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Viking conquest danish longphort
Viking conquest danish longphort












En route to the Viking longphort there, known as Dubh-Linn, Thorgrim Night Wolf and Ornolf the Restless stumble across an Irish ship that carries aboard it a single item - a crown. Such was the case in the southern lands of Ireland. They came at first to plunder, and then to settle, an encroachment fiercely resisted where ever they went. Few could resist the power of their violent onslaught. For decades the Vikings have swept out of the Norse countries and fallen on England, Ireland, whatever lands they could reach aboard their longships.

viking conquest danish longphort

Such was the case Book I of the ongoing Norsemen Saga. So here on a swamp 900 years ago, a group of settlers decided to make a real go at planning, building, reconstructing and maintaining a mini town of wood on a sinking reed ridden and wet riverine and tidal space.Book I of the ongoing Norsemen Saga. there is an indication from the dendrochronological dates of the timbers found on the site that there was a continuous felling of trees and construction of buildings and reclamation structures from just a few years before 1100AD to 1160AD. Two to three metres underneath our present day city, they exposed the remains of timber structures lingering, intrusive and protruding through the mud.

viking conquest danish longphort

On troweling back the earth, the archaeologists pealed back different temporal contexts. The publication Archaeological Excavations at South Main Street 2003-2005 (Brett & Hurley, 2014) records Hiberno Norse structures found under South Main Street area. It is known that there were at least three main areas of settlement: firstly, they lived on the southern valley side next to the monastery, the core area of which is present-day Barrack Street secondly, they settled on a marshy island now the location of South Main Street, the Beamish and Crawford Brewery, Hanover Street and Bishop Lucey Park and thirdly they settled on the adjacent northern valleyside, now the area of John Street in Lower Blackpool. Nevertheless, there are some clues that give an insight into the location, structure and society of Danish Viking Age Cork. Unfortunately, the information available regarding a Danish settlement at Cork is historically and archaeologically deficient compared to that arising from excavations in Waterford and Dublin. They took over and adapted existing Norwegian bases and constructed additional ones to a similar but larger design. In Cork, these new invaders – the Danish Vikings – started off by raiding the monastery on the hillside but soon turned their attention to wealthier and more powerful Gaelic kingdoms in Munster. The Norwegian presence in Corcach Mór na Mumhan was interrupted by invaders from Denmark circa AD914 who also attacked other Viking towns in Ireland and gained control of them.

viking conquest danish longphort

The Norwegians established a maritime network with other Viking ports, namely those at Dublin, Waterford, Wexford, and Limerick. With this in mind, Dún Corcaighe would have been located strategically near the mature stage of the River Lee, and therefore would have controlled the lowest crossing-point of the river, whilst being sheltered by the valley sides. It is thought that it was located on an island, the core of which could be marked by South Main Street, an area that was developed in ensuing centuries by other colonialists.

viking conquest danish longphort

We cannot be sure of the exact location of the Viking town, but it is known that in AD 848 a settlement base called Dún Corcaighe, or Fort of the Marshes, was besieged by Olchobar, King of Caiseal from North Munster. The marshy environment would not have been entirely welcoming, but the Norwegians nonetheless established a settlement or longphort here. It is also known that it was raided four to five times in the ensuing one hundred years. 820 and the most valuable treasures were plundered. Archaeologists from Sheila Lane & Associates digging at the Grand Parade City Car Park 2004 (picture: Kieran McCarthy)Īll that is known of the first recorded Viking attack on the monastery at Corcach Mór na Mumhan was that it occurred in A.D.














Viking conquest danish longphort