A new narrative history of the Viking Age, interwoven with exploration of the physical remains & landscapes that the Vikings fashioned & walked: their rune-stones & ship burials, settlements & battlefields. To many, the word ` Viking` brings to mind red scenes of rape & pillage, of marauders from beyond the sea rampaging around the British coastline in the last gloomy centuries before the Norman Conquest. It is true that Britain in the Viking Age was a turbulent, violent place. The kings & warlords who have impressed their memories on the period revel in names that fire the blood & stir the imagination: Svein Forkbeard & Edmund Ironside, Ivar the Boneless & Alfred the Great, Erik Bloodaxe & Edgar the Pacifier amongst many others. Evidence for their brutality, their dominance, their avarice & their pride is still unearthed from British soil with stunning regularity. But this is not the whole story. In Viking Britain, Thomas Williams has drawn on his experience as project curator of the British Museum exhibition of Vikings: Life & Legend to show how the people we call Vikings came not just to raid & plunder, but to settle, to colonize & to rule. The impact on these islands was profound & enduring, shaping British social, cultural & political development for hundreds of years. Indeed, in language, literature, place-names & folklore, the presence of Scandinavian settlers can still be felt, & their memory
- filtered & refashioned through the writings of people like J.R.R. Tolkien, William Morris & G.K. Chesterton
- has transformed the western imagination. This remarkable makes use of new academic research & first-hand experience, drawing deeply from the relics & landscapes that the Vikings & their contemporaries fashioned & walked: their runestones & ship burials, settlements & battlefields, poems & chronicles. The book offers a vital evocation of a forgotten world, its echoes in later history & its implications for the present.