A Viking Mystery
Beneath Oxford University, archaeologists have uncovered a medieval city that altered the course of English history
- By David Keys
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
After decades of peace, Vikings again raided England, in A.D. 980. At the time, the Anglo-Saxon ruler was King Aethelred the Unraed (literally “the ill-advised”). As his name suggests, popular history has portrayed him as a mediocre successor to Alfred the Great and Edgar the Peaceful. The 12th-century historian William of Malmesbury wrote that Aethelred “occupied rather than governed” the kingdom. “The career of his life was said to have been cruel in the beginning, wretched in the middle and disgraceful in the end.”
To avert war, Aethelred paid the Vikings some 26,000 pounds in silver between A.D. 991 and 994. In the years that followed, the king employed many of them as mercenaries to discourage other Vikings from attacking England.
But, in A.D. 997, some of the mercenaries turned on their royal employer and attacked the Anglo-Saxon southern counties. In early A.D. 1002, Aethelred again tried to buy off the Vikings—this time with 24,000 pounds in silver.
The geopolitical situation changed in England’s favor only when Aethelred made an alliance with Normandy and sealed the deal by marrying the Duke of Normandy’s sister in A.D. 1002. Possibly emboldened by the support of a powerful ally, Aethelred decided to take pre-emptive action before the Danes again broke the truce.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Aethelred was “informed” that Danish mercenaries intended to “beguile him out of his life.” (It is unknown whether an informer learned of an actual plot, or if Aethelred and his council fabricated the threat.) Aethelred then set in motion one of the most heinous acts of mass murder in English history, committed on St. Brice’s Day, November 13, 1002. As he himself recounted in a charter written two years later, “a decree was sent out by me, with the counsel of my leading men and magnates, to the effect that all the Danes who had sprung up in this island, sprouting like cockle [weeds] amongst the wheat, were to be destroyed by a most just extermination.”
Prior to 2008, the only known inhabitants of the St. John’s College garden had been the songbirds and squirrels that darted across the neatly cropped lawn and hid in an ancient beech tree. Generations of dons and students had strolled across that greenery, unsuspecting of what lay beneath.
The lab data indicating that the men buried there for 1,000 years had eaten lots of seafood, plus the burn markings and other evidence, convinced the archaeologists that the grave probably held victims of the St. Brice’s Day massacre. Aethelred himself recounted exactly how the residents of Oxford killed the Danes in a local church: “Striving to escape death, [the Danes] entered [a] sanctuary of Christ, having broken by force the doors and bolts, and resolved to make a refuge and defence for themselves therein against the people of the town and the suburbs; but when all the people in pursuit strove, forced by necessity, to drive them out, and could not, they set fire to the [building’s] timbers and burnt [it] down.”
Wallis, the archaeologist in charge at Oxford, surmises that the townspeople loaded the corpses onto a cart and drove out through the north gate of the city, past land that today encompasses the Oxford colleges of Balliol and most of St. John’s, then threw the Vikings into the prehistoric henge—the largest ditch nearest the city’s northern exit.
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Comments (30)
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most of my ancestors r decedents of england and ireland. i have a great fascination of english history and lore. i have always thought that the vikings got kind of a bad rap. the saxons and the anglos were just as savage and terrible to the indigenous people. not to mention what the romans did. but it was a very interesting article.
Posted by susan twilligear-lusk-orosco on November 19,2011 | 03:51 AM
saxons,jutes, angles, vikings, normans were all germanic war-tribes.
All the same, really.
Posted by carlos on November 1,2011 | 12:04 PM
i would like to know if you have obtained d.n.a.from the remains in the ship.
Posted by cathy m. irven on October 30,2011 | 11:05 PM
i felt i had to make another comment about our family name maiden name mcelhaney scotland my father made me promise to always put 2 horizontal lines under the little c.as a means of i.d.he also named my sister and i same initials c.m.m.my sisters name is constance his is charles and my sons name charles also like my dads.i thought that was strange.
Posted by cathy on October 30,2011 | 07:20 PM
One more question, if everyone was Scandinavian in the Danelaw where are all the dead Anglo-Saxons and their mass graves, as the Scandinavians must of mass murdered them too?
