- Battle of Fulford
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Fulford
partof=Viking Conquest of England
caption=A map of the battle
date=20 September 1066
place=Fulford ,York ,England
territory=Norwegian gain Fulford and later York
result=Norwegian Victory
combatant1=Norwegians
combatant2=Anglo-Saxon English
commander1=Harald HardradaTostig
commander2=Morcar of Northumbria and his brotherEdwin, Earl of Mercia
strength1=unknown, possibly 7000
strength2=unknown, probably of about equal size to the Norwegians
casualties1=Unknown
casualties2=UnknownThe Battle of Fulford took place at the village of
Fulford , nearYork inEngland onSeptember 20 1066 , when KingHarald III of Norway andTostig , his English ally, fought and defeated the Northern Earls Edwin and Morcar. Tostig was able to identify the most valuable hostages afterwards, thus ensuring lasting compliance from the defeated English. Tostig was Harold Godwinson's brother who was banished. He allied with Harald and promised him the crown. In return Tostig would be given his own English lands. Tostig and Morcar were mortal enemies because Morcar took Tostig's place of being Earl of Northumbria.Edwin had brought some soldiers to the east to prepare for an invasion by the Norwegians. The battle started with the English spreading their forces out at Germany Beck to secure their flanks. On the right flank was the River Ouse, and on the left flank was the Fordland, a swampy area. The disadvantage to the position was that it gave Harald higher ground which was perfect for seeing the battle from a distance. Another disadvantage was that if one flank gave way, the other one would be in trouble. If the Anglo-Saxon army had to retreat, it would not be able to because of the marshlands. They would have to hold off the Norwegians as long as possible.
Harald's army approached from three routes to the south. Harald lined his army up to oppose the Anglo-Saxons, but he knew it would take hours for all of his troops to arrive. His least experienced troops were sent to the right, and his best troops on the riverbank.
Background Information
When the Anglo-Saxon king
Edward the Confessor died in 1066 with no child, and thus no heir to the throne, it created a power vacuum into which three competing interests laid claim to King of England.The first was
Harald III Sigurdsson ofNorway who pressed his claim on the basis of an agreement between his predecessor and nephew Magnus andHarthacanute that the last of them to die should inherit England, Norway andDenmark - the same claim that Harald had used to press his claims on Denmark. The second wasWilliam the Bastard , theDuke ofNormandy , because of his blood ties toEthelred the Unready . The third was an Anglo-Saxon by the name ofHarold Godwinson who had been elected by the Anglo-SaxonWitenagemot of England to be king. The stage was set for a battle between the three. However, the Norwegians were the first side to initiate hostilities. They invaded England before the Normans, due to the bad weather conditions in theEnglish Channel that delayed Duke William's invasion.English charge
The English struck first, advancing on the Norwegian army before it could be fully deployed. Morcar's troops pushed Harald's back into the
marshland s with their attack, making progress against the weaker section of the Norwegian line. However, this initial success proved insufficient for victory to the English army, as the Norwegians brought the force of the better of their troops to bear upon them, still fresh against the weakened Anglo-Saxons.Harald's countermove
Harald brought more of his troops from the right flank to attack the centre, and sent more men to the river. The men were outnumbered, but they kept pushing and shoving the defenders back. Their efforts worked and the Anglo-Saxons were forced to give ground. Edwin's soldiers who were defending the bank now were cut off from the rest of the army by the marsh, so they headed back to the city to make a final stand. Within another hour, the men on the beck were forced off by the Norwegians. Other invading Norwegians, who were still arriving, found a way to get around the thick fighting and opened a third front against the Anglo-Saxons. Outnumbered and outmaneuvered, the defenders were forced into defeat. Edwin and Morcar however, managed to survive the fight.
The remaining men in Fulford surrendered under the promise that the victors would not loot their city. The treaty was kept, as King Harald turned his attention towards
York .Consequences of the loss
The battle of Fulford did not yield a huge gain or loss to either side, but fits into the important chain of events of the English Autumn of 1066. As a section of the total force of the nation, the English losses were not decisive and the Norwegians retained a sizeable army, prepared for an attack on York. The
Battle of Stamford Bridge ended these designs, with the defeat of Harald's army, and it is unlikely (though not totally implausible, given the vague data), that the losses at Fulford were a significant contributing factor to this later defeat. Fulford was not to be the battle to end all Scandinavian attempts at English conquest, and neither was Stamford Bridge -Sweyn II Estridsson of Denmark sent an army to England after the Norman Conquest, but was bought off by the Normans. Had the Norwegian invasion been defeated at Fulford Gate, King Harold Godwinson would have been forced into neither the taxing marches nor the battle losses that the defeat at Fulford thrust upon him, altering significantly his army at theBattle of Hastings .It might have required more than was possible from the outnumbered English army, but if the Battle of Fulford had gone the other way, 1066 could have been a very different year for the Anglo Saxon people of Britain, and the history of England, and the whole
United Kingdom could have run another course entirely.External links
* [http://www.ibattles.co.uk Drama Documentary about the Battle of Fulford]
* [http://www.battlefieldstrust.com/resource-centre/viking/battleview.asp?BattleFieldId=52 Details from the Battlefields Trust]
* [http://www.battleoffulford.org.uk/a_battle.htm Battle of Fulford]
* [http://www.battle1066.com/g122.shtml Battle of Fulford]
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