.

And it's made up of a number of items, a lot of exotic items, such as the fragments of Islamic objects.

dirhams some of the weights also things that are out of other things that are out of place like anglo-saxon coins from other kingdoms so in talks in alderwalk we have coins from wessex which really shouldn't be there in lincolnshire in talks so we have northumbrian small copper alloy stikers which were there therefore outside their area of circulation

And we also have lead gaming pieces, which are a key aspect of the signature of the Viking Great Army. Now, we've started to, using the national database, the Port of Antiquity Scheme database, we've started to look for these items elsewhere in eastern and southern England. And

We've now identified, and we write about these in the book, some 50 other sites. Many of them will have been these foraging sites where groups from the army have gone out into the countryside. Some of them may be strategic outposts as well. Some of them may be reconnoitering for future areas of settlement. They're probably much smaller groups, and they're represented by just a few finds. But we can...

particularly along some of the pre-existing road networks and transport networks. So, for example, we have sites along Watling Street and Ermine Street because those Roman roads were still being used in this period as major transport networks.

and also along the river systems as well. You can imagine them sailing out with a few ships from the camp, sailing further up the Trent and identifying other places where they could gather resources from. And Dawn, one of the things we haven't talked about in all of these resources yet is pottery, which is often...

Quite an interesting thing to find during archaeological digs. Is there much evidence of pottery going on there? And does that tell us anything about what the army is doing? Well, we don't really have any evidence of pottery on the camps. That doesn't seem to be something that they're...

really making use of or carting around with them. However, there is a connection to pottery production that we noticed and we do write about this in the book because pottery

The late 9th century in eastern England sees a ceramic revolution. We see new ways of manufacturing pottery. That region sees the reintroduction of the true fast potter's wheel for the first time since the Roman period. And it remarkably turns up in those areas where the Viking Great Army was active and where we know it went on to settle and divide up territory.

So one of the things we took a look at was whether there is a direct connection with the activities of the Great Army. Because what really struck us was that that type of pottery production, while not known in England before the end of the 9th century, was found in the northern part of the continent. And in precisely those regions where we know that Viking armies were active,

in the middle part of the 9th century and from where we have good reasons to think that some members of the Great Army had arrived from. And so what we think is going on is that

The conquest of parts of eastern England by the Great Army led to the arrival of potters from the northern part of the continent. So we're talking about northern France and the low countries who set up new industries in parts of eastern England. And one of the places, remarkably, is Torxie.

I think this happens in the years after the Great Army had overwintered there. And the fact that continental craft workers followed the Great Army is something that we know from other sources of evidence. Julian mentioned earlier that there's evidence for the Great Army minting coins. Now, they weren't minting coins in Scandinavia, so the skill set to mint coins could only have come either from...

English moneyers or from continental moneyers. And then what we see in the years and decades to follow is that continental moneyers come into England and mint coins for Scandinavian kings. So we have that one piece of evidence. And we think that the pottery industries that emerge in Eastern England are places like Stamford and Thetford, which is another place that the

have their origins in the political developments that occurred after the Great Army had conquered and settled. And they created these kind of new opportunities and these new markets for these potters. And there is some evidence that this sort of wheel-thrown pottery

It was also making its way into Scandinavia in this period as well. So we see this sort of transformation in pottery production that follows in the wake of the Great Army's activities. We have excavated one of the pottery kilns at Torksey, in fact, because the area of the Viking camp is to the north of the modern area.

But to the south of the village, there is a large field which we've also investigated archaeologically. And there we've now got one of the largest concentrations of kilns of the 10th century and a little later from...

Anywhere in England, there's about 40 kilns in total we know from geophysics. Some of them had been excavated earlier in the 1960s and 70s, but we also excavated one and found the wasters, the broken sherds sitting in the kiln pit.

These are examples of this new industrial form, Torxie Ware, which was much more hard-fired, much more resilient, much more standardized forms than any of the pottery that had been manufactured in Anglo-Saxon England before. So we see this nice sort of transition from the army camp to the north of the village and then to the south. Now, its legacy, the mass-scale industrialized production

of pottery used for transporting items as well as for high quality consumption. And it travels throughout Eastern England and is traded widely. Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile with a message for everyone paying big wireless way too much. Please, for the love of everything good in this world, stop. With Mint, you can get premium wireless for just $15 a month. Of course, if you enjoy overpaying, no judgments, but that's weird. Okay, one judgment.

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I guess it's fascinating because it's easy to think of the Great Army just being about violence and that they're just tearing through the countryside, destroying. It's interesting to think that they're drawing in almost technological advancements and craftsmen from overseas that wouldn't have come to England otherwise. So there is this sort of cultural legacy there.

to go with the violence that the Great Army did bring? Yeah, that's absolutely the case. And one of the most intriguing examples comes from what we know of the career of Guthrum, who was one of the leaders of the Great Army, who...