Posted by Michael on July 25,2011 | 09:19 AM
If half the population was scandinavian then why are many surnames and placenames in the East and North of England just as likely to be Old English. I believe many of the Scandinavian influences are pre-viking, they found -thorpe placename to be just as much Old English in origin as Viking and related to Dutch and German dorf. Ja and Ney are said in the Netherlands just as much as in Scandianvia. Evidence of Scandinavia influence pre-Viking if found throughout Anglo-Saxon England. I think there is too much putting ancient groups into neat cultural boxes. Like all Anglo-Saxons looked, acted, behaved and spoke the same - when there is evidence they didn't and all Scandinavians did the same, why then doesn't the north and east speak Old Norse if there was a million Scandinavians and declare a separate state. More like the English were used to Scandinavian goods and fashions as they had always followed them. Although I wouldn't see the Scandinavians as a race/ethnic group.
Posted by Michael on July 25,2011 | 09:01 AM
I would like to know where the evidence is that half of England was Scandinavian, and indeed what we actually mean by Scandinavian? Were the Danish really an racial community in England. Genetic evidence proves the opposite. They found a grave of 56 people hardly hundreds of thousands! When average Anglo-Saxon and Viking armies were between 30-100 men, its hard to believe such mass movements of people. Historical documents are often exaggerated. I think the story is widely exaggerated too.
Posted by Michael on July 25,2011 | 08:09 AM
I believe/is quite sure that "vikings" were not a term for all scandinavians but more of a profession sort of like "pirates" it is widely believed (in scandinavia) that vikings were a result of political pressure from the german emperor "Otto I" (like our "christening" in A.D. 965) and overpopulation in scandinavia.
Anyway i like this article and it is very nice to have some of the misconceptions(?) that people tend to have about my ancestors obliterated;D
Greetings from one happy Dane still not done counting his silver:D
Posted by Lasse Lund Christensen on December 8,2010 | 08:16 AM
oh yes and :"The Danes ultimately conquered England, in A.D. 1016" Is not correct... it was in fact in 1013 and king Sven Forkbeard Died in 1014..
Sorry couldn´nt help myself;D
Posted by Lasse Lund Christensen on December 8,2010 | 07:57 AM
Hello :D Sorry for any mistakes since english is not my first language....
As a Dane it was quite interesting to read this article and most of the historical references are very well known in danish "Lore" and tradition... worth mentioning though is that the "English" King Harold Godwinson in no way gave up when seeing this Papal flag @ Hastings (of which I have never heard) and it was in fact a question of minor detail that he eventually lost to William The Bastard (Conqueror to the rest of you) and also the fact that king Harold (Harald) had just before the battle of Hastings marched from Stamford Bridge in the north where he repelled an attack from norwegian king Harald (same name... NOT a coincidence;) and then right thereafter had to fight William (Wilhelm) in the south.... pretty hardcore situation for Harold Godwinson to be in...
Posted by Lasse Lund Christensen on December 8,2010 | 07:51 AM
This is a great article. I really enjoyed it.
I have a question . It says the male skeletons were "unusually large". How tall were they and what is the estimate of their weight range considering their muscle mass?
Also what would have been the height and weight of an Anglo-Saxon man?
I have always thought that the scandinavians might have been more robust physical specimens due to their seafood diet and more omega 3 fatty acids and fish oil consumption.
I would dearly like to know exactly what occurred at the battle of Hastings as it has affected my genetic heritage.
I find some of the posts here be oversimplistic in their assessments of the reasons for the English loss.Some reasons cited by others include:tired English soldiers,loss of men against Harald Hardrada, English did not have many bowmen:Modernized Norman warfare, strategy,and weapons use.
Posted by Ted on December 7,2010 | 09:06 PM
A superb article about a fascinating event. I read this article while waiting in the doctor's office and was so excited when the names of the kings were shared. My husband is a descendent of many of them. Aethelred among them. It is so exciting seeing history brought to light after so long, but when I know that my own husband and our children are descendents of these brave men, it only makes it seem even more amazing. Thank you for the information. I am planning to buy every book I can find about the research of these times. These descendents of the great historical figures salute you!
Posted by Judith W. on October 23,2010 | 04:10 PM
Very good article iam reading the Anglo Saxxon Chronicals and my family desends from these people.. on the Swinton website my family connects to these People...http://www.swintonfamilysociety.org/charts.html
Posted by E Hairston on October 17,2010 | 01:02 PM
It's not well known, but one of the main reasons for the defeat at Hastings is the following: There were two Popes at the time... one in Rome, the other in Avignon,France. William had asked the Avignon Pope for the right to fly the Papal flag in battle, and the request was granted. When the English King saw this at Hastings, he thought that the Pope (in Rome) had turned against him, and he simply, in effect, gave up.
Posted by Peter Frailey on October 13,2010 | 01:08 AM
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