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  2. Anglo-Saxon warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_warfare

    A modern recreation of a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon warrior. The period of Anglo-Saxon warfare spans the 5th century AD to the 11th in Anglo-Saxon England.Its technology and tactics resemble those of other European cultural areas of the Early Medieval Period, although the Anglo-Saxons, unlike the Continental Germanic tribes such as the Franks and the Goths, do not appear to have regularly fought ...

  3. Weapons and armour in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapons_and_armour_in...

    As for defensive equipment, most Anglo-Saxon warriors only had access to shields. [97] Pollington theorized that the shield was "perhaps the most culturally significant piece of defensive equipment" in Anglo-Saxon England, for the shield-wall would have symbolically represented the separation between the two sides on the battlefield. [87]

  4. Category:Anglo-Saxon warriors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Anglo-Saxon_warriors

    Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Anglo-Saxon warriors" The following 137 pages are in this category, out of 137 total. ...

  5. Battle of Brunanburh (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Brunanburh_(poem)

    The Battle of Brunanburh [nb 1] was a culmination of the conflict between King Æthelstan and the northern kings. [2] After Æthelstan had defeated the Vikings at York in 928, Constantine II, the Scottish King, recognised the threat posed by the House of Wessex to his own position, and began forging alliances with neighbouring kingdoms to attempt a pre-emptive strike against Æthelstan.

  6. Battle of Chester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Chester

    The argument relies on the 604 date for the battle found in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as well as the suggestion that a passage in Bede that specifically exculpates Augustine, which appears in the Latin but not in the early English translation of the text, was a later addition aimed at distancing the churchman from the violence he predicted. [10]

  7. Battle of Catraeth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Catraeth

    Rosemary Sutcliff's young adult novel The Shining Company (1990) tells the story of the Battle of Catraeth from the viewpoint of Prosper, shield-bearer to one of King Mynyddog's Gododdin warriors. Richard J. Denning's 2010 novel, The Amber Treasure tells the story of the Battle of Catraeth from the point of view of a young Anglo Saxon youth ...

  8. Battle of Maldon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Maldon

    "The Battle of Maldon" is the name conventionally given to a surviving 325-line fragment of Old English poetry. Linguistic study has led to the conjecture that initially the complete poem was transmitted orally, then in a lost manuscript in the East Saxon dialect and now survives as a fragment in the West Saxon form, possibly that of a scribe active at the Monastery of Worcester late in the ...

  9. Uhtred of Bamburgh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uhtred_of_Bamburgh

    The name of Uhtred, Earl of Northumbria as it appears on folio 153r of British Library Cotton MS Tiberius B I (the "C" version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle): "Uhtrede eorle". Uhtred of Bamburgh (Uhtred the Bold—sometimes Uchtred; died ca. 1016), was ruler of Bamburgh and from 1006 to 1016 the ealdorman of Northumbria.