Canute the Great, 995 (circa)-1035, and the Rise of Danish Imperialism during the Viking Age. Laurence Marcellus Larson

Canute the Great, 995 (circa)-1035, and the Rise of Danish Imperialism during the Viking Age - Laurence Marcellus Larson


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       Laurence Marcellus Larson

      Canute the Great, 995 (circa)-1035, and the Rise of Danish Imperialism during the Viking Age

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664594334

       FOREWORD

       CANUTE THE GREAT

       CHAPTER I

       THE HERITAGE OF CANUTE THE GREAT

       CHAPTER II

       THE CONQUEST OF ENGLAND—1003-1013

       CHAPTER III

       THE ENGLISH REACTION AND THE NORSE REVOLT 1014-1016

       CHAPTER IV

       THE STRUGGLE WITH EDMUND IRONSIDE—1016

       CHAPTER V

       THE RULE OF THE DANES IN ENGLAND—1017-1020

       CHAPTER VI

       THE BEGINNINGS OF EMPIRE—1019-1025

       CHAPTER VII

       CANUTE AND THE ENGLISH CHURCH—1017-1026

       CHAPTER VIII

       THE TWILIGHT OF THE GODS

       CHAPTER IX

       CANUTE AND THE NORWEGIAN CONSPIRACY—1023-1026

       CHAPTER X

       THE BATTLE OF HOLY RIVER AND THE PILGRIMAGE TO ROME—1026-1027

       CHAPTER XI

       THE CONQUEST OF NORWAY—1028-1030

       CHAPTER XII

       THE EMPIRE OF THE NORTH

       CHAPTER XIII

       NORTHERN CULTURE IN THE DAYS OF CANUTE

       CHAPTER XIV

       THE LAST YEARS—1031-1035

       CHAPTER XV

       THE COLLAPSE OF THE EMPIRE—1035-1042

       APPENDICES

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

       INDEX

      

Canute and Emma—(The King and Queen are presenting a golden cross to Winchester Abbey, New Minster.) From a miniature reproduced in Liber Vitæ (Birch).

      TO MY WIFE

      LILLIAN MAY LARSON

      FOREWORD

       Table of Contents

      Toward the close of the eighth century, there appeared in the waters of Western Europe the strange dragon fleets of the Northmen, the "heathen," or the vikings, as they called themselves, and for more than two hundred years the shores of the West and the Southwest lived in constant dread of pillage and piracy. The viking invasions have always been of interest to the student of the Middle Ages; but only recently have historians begun to fathom the full significance of the movement. The British Isles were pre-eminently the field of viking activities. English historians, however, have usually found nothing in the invasions but two successive waves of destruction. As an eminent writer has tersely stated it—the Dane contributed nothing to English civilisation, for he had nothing to contribute.

      On the other hand, Scandinavian students, who naturally took great pride in the valorous deeds of their ancestors, once viewed the western lands chiefly as a field that offered unusual opportunities for the development of the dormant energies of the Northern race. That Christian civilisation could not fail to react on the heathen mind was clearly seen; but this phase of the problem was not emphasised; the importance of western influences was minimised.

      Serious study of the viking age in its broader aspects began about fifty years ago with the researches of Gudbrand Vigfusson, a young Icelandic scholar, much of whose work was carried on in England. Vigfusson's work was parallelled by the far more thorough researches of the eminent Norwegian philologist, Sophus Bugge. These investigators both came to the same general conclusion: that Old Norse culture, especially on the literary side, shows permeating traces of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon elements; that the Eddic literature was not an entirely native product, but was largely built up in the viking colonies in Britain from borrowed materials.

      Some years earlier, the Danish antiquarian, J.J.A. Worsaae, had begun to study the "memorials" of Norse and Danish occupation in Britain, and


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