The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Coles

Loading Inventory...
God's Hammer: A History of the Viking Crusades

God's Hammer: A History of the Viking Crusades in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $43.00
Buy Online
God's Hammer: A History of the Viking Crusades

Coles

God's Hammer: A History of the Viking Crusades in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $43.00
Loading Inventory...

Size: Hardcover

Buy Online
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
A commanding history of how the Vikings and their descendants in medieval Scandinavia took up arms—and the cross—in pursuit of fortune, power, empire, and, occasionally, salvation. In 1861, the archaeologist James Farrer excavated a grass-grown mound on the Orkney Islands off the north coast of Scotland. He discovered a Neolithic tomb that had once provided shelter for the prehistoric dead. He also found evidence that many centuries earlier, Norse-speaking tomb-breakers had entered the mound and left dozens of inscriptions, one of which stood out: "Crusaders broke into this barrow." The world of the Viking north and the era of the Crusades sit apart from one another in the imagination, divided by the mental gulf created by the Norman Conquest. The Vikings are seen as a phenomenon of the Dark Ages, a time of unreconstructed barbarism and pagan menace, drenched in blood-sacrifice and presided over by grim gods; the Crusades on the other hand are squarely medieval, an outgrowth of the color, pageantry and romance of an era of knights, cathedrals, castles and bright heraldry: an age of violence, certainly, but glossed with faith and chivalry. Both images are false, of course, created and compounded by centuries of historiographical habit. From the tenth century onward, the men of the north were as likely to be found killing in the name of Christ as they were to be pillaging the monasteries of Britain, Ireland and France. And, by the eleventh and twelfth centuries, the swords of Scandinavia were turned with frequency and fervor against the perceived enemies of God: in the Holy Land, in the wild and frozen world of the eastern Baltic and within the bounds of their own Scandinavian realms. God’s Hammer is full of the adventure, horror, and madness associated with the Crusades, yet it exists in a world that remained inspired by the Viking heroes of the past. The focus throughout is on the deeds and experiences of the Scandinavians themselves; of the change they wrought upon the people and places they encountered, and the way in which the experience of Holy War transformed the self-image and mentality of those who prosecuted it and shaped the societies that gave rise to and sustained it.
A commanding history of how the Vikings and their descendants in medieval Scandinavia took up arms—and the cross—in pursuit of fortune, power, empire, and, occasionally, salvation. In 1861, the archaeologist James Farrer excavated a grass-grown mound on the Orkney Islands off the north coast of Scotland. He discovered a Neolithic tomb that had once provided shelter for the prehistoric dead. He also found evidence that many centuries earlier, Norse-speaking tomb-breakers had entered the mound and left dozens of inscriptions, one of which stood out: "Crusaders broke into this barrow." The world of the Viking north and the era of the Crusades sit apart from one another in the imagination, divided by the mental gulf created by the Norman Conquest. The Vikings are seen as a phenomenon of the Dark Ages, a time of unreconstructed barbarism and pagan menace, drenched in blood-sacrifice and presided over by grim gods; the Crusades on the other hand are squarely medieval, an outgrowth of the color, pageantry and romance of an era of knights, cathedrals, castles and bright heraldry: an age of violence, certainly, but glossed with faith and chivalry. Both images are false, of course, created and compounded by centuries of historiographical habit. From the tenth century onward, the men of the north were as likely to be found killing in the name of Christ as they were to be pillaging the monasteries of Britain, Ireland and France. And, by the eleventh and twelfth centuries, the swords of Scandinavia were turned with frequency and fervor against the perceived enemies of God: in the Holy Land, in the wild and frozen world of the eastern Baltic and within the bounds of their own Scandinavian realms. God’s Hammer is full of the adventure, horror, and madness associated with the Crusades, yet it exists in a world that remained inspired by the Viking heroes of the past. The focus throughout is on the deeds and experiences of the Scandinavians themselves; of the change they wrought upon the people and places they encountered, and the way in which the experience of Holy War transformed the self-image and mentality of those who prosecuted it and shaped the societies that gave rise to and sustained it.

More About Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre

Find everything in-store including new, used and children’s books, music, movies, games and toys. Visit Coles today to find the perfect gift, or a novel for yourself. COVID-19 UPDATE: Open | Regular Centre Hours

Find Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre in Vernon, BC

Visit Coles at Village Green Shopping Centre in Vernon, BC
Powered by Adeptmind