He's converted to Christianity by King Alfred. He stands as his sponsor at his baptism. And then Guthrum heads off to East Anglia where he rules as a king. He takes on an Anglo-Saxon name. He's known as Affelstan.

He then mints coins and some of his first issues are copies of the coins of King Alfred. And then he mints, or has minted for him, to perhaps be more accurate, coins in his baptismal name. And to all intents and purposes, Gothram behaves like

an English king, a Western European Christian ruler. And I think it's those sorts of developments that drives this desire to have the apparatus of kingship. And if that involves minting coins, if that involves sponsoring the arrival of potters to make the kind of pottery that they would have seen in

the elite and kings and members of society in Francia making use of, that would have informed their idea of what being a king, what being a ruler was like when Guthrum and his followers settled in East Anglia.

I guess it's easy for us to see the Vikings coming and imposing a lot on communities. It's interesting to see them absorbing as well and drawing influences from all other places to alter their own culture while they're in other countries. Yeah, and it's clear that one of the things they're very good at is in assimilating into local populations and adapting. And that's

why when we look into the next few decades in the settlement phase they almost become invisible even though there's this massive Scandinavian legacy but the

We don't have thousands of Viking warrior burials from across England. And that's because they adopted Christianity initially just as one of their other gods, probably. But then they become converted and they are buried in Anglo-Saxon churchyards without grave goods. They adopt other aspects of Anglo-Saxon material culture. And so they become very difficult to recognize. But that's because they're very good at

adapting and assimilating and we see this in many of the areas they settle yeah

Did you find some evidence in the camps as well of them potentially liking to play board games? Is there some finds that suggest they had games they played? Yes, we did. And this is particularly interesting because from Torksey, we've got over 300 gaming pieces. These are very crudely made, generally of lead, just hand-shaped. Some of them may have been cast. And we do know, particularly from some of the richer Scandinavian countries,

graves. We have much more elaborate gaming sets, some in glass, for example. It seems when they were travelling, they made do with materials that they found locally. And we believe that at Torksey, they had access to a lot of lead, which may have come from a Roman villa that was previously on the site. So they made these gaming pieces. We have an

and then from elsewhere of wooden gaming boards, either scratched into the planks of ships or individual boards. There's a very well-preserved one from a crannog in Ireland, Ballanderi. And the boards are very much like chess or drafts boards. But we know from later sources that one of the popular games amongst Scandinavians was called Neffertapel.

And it involved two sides, one with a smaller number of pieces, but with a king piece, the nepi, that starts off in the centre of the board. And then their opponent has a larger number of pieces that start out round the outside of the board. And their objective is to capture the king. So we think that in the long winter evenings, these warriors, as well as telling stories about their great exploits in battle,

were playing these games of strategy a bit like modern chess. The rules aren't exactly the same. But it was probably as well part of the education of the younger warriors. As we've mentioned, there were children on the camps. We imagine they were playing them as well. Maybe the adults were probably gambling over the outcomes of the games as well. And maybe some of the really small pieces of silver that we find on the camps could even be gambling chips that they were exploiting.

exchanging according to the winner of the game. It's too tempting to see Vikings, particularly in armies like this, as just, you know, 12 hours a day fighting, slaughtering, burning, abducting people and whatever else. It's really interesting to think about them in their downtime and that they did relax and they did have fun alongside what for them was business.

Absolutely. I mean, when you're sitting in a field in Lincolnshire for a number of months, I think you've got to have other things to occupy your time other than just processing your loot and repairing your armour and vessels. As

As it dawned, do we have a sense of when the Viking Great Army ceased to be a thing and where it went? We've talked a little bit about them being absorbed into local communities. Do we have a sense of the army moving on or does it just kind of vanish and melt away? Yeah, we do seem to see a number of different developments. I mentioned Guthrum earlier, eventually becomes king in East Anglia. So he's sort of king through the 880s there. Yeah.

But I think the key moment is in the year or so after the army overwintered at Repton. So that's over the winter of 873 to four. And the Angus Saxon Chronicle tells us that the army divided in two at that point. And

One half kind of went south and continued raiding in Mercia and Wessex. And that's the army led by Guthrum and a couple of other rulers. And the other half went north under their ruler Halfdan, settle and divide out the land in Northumbria. But then Halfdan...

seems to head off into Ireland. I mean, it's a little bit tricky because the name is spelt differently in the Irish sources, but we have a raider of a similar name who's in Ireland and eventually is killed there. So I think that there is a sort of division of the army and some of them kind of carry on fighting and eventually settle. Others disappear and leave England for good. We also see traces of returning warringty

warriors on the continent. So for example, at a site called Hedeby and another site near Hedeby, archaeologists there have found examples of these gaming pieces, which are otherwise not known at all in Denmark. So we believe this is an example of a warrior who was in the

returned and may have been serving in a warrior band protecting the southern frontier as it was of then Denmark.

