Footprint Publishing

Ivar the Boneless

                                                                               Bookmark and Share

Ivar (Ivor) (Ivarr) the boneless Ragnarsson

 

Ivar known in Old Norse as Ivarr “Beinlauss” possible meaning, bone-loose or bone-less. (Could it be that he suffered from brittle bone disease or was he simply double jointed or could he have been exceptionally tall and loose limbed). What ever his disability was, if it was indeed a disability, it certainly did not affect his mind. He was already the King of Dublin when he masterminded and led, along with his brothers, Halfdan and Ubbe the great Danish army that arrived in three to four hundred longships to land in East Anglia in 865.

 

With this great army over wintering in his country King Edmund played it canny and supplied them with horses (maybe he hoped that by doing so, they would move on and he would be rid of them). The ploy seems to work for in the spring of 866 the great army with Ivar at its head rode north. On reaching York he found a civil war in progress, King Osbert and King Aelle were at each other’s throats and the city was largely undefended. In November 866 the Danes captured and immediately set about strengthening the city’s defences.

 

In March 867 the rivals Osbert and Aelle ceased hostilities, agreed to join forces and attempted to retake York. The attempt failed, Osbert was killed during the battle, Aelle was captured and died horribly by being subjected by Ivar and his brothers to the death of the Blood Eagle. (Laying him down on this face, they cut his ribs from his spine, ripped them apart and pulled his lungs out through his back). This was done in revenge for the death of their father Ragnarr Lothbrok. Aelle had 2 years previously, cast him into a pit full of vipers and denied him the right to die with a sword in his hand.

 

What was left of the Royal Court of the Angles fled north to the Capital of Bernicia, Bamborough? The Danes renamed York as Jorvik and after settling the puppet king Ecgberht on the throne, Ivar led the army south again, this time into Mercia and captured Nottingham. They were besieged in the city by a joint army belonging to King Bughred of Mercia and King Aethelred of Wessex. A compromise was reached (Most likely the payment of Danegelt) and Ivar and his army returned to Jorvik.

 

In 869, Halfdan stayed in Jorvik, while Ivar and Ubbe attacked and overcame the army of King Edmund of East anglia, making the kingdom their own. Edmund escaped, but was captured the following year, after being used by the Danish archers for target practice, was sacrificed to Odin and had his head cut off. Edmund’s brother, Edwold fled to Cerne Abbas and became a hermit. The Danes placed Oswald, a puppet king on the throne of East Anglia. The Fens were ravaged and when the people took refuge in Peterborough Abbey the Danes slaughtered them and destroyed the Abbey.

 

Ivar returned briefly to Jorvik and then set sail for Dublin where he was reunited with Olaf The White, who seems to have been left in charge of Dublin. (Dublin, from Dubh meaning black and Linn, meaning pool, it may have referred to a pool of dark water in a branch of the river Liffey that does not exist today). Olaf had arrived in Dublin in 853 and had already spent many years in southern Pictland taking hostages and collecting tribute. When Ivar and he met up again they launched an attack against the ancient capital of Strathclyde.

 

Ivar headed northwest from Jorvik, while Olaf sailed up the Clyde at the head of a large fleet and they came together at the capital Dun Breattann, (Fortress of the Britons) Dumbarton Rock. Unable to gain access they besieged the fortress. (Something the Danes did rarely). The stronghold held out for four months until the well on the rock dried up (It is possible that the Danes somehow diverted the water supply). After destroying the fortress the Danes stayed the winter in Strathclyde and returned to Dublin with their booty in the spring. It took 200 ships to carry away the plunder and slaves. (The slaves would have been transported to North Africa and sold to Arab traders).

 

One of The prisoners was King Artgal of Strathclyde and a ransom demand was sent to his son Rhun. Unfortunately for Artgal, Rhun was ambitious and he approached his wife’s brother King Constantine ruler of Alba, who sent gifts to Dublin with the request that Artgal be killed. Ivar accepted and Rhun became king on the death of his father.

 

Ivar retired to Dublin and hailed as ‘King of the Northmen of all Ireland and Britain and died peacefully in 873. At his own request his body was brought back to England for burial. It is said that William the Conqueror had the body dug up and destroyed.

 

But was that really the case, in the ‘Book of Hyde’ written in the 14th century, the Chronicler said that Hingwar (Ivarr?) Drowned 5 years later, while crossing the ford at Hungerford on the way to Edlington.

