A rich history of the years leading up to 1066 when Vikings, Anglo-Saxons and Normans vied for the English crown. A tale of loyalty, treason and military might.
In a saga reminiscent of Game of Thrones and The Last Kingdom , Battle for the Island Kingdom reveals the life-and-death struggle for power which changed the course of history. The six decades leading up to 1066 were defined by bloody wars and intrigues, in which three peoples vied for supremacy over the island kingdom. In this epic retelling, Don Hollway ( The Last Viking ) recounts the clashes of Vikings, Anglo-Saxons and Normans, their warlords and their conniving queens.
It begins with the Viking Cnut the Great, forging three nations into his North Sea Empire while his Saxon wife Aelfgifu rules in his stead and schemes for England's throne. Her archenemy is Emma of Normandy, widow of Saxon king Aethelred, claiming Cnut's realm in exchange for her hand in marriage. Their sons become rivals, pawns in their mothers' wars until they can secure their own destinies. And always in the shadows is Godwin of Wessex, playing all sides to become the power behind the throne until his son Harold emerges as king of all of England.
But Harold's brother Tostig turns traitor, abandons the Anglo-Saxons and joins the army of the last great Viking, Harald Hardrada, where together they meet their fate at the battle of Stamford Bridge. And all this time watching from across the water is William, the Bastard, fighting to secure his own Norman dukedom, but with an eye on the English crown.
There are two types of people who will love Don Hollway's Battle for the Island Kingdom. First, people who go down Wikipedia rabbit holes and end up on an article like, 'List of English Monarchs." Then, you start reading about these people and see a cluster where a bunch of kings keep dying really early in their reigns. You ask yourself, "What the heck was going on here?" And yes, I am this type of person.
The second type of person who would love this book is pretty much everyone else. There is war, back-stabbing, polygamy, politics, poisonings, and a saint or two. What's not to love? Hollway focuses specifically on the years 1000-1066 in England. Why these dates? Well, any history nerd (and/or British person) knows that in 1066 William the Conqueror decided to...conquer. But before that is a time period which does not get as many books written about it probably because it is very difficult to untangle the absolute mess that was the monarchy. Seriously, they recycled so many names. Luckily, Hollway keeps everything clear and concise while telling a great story.
Come on, don't you want to learn more about Eadwig All-Fair? How could you not?
(This book was provided as an advance copy by Netgalley and Osprey Publishing.)
In all honesty I was a bit conflicted about the beginning sections of this book.The many characters and storylines between the Vikings and the Anglo Saxons was rather difficult to follow.The writing was often scholarly and in some sections weren't always clear and concise to me.However,by the time we reach the Norman invaders I was hooked on the battle scenes and the many details of William the Conqueror's climb to power.The author also managed to show off William's personality which I found quite fascinating.The last sections absolutely made up for the beginning and I would love to read something else on this topic from this author in the future.
Pausing to consider the implications of the machinations of all the players - Vikings, Angl0-Saxon, and Norman - during the six decades prior to the climatic battles of 1066, I often sent up a prayer of thanks for not having lived during that period of devastation, treachery, pillage, and brutal battles. Portraying sixty years of conflicts, this detailed and engrossing book brings the historical characters to life amid an epic struggle for a kingdom in medieval England. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC - which allowed me to post this honest and voluntary review.
A digital version of this book was provided to me by Netgalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.
This is an expansive history of a period lesser known in English history. Don Holloway guides the reader with ease through a sometimes complicated array of historical figures, their accomplishments, and often their downfalls. The book is well-researched yet is simplistically written for the common reader who may not be as acquainted with Anglo-Saxon history. In addition, the structure of the book is well done, the choice of chronological order is the most obvious choice for a historical analysis such as this one, yet, Holloway knows when to provide glimpses of past or future events in the timeline so the book reads more at times like a grand epic novel than that of non-fiction. This book is an excellent addition to a small collection of literature on the Anglo-Saxon period for the everyday reader and every budding historian should find a place for it on their shelves.
A fascinating book. A whirlwind story of regime change upon regime change, from Vikings to Anglo-Saxons to Vikings to Normans. Back and forth, up and down the tale unfolds, washing up on the English beach, then swishing back to the European Continent and back to England again. The interplay, interacting, conflict and control-seeking kept me turning pages, excited about each new chapter. Fascinating book!
And the tale does three things for readers. First, it reminds us that this is normal history and what normal world events look like. Here, inside the 21st Century, we have been coddled for the last 70 to 80 years, and have quickly forgotten that most of world history is littered with blood, dead bodies, and burnt out hamlets. And as most of the world returns to "normal" in the years ahead, we're already starting to see more of the same.