We have another example of some insect weights and possibly gaining peace. There's in a burial right in the far north of Scotland, at Culloran Bay, where this may be, again, another member of the army who's moved on from England, has settled, has farmed, and then is buried with some of these sort of key heirlooms, almost, or sort of trinkets of his overseas expeditions.

Yeah, it's like the old fashioned having a photo slideshow to show everybody. Yeah, there's a really extraordinary example from the Netherlands as well at a place called Zutphen. And I became aware of this. I was out there a few years ago giving a talk on the Viking Great Army. I mean, seemingly people in the audience would think this is really interesting, but it wouldn't really connect very much with what they knew about. And the municipal archaeologist came up to me afterwards and said, oh, those lead gaming pieces.

that you were showing. We found some here, which was a bit of a surprise. So I had a look at them. They were very like the sorts of things that we were finding at TalkSing. And

Then I was shown some of the archaeological evidence from Zutphen and there had been excavation of some buildings dating to the late 9th century, which had been burnt down. And there were two burials in the base of these buildings, alongside one of which was a Northumbrian stiker, those little copper alloy coins that we see.

are found in great numbers at Torksey. There we've got evidence for what appears to be a Viking raid. And we know that there were from contemporary written sources or Viking raids in that area in the 880s. And we've got this stiker in the base of these burnt down buildings and nearby these lead gaming pieces. So that may be another example of what happened to somebody who'd been with the Great Army and headed back

to the continent, continued engaging in raids. And some of the material that they had with them that they'd acquired in England ends up being lost, left behind during their raiding at Zutphen. Fascinating that it gets us so close to the real human stories of the members of the armies as well. I wondered if we could just end on maybe Julian and then Dawn. If you could give us an idea, there's so many exciting new finds that seem to be happening and this is giving us new information about

Is there more to find at these sites? And if there is one question that you could answer at one of these sites, what would you like to know? What would you really like to discover?

Gosh, there's certainly a lot more to find out about because we're discovering new sites now because of the signature around England all the time. And as a nice example, recently one of our metal detectorists colleagues discovered that half of an Irish cross-shaped brooch had been found at a site

north of the River Humber, whilst the other half of it had been found at a site south of the River Humber. So this is an example that shows the actual sort of splitting up of items and parts of the same object being carried by different members of the army to different locations. So that's a relatively recent find. So lots of work to do on that.

I think the other thing I would dearly love to know more about goes back to the problem that we've had with the soil conditions at Torksey and where animal bone and archaeobotanical remains in particular don't survive. So although we can infer all of this processing of animals and processing of plants and crops,

we don't really have the solid evidence for it so what we really need is a viking camp and there are still several of them where we don't know the precise location but we need one where the soil conditions will mean that the botanics and the animal bones survive because they will tell us a lot more about what was going on dawn is there any question that you would dearly love to answer at one of these sites

I think I would like to know more about the women and children involved in the activities of the Great Army. And we know that they were present. We've got a little bit of evidence for that as well as some of the burials that have been excavated at Heathwood near to Repton, which is a cremation cemetery. It would be kind of nice if we had some burials in situ alongside a winter camp site somewhere.

I'd sort of like to put my questions alongside those that Julian has just outlined. Another issue at Torxie and Alderwark is the fact that these are regularly ploughed sites. So we did try doing some excavation at Torxie and features had clearly been ploughed out and there was a lot that we were not going to be able to see if we excavated.

You know, if we had a site that wasn't so disturbed by ploughing and, you know, we could find out about the sorts of, you know, food provisions at the site. But also we had some burials in situ and they were able to tell us more about the people on the camp, including women and children. I think I'm not asking for too much there, am I? I think that's the sort of thing that I'd really like to see because we now know what we're looking for, having almost seen it by proxy through the metal detected site.

data from Torksey and Old Walk, it'd be great to get a campsite that hasn't been disturbed and has got better preservation conditions. Because there are so many more questions that are prompted by the material that we have been studying from Torksey and Old Walk that it needs the right kind of site where you can ask these sort of questions and employ the right sort of archaeological methods to begin to answer them.

Yeah, well, I very much hope that you come across a site like that because it's been fascinating to find out what you've discovered so far from these new sites and creating that signature will hopefully help you locate one that can answer even more questions for us. And I look forward to maybe you being able to enlighten us even more about the activity of the Viking Great Army. So thank you so much for joining us, Dawn and Julian. It's been an absolute pleasure to talk to you about this. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you.

I hope you've enjoyed finding out about life in the Viking Great Army. Dawn and Julian's book of the same name is out now if you'd like to uncover more. There are some great episodes in our back catalogue on Viking Age archaeology, including Eleanor Barraclough's visit to talk about her book, Embers of the Hands.

There are new instalments of Gone Medieval every Tuesday and Friday, so please come back and join Eleanor and I for more from the greatest millennium in human history. Don't forget to also subscribe or follow us on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts and tell all of your friends and family that you've gone medieval.

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