 

Copyright Fred Watson October 2007
 
_______________________________
Danish Vikings
 
______________________________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Ragnarr Lothbrok

A raider and one time king of Sweden and Denmark. Ragnarr spent most of life as a Viking pirate and married the Shield Maiden Lathgertha. When raiding his favourite trick was to attack Christian cities on feast days and take them by surprise when everyone was in church. In 845AD he attacked Paris but the then king, Charles the Bald offered him the massive sum of £7000 to not sack the city. Ragnarr accepted the money, but continued to ravage the rest of the kingdom and continued to do so for many, many years.

In 865AD Ragnarr left France in peace and turned his attention on England and having landed on the Northumbrian coast commenced to cause havoc. He would have been better off if he had stayed in France. Aelle II the king of Northumbria defeated him in battle and had him thrown into a pit full of vipers, where he died an agonising death.
______________ 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

King Edmund of East Anglia
 

Edmund was crowned at Bures in 856AD at the age of fourteen and ruled in peace until 865AD. In that year the great Danish heathen army led by Ivarr the boneless, his brothers Halfdan and Ubbe arrived in his kingdom. With his army outnumbered by the host Edmund bought the Danes off with a supply of horses.
 

The next year the Danes left East Anglia, move north and captured York the capital of Northumbria. The two warring kings, Osbert and Aelle joined forces and attacked the Danes. Unfortunately they lost the battle, Osbert was killed during the fighting and Aelle was captured and tortured to death in revenge for the killing of Ivarr’s father, two years prior.
 

After spending the year ravaging the north and dividing up the spoils, Ivarr and Ubbe left Halfdan and his men to control the north and headed back south. Burning and slaughtering the two halves of the Danish army rampaged down the east coast until Ivarr and his men came against Edmund’s army. A battle ensued and Edmund won the day but both sides took a severe mauling. The armies met again at Thetford but this time Ubbe had joined up with Ivarr and the outnumbered East Anglian army was defeated and Edmund slain.
 

The making of a martyr; The popular story is that Edmund managed to escape but was captured, beaten, tied to a tree and use for archery practice before having his head cut off. The body of the king was left to rot, while the head was thrown into a bramble thicket. Later the remains, body and head were recovered, and eventually laid to rest in Baedoricesworth (present day Bury St Edmund) many miracles were recorded and Edmund was declared a saint.
_____________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Olaf the White

A kinsman of Ivarr the Boneless (some say a brother) Olaf was born in Ireland, married Aud the deep minded, daughter of Ketil Flatnose the ruler of the Hebrides and became king of Dublin. He may have at one time been joint ruler with Ivarr.

 In 669AD Olaf and Ivarr attacked the rock fortress of the Britons at Dumbarton. After a siege lasting four months the well serving the fortress ran dry, the Norse / Irish broke in and the captured Britons were take back to Ireland as slaves. Barely a year later Olaf was killed at the instigation of the Pictish king Constantine I while to collect more tribute.
_______________________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

King Artgal of Al Cluith (Strathclyde) 850AD – 872AD.

 

Artgal ruled his kingdom from a fortress at Dumbarton Rock - where the River Leven meets with the River Clyde. When the fortress fell in 870AD Artgal was captured and put up for ransom by Olaf the White after much haggling Constantine I arranged the death of Artgal in 872AD and placed Rhun, Artgal’s son - who was married to Constantine’s sister - on the throne.
_________________________
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Constantine I King of the Picts 863AD – 877AD

 

The son of Kenneth I MacAllpin, Constantine succeeded his Uncle Donald I as king of the picts. His reign like that of Artgal of Strathclyde was spent for the most part in conflict with the Vikings.

 

 In 870AD when Artgal was captured and put up for ransom by Olaf the White. When Artgal's son Rhun - who was married to Constantines sister - aproached Constantine he seized the chance to expand his influence southward and after much negotiation arranged for Artgal’s death at the hands of Olaf in 872AD.  Rhun was placed on the throne. Later Olaf, while trying to collect yet more tribute was killed at the instigation of Constantine.

 

In 875AD the Pictish forces under Constantine were heavily defeated in battle with the Vikings at Dollar.

 

In 877 Constantine again came into battle with the Vikings and was beheaded on the beach at Inverdovat (near Newport on Tay)

 

Constantine was buried on the island of Iona.
_________________________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Build A Website


 
Shield of the Sun
This serial has been reformatted into shorter sections and parts 1 through to 32 can now be read on the stories for dads page.
Home | Free Short Stories For Girls | Free Short Stories For Boys | Free Stories for mums | Free Stories for dads | Free Tales For Young Children | History | Anglo-Saxon-Northumbria | News | Home Cooking | Showcase Your Books | Self-publishing | Links | Contact Us | Tell A Friend