This ebook edition first published in 2012.
One of the greatest medieval warriors Harald Sigurdsson, nicknamed Hardrada (Harold the Ruthless or hard ruler) fell in battle in an attempt to snatch the crown of England. The spectacular and heroic career which ended at Stamford Bridge in Yorkshire on 25 September 1066 had taken Harald from Norway to Russia and Constantinople and saw him gain a kingdom by force and determination rather than right or inheritance. He was one of the most feared rulers in Europe and was first and foremost a professional soldier, who acquired great wealth by plunder and showed no mercy to those he conquered. "Harald Hardrada: The Warrior's Way" reconstructs a military career spanning three and a half decades and involving encounters with an extraordinary range of allies and enemies in sea-fights and land battles, sieges and viking raids across a variety of theatres of war. John Marsden's superbly researched and powerfully written account takes us from the lands of the Norsemen to Byzantium and the Crusades and makes clear how England moved decisively from three hundred years of exposure to the Scandinavian orbit to a stronger identification with continental Europe following the Norman invasion.
Author(s): John Marsden
Publisher: The History Press
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 256
Author’s Note and Acknowledgements
Maps
Sagas, Skalds and Soldiering. An introduction to a military biography
I. Stiklestad
Norway, 1030
II. Varangian
Russia, 1031–1034
Byzantine Empire, 1034–1041
Constantinople, 1041–1042
Russia, 1042–1045
III. Hardrada
Scandinavia, 1045–1065
IV. Stamford Bridge
England, 1066
Land-ravager. An afterword from west-over-sea
Genealogies
Notes and References
Select Bibliography