Viking Empire and Battles 570-1263

Jersay

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Frisia (570)
Portland (787): Three lost viking ships land at Portland Bill. The king's reeve tries to collect taxes from them. They kill him and sail on.
Isle of Lindisfarne (793)
Isle of Skye (795)
Ionia (795)
Rathün (795)
Aquitaine (799)
St. Philibergt (799)
Ionia (802, again)
Lyminge (804)
Ionia (806, yet again)
Slav town of Reric, citizens transfer to Hedeby (808)
Frisia (810, again)

Vestfold, Norway--Norwegian Vikings struggle with Danish Vikings (813)
Flanders (820)
Aquitaine (820)
Faroes Islands (825)
Arnagh (832)
Arnagh (832, again)
Arnagh (832, yet again)
Dorestad (834)
Sheppy (835)
Dorestad (835, again)
Dorestad (836, yet again)
Dorestad (837, even yet again)

Constantinople (839, not sacked, but city was reached by Swedish Vikings)
Dublin (840)
Dublin (841 permanent Viking settlement in Dublin)
Francia (842)
Frisia (843, yet again)
Nantes (848)
Coulouse (844)
Galicia (844)
Al-Andalus (844)
Hamburg (845)
Frisia (845)
Paris (845)
Bordeaux (848)
Canterbury (851)
London (851)
Mona (852)
St. Martin (853)
Tours (853)
Various Mediterranean Isles (859-862 )
Iceland explored by Gardar the Swede (860)

Constantinople (860, threatened yet again)
Winchester (860)
Novgorod (862)
St. Benoit (865)
Fleury (865)
Poitiers (865)
Various English cities completely overrun by Danish Vikings (865)
York (867)
Armaugh (869)
Dumberton (870)
Orkney (870)
Alt Clud (870)
Wessex (871)
Viking settlement of Iceland (870-930)
Repton (873)
Ireland (873, yet again)
Wessex (again, 876)
Wessex (yet again, 877)
Gloucester (877)
St. David's (878)
Dyfed (878)

Edington (878, Vikings defeated)
Kiev (880)
Aachen (881)
Cologne (881)
Paris (885-886)

London (886, Vikings defeated)
the Dyle (891, Viking defeated)
Lloeger (895)
Bytheiniog (895)
Various sites in Northwest England (900, again)

Dublin (902, Vikings expelled from area)
Normandy (911, Viking Rollo recognized as ruler of Normandy by the French)
Brittany (912)
Brittany (914-36 yet again!)
Dublin (917, yet again, Vikings recapture city)
Corbridge (917)

Germania (934, Vikings defeated)
Limerick (937)
Brunanburh (937, Viking and Scottish alliance defeated)
Stainmore (954, Vikings defeated)
various sites in England (980, even yet again)
Greenland (981)
Baffin Island (986)
Greenland (yet again, 986)
Newfoundland (986)
Maldon (991)
Folkistone (991)
London (994)
Svold (1000)
Vinland (1000)
Norway (1015, conquered)
England under ruler of Cnut (1016-35)
most of northern Scotland conquered (1030-35)

England (End of Danish rule 1042)
Constantinople (last Rus attack 1043)
Fulford and Stamford Bridge (1066)
Hastings (Normans, i.e., Viking descendents in northern France, led by William the Bastard, invade England in 1066)

England (1069, yet again, Vikings defeated)
England (1075, even yet again, last major Danish invasion of Britain)
Hebrides (1095)
Norman descendents of Vikings in France expand into southern Italy (1071)
Ulster (1103, Vikings defeated)
East Coast of England raided, but Vikings driven off (1153)
Largs, Scotland (1263)

http://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/viking_attacklist.html

Black represents Losses and Red initiates Victory. Most have been one of the most efficent forces in battle with so many victories or a 700 hundred year period.
 

Jersay

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Dec 1, 2005
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So it appears that these Viking Battles are better than some of the other empires or groups of peoples who fought in that time period or this time period as well.
 

Jersay

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Dec 1, 2005
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All the battles were pretty good for the victories that the Vikings did. And some of these places are extremely important places of power. London, Constantinopole, Paris and on and on.