A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old

A Rare, Original, Ancient Viking Wrought Iron Hammer Adze For Viking Long Boat & Roundhouse Construction Found Near Camphill, North Yorkshire, In The 19th Century, Circa 1870's. Around 1100 to 1200 Years Old

All Viking ships were clinker built; the planks were overlapped at one edge and riveted together. In clinker shipbuilding you start build the outside first, and then put a frame inside it.
Viking ship frames are like display cases of grown timbers. For instance, the stem and stern posts would be taken from large, curved branches. Where two parts of the frame are to meet (usually a weak spot that needs re-enforcement) the Vikings used a single timber, cut from a branching element of a tree. On smaller vessels, where the oars didn’t pass through oarholes, the tholes (or rowlocks) were made from the junction of a branch with the trunk – putting the strongest part of the wood at the point of most strain.

Viking houses were built of wood. The longhouses had bowed walls in plan, forming a ship-like outline. The walls were lined with clay or consisted of wooden planks placed vertically into the ground, which supported the roof, along with two rows of internal posts. Outside the house was often supported by sloping posts. Roofs were slanted and could be thatched or wooden.

Renown scholar Alcuin of York was back at Charlemagne's court by at least mid-792, writing a series of letters to Æthelred, to Hygbald, Bishop of Lindisfarne, and to Æthelhard, Archbishop of Canterbury in the succeeding months, dealing with the Viking attack on Lindisfarne in July 793. These letters and Alcuin's poem on the subject, "De clade Lindisfarnensis monasterii", provide the only significant contemporary account of these events. In his description of the Viking attack, he wrote: "Never before has such terror appeared in Britain. Behold the church of St Cuthbert, splattered with the blood of God's priests, robbed of its ornaments.

The Vikings began arriving en masse with armies intent on conquest. These armies were led by Ivar the Boneless, Halfdan, and Ubba, three of the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok, who had been killed by the Northumbrian King Ælla. The first English city to fall to the invaders was York, conquered in 866. The Northumbrians tried in vain to retake the city, and King Ælla was killed in the process. One-by-one, other Saxon realms capitulated until virtually all of north and eastern England was under the direct control of the Danes.

At this point, the strongest Anglo-Saxon kingdom was Wessex, and upon the death of its king Æthelred, Alfred succeeded the throne and took the fight to the Vikings in England, who had begun annexing huge chunks of Mercia, an ally of Wessex. Alfred’s initial campaign against the Vikings was, however, a complete failure. Anglo-Saxon military tactics and defenses were incapable of dealing with Viking raids, and Alfred was eventually forced into hiding in the Somerset Marshes. The Vikings in England had succeeded in opening up the whole of Anglo-Saxon England to their mercy.
In 878, King Alfred came out of hiding and met with the lords still loyal to his cause. During his time in the Somerset Marshes, he had carefully planned a major counter-offensive against the Danish Viking army under Guthrum. Alfred’s campaign was successful, and Guthrum’s army was beaten, first in the field at Edington and then starved into submission at Chippenham. Several years later, a boundary was established, dividing England in two, with one half under Anglo-Saxon control and the other half, known as the Danelaw, under the control of the Vikings.

King Alfred organized better defenses, as well as a powerful free-standing army better equipped to deal with Viking tactics. As a result, subsequent raids and a major invasion attempt were thwarted. The Vikings who were part of this invasion attempt either ended up settling in Danelaw or sailing to Normandy and settling there.
Beyer, Greg. "The Vikings in England (Or were they Danes?)" TheCollector.com, March 11, 2023, https://www.thecollector.com/danes-or-vikings-in-england/

Title page of a late manuscript of the Prose Edda written by Snorri Sturluson (13th century), showing the Ancient Norse Gods Odin, Heimdallr, Sleipnir, and other figures from Norse mythology, plus the legendary axe hammer.

The Tjängvide image stone with illustrations from Norse mythology
By Berig - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3682858
Showing axe hammers in combat and a Viking longship.

Scenes in the gallery of Viking-Norman carpenters making a long ship, from King William the Conqueror's Bayeux embroidery {although it is always called, and known through history, and even today, as a tapestry, but in error}. Commissioned by Bishop Odo of Bayeux, William's maternal half-brother, it was made for him in England in the 1070s.

The Normans of Normandy were settled Vikings.

Code: 25795

995.00 GBP