Battle of Maldon: Difference between revisions

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The '''Battle of Maldon''' was not a significant historical event, but it has com to be immortalised by a heroic poem that tells of the events.
The '''Battle of Maldon''' was not a significant historical event, but it has come to be immortalised by a heroic [[Anglo-Saxon]] [[Anglo-Saxon Poetry|poem]] that tells of the events.


The battle was fought on the 10th or 11th of August, 991 A.D. between forces lead by Earl Byrhtnoth and a party of [[Viking]]s. The Vikings had been raiding through Ipswich, when they were holed up on Northey Island by Byrhtnoth's forces. In what was later described as an act of pride Byrhtnoth allowed the Vikings to cross over to the mainland before battle was begun. Suffering from the desertion of some of his forces, Byrhtnoth's forces were destroyed, and Byrhtnoth himself died.
The battle was fought on the 10th or 11th of August, 991 A.D. between forces lead by Earl Byrhtnoth and a party of [[Viking]]s. The Vikings had been raiding through Ipswich, when they were holed up on Northey Island by Byrhtnoth's forces. In what was later described as an act of pride Byrhtnoth allowed the Vikings to cross over to the mainland before battle was begun. Suffering from the desertion of some of his forces, Byrhtnoth's forces were destroyed, and Byrhtnoth himself died.

Revision as of 15:26, 17 June 2004

The Battle of Maldon was not a significant historical event, but it has come to be immortalised by a heroic Anglo-Saxon poem that tells of the events.

The battle was fought on the 10th or 11th of August, 991 A.D. between forces lead by Earl Byrhtnoth and a party of Vikings. The Vikings had been raiding through Ipswich, when they were holed up on Northey Island by Byrhtnoth's forces. In what was later described as an act of pride Byrhtnoth allowed the Vikings to cross over to the mainland before battle was begun. Suffering from the desertion of some of his forces, Byrhtnoth's forces were destroyed, and Byrhtnoth himself died.

The poem, though incomplete, is a powerful depiction of courage in the name of a doomed cause. In this way it shares a curious link with the poem "The charge of the Light Brigade", written almost nine centuries later.

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