|
|||||||||
|
|
The Basic Weapons of the Viking Age Arsenal By Bill Ward Illustration by Richard H. Fay
The sword may be the soul of the warrior, but for much of history such a weapon was out of reach for the common soldier—himself often a non-professional that spent the majority of his time farming or pursuing a trade. The span of the Dark Ages and the Early Middle Ages, stretching from the decline of the Western Roman Empire to the First Crusade (circa AD 500-1100) is marked by a military technology and methodology different from previous and subsequent eras. Gone was the time of the professional, state-sponsored soldier typified by Rome at its peak, while the age of the mounted knight with his finely made weapons and armor of high-quality steel lay centuries in the future. The Viking Age (circa AD 700-1000) was the era of the foot soldier, sometimes an experienced professional raider like the Vikings of the Great Army (9th century), but more often than not a common man who understood war as yet one more duty—or opportunity—in a life of obligations.
Almost as common as the foot soldier’s thrusting spear were the short spears and javelins used by most peoples of the Viking Age, from the poor Irish kern to the wealthy Viking sea-raider. Thrown weapons of this kind were a commonplace for Germanic tribal warriors of the preceding era—as well as that of their paramount enemy, the pilum-throwing roman legionnaire—and such weapons were capable of piercing shields, leather, and linked mail armors. The effectiveness of piercing weapons, and the range advantages of both thrusting and throwing variants of the spear, meant that these weapons were used by warriors of all walks of life—from the humble slave to the King and his retainers.
The axe became the symbol of the elite Varangian Guard of the Byzantine (Eastern Roman) Empire. For centuries, Swedes and other Norseman comprised this semi-mercenary body of soldiers, which made its mark on numerous battles throughout the Eastern Mediterranean. But perhaps the pinnacle of the Dark Age axe was the Danish Bearded-Axe used by the Saxon Huscarls, the elite household troops of the Anglo-Saxon Kings that emerged in the hybrid Saxon-Scandinavian society of the English Danelaw. This massive weapon was as tall as a man, and it is surmised that the huscarls trained to use it in an open-stance, left-handed style so that its strike would come at an enemy’s unshielded side. This weapon was said to be lethal against both armored men and horses at the Battle of Hastings (1066). Many of the Germanic tribes of the Age of Migration (circa AD 400-600) took their name from a particular, favored weapon. The Franks were named for their ubiquitous throwing axe, the francisca, the Lombards (Langobards, meaning ‘long beards’) that settled in Northern Italy were named for their bearded axes, and the Saxons of Frisia owed their name to the heavy, single-edged knives called saxes.
The sax ranged from three to thirty inches or more in length. The smaller versions of it were used more as a utility knife while longer blades were used for heavier tasks (as one might use a machete) and, of course, for warfare. The sax has a straight blade, its unsharpened side slanting abruptly to a point at around two-thirds of its length. The more extreme tapers of this kind are called ‘broken back’ saxes. Most saxes were not of the same quality steel as a pattern-welded sword of this era, and hence tended to be thicker and heavier. Carried in a sheath on the belt, the sax made an excellent weapon of last resort on the battlefield. Some longer versions of this weapon were hilted as swords, and used in the same way, and may have even been constructed along similar lines. Many beautifully inlaid saxes survive from the Dark Ages, and demonstrate that it was a weapon favored by commoner and noble alike. Indeed, in many Dark Age societies the carrying of a knife or other weapon denoted a man’s free status, and would have been a universal mark of one’s social rank.
One of the primary functions of missile weapons in pitched battles was to disrupt the closely packed ranks of a shieldwall formation and make it more vulnerable to frontal assault. William the Conqueror famously used his massed archers to do just that at Hastings in 1066 against a solid formation of Saxon infantry. Fresh from a victory in the north against an invading Norwegian army under Harald Hardrada, Harold Godwinson’s Anglo-Saxon force was perhaps the finest infantry army of the era, an exemplar of the methodologies of the Viking Age. But William’s Normans (themselves but a few generations removed from Viking settlers in northern France—’Norman’ literally means north man) represented something new. It was at Hastings that the Viking Age culminated in a new battlefield synthesis with the effective deployment of what would prove to be the dominant weapon system of the coming era—the armored shock cavalrymen. With the rise of the medieval knight the importance of the amateur infantryman would decline until the Hundred Years War of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and the weapons and armor of the Dark Ages would undergo a rapid evolution. |
|
||||||
|
|||||||||