how many vikings invalided great britian
10,000
Yup! They fought against them hard!
The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.
No, the Vikings came from what is now Norway and Denmark. The Vikings also came from Sweden. The Frisians were Dutch, similar but not the same to the Vikings.
the vikings came from Scandinavia
They often lived near fjords. Norway is in the area the came from. They eventually settled in France and England.
because the vikings land had flooded and they had no room to grow food and they came to England to live in a place where they can grow with out getting flooded
Yup! They fought against them hard!
King Alfred started a newspaper called the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.The Vikings came.
No, the Vikings came from what is now Norway and Denmark. The Vikings also came from Sweden. The Frisians were Dutch, similar but not the same to the Vikings.
The name of England came from the Anglo-Saxons who named it Angles, as time passed vikings referred to Angles as Angland, followed by the Normans who start the origin of "England".
The Vikings
the vikings came from Scandinavia
They often lived near fjords. Norway is in the area the came from. They eventually settled in France and England.
The Vikings.
The vikings conquered England Scotland and Ireland. during the mid-800s the vikings burned and looted towns on the coasts of France Spain and Italy. BUt this was not when the vikings came about. They started off in Scandinavia and sailed across the world for a unknown reason
The Viking Territory in England was called Danelaw. The Vikings came to England to rob and pillage and take what they wanted, by force if necessary. The took over an area in England that covered about 1/3 of the country near Dorset, England.