A history of Britain in the violent and unruly era between the first
Scandinavian raids in 789 and the final expulsion of the Vikings from
York in 954.
In 865, a great Viking army landed in East Anglia, precipitating a
series of wars that would last until the middle of the following
century. It was in this time of crisis that the modern kingdoms of
Britain were born. In their responses to the Viking threat, these
kingdoms forged their identities as hybrid cultures: vibrant and
entrepreneurial peoples adapting to instability and opportunity.
Traditionally, Alfred the Great is cast as the central player in the
story of Viking Age Britain. But Max Adams, while stressing the genius
of Alfred as war leader, law-giver, and forger of the English nation,
has a more nuanced narrative approach to this conventional version of
history. The Britain encountered by the Scandinavians of the ninth and
tenth centuries was one of regional diversity and self-conscious
cultural identities, depicted in glorious narrative fashion in The
Viking Wars.