Next, this volume shows how related we are to our ancestry and ancestral actions. As Americans living in the "make it up as you go along" age, where we remake ourselves in our own image, this kind of thinking is utterly foreign to us. But Hollway has done a fine job reminding readers how we all stand on the shoulders of those who have long gone before us.
Lastly, for those who are Bible readers, this story can break through our modernist/post-modernist sensitivities, to remind us how violent the world really is in almost all of human history. After reading this work, then the next time you step into Joshua through 2 Kings, you will go, "Ah. Now I get it! Now I see why God put the stipulations down that he did to restrain such bloodlust. Oh, now I see how the flux and flow of turf wars imperiled common folk all around. Yes, now I get it!" I'm sure the author will find my application a bit surprising, but it was a very helpful rehearsal of history that puts so much of the human record back into its brutal context. This was truly a fascinating work. I highly recommend it.
The period between the new millennium in the year 1000 and the Norman Conquest of 1066 was a time of enormous upheaval and unrest in England, as the Anglo Saxons, Vikings and Normans all competed for the Crown. It's a story of war, intrigue, politics and betrayal that reads like Game of Thrones and yet in many ways it's a period less familiar to us (certainly to me) in any great detail than 1066 itself.
It's a very complicated story and as a result it took me a while to get really engrossed and to get my head around all those involved, particularly as the Anglo Saxon and Viking names are so unfamiliar to me beyond the most well known. However, the author does an excellent job of laying it all out and the further I got, the more my mind became attuned to the names and it got a lot clearer! It's certainly a fascinating period which has had a huge impact on the country's history and I found it intriguing to think how different things may have been with a different result.
The research is immaculate, a combination of sources from the time and other academic works, and I was particularly pleased that the role played by the women involved and the influence they had was a full part of the story told. As someone with limited knowledge of the period, I found it a fascinating introduction and it's whet my appetite to find out more, always a good sign for a history book!
Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for the copy in return for an honest review.
It’s fun to read, but says little about Aethelred, Cnut, and 1066 that hasn’t been repeated a thousand times before. The best mass market history books make a better attempt to engage with what modern historians are working on. Take a look at the acknowledgements here: not a single historian is thanked, mostly just publishers, editors, and agents. Same deal with the endorsements and blurbs: all people/publications that don’t write history. Nobody looked over this book except people whose main interest is making money off it, which explains why it’s unoriginal and prematurely outdated. Seeking advice from even a single expert could have made this far more balanced.
The author also favors later, less reliable medieval sources that are more colorful. I highly suspect this is because they are more “exciting,” but they are sometimes plopped down without any discussion of why those sources frame events the way they do. It gets old reading exaggerated stuff from Walter Map and William of Jumieges instead of from better, earlier sources. The bibliography is another giveaway that the book has taken some shortcuts. The author is using some public domain translations that are so old they almost need their own translations.
Look, no one is expecting a book with a title like “Battle for the Island Kingdom” be a hard-hitting academic work, and some sections are more or less fine. But how is this any different than the zillion other 1066 books? It might get someone interested in the era for the very first time, but that’s about it.
Hollway has done a thorough job of reviewing the source material and has put together a very good history of the period. I have read a number of histories of the period dealing with one or another king or the Norman Conquest, but this is the first I've read to treat the whole as a whole. It was quite enlightening.
While it does seem to be very well-researched, it is written in a more popular style than many histories of the period. That's not a drawback, it's a way for the author to make the history more accessible.
The only thing about this style is the rather "cliff-hanger-ish" end to each chapter.
"The child was named William." for example. C'mon, we know who the child is, we don't need a "dum-dum-DAAAH!" sentence at the end of the chapter. It's OK once in a while but the technique wears out quickly. But, that's a stylistic quibble.
Keeping track of battles, warriors, and frequently shifting alliances makes this book a challenging read. The petty squabblings of neighboring, overlapping kingdoms led to perpetual warfare. In addition, the time period is fraught with barbarism, cruelty, and torture at a scale almost unimaginable today. Life was indeed brutal, frequently nasty, and often short.
Keeping track of medieval history is difficult, because primary sources are frequently in contraction to each other and are heavily biased. The truth depends on precisely what cloistered monk owed allegiance to what king or noble personage. The Norman conquest at Hastings could have gone any number of different ways, but the fact that it proceeded as it did is due as much to luck and happenstance as it is to superior skill on the battlefield.
I knew that 1066 is the year, Battle of Hasting was fought where King Harold Godwinson was slain and William of Normandy became king of England. And not much more.
Of course, I have some ideas about the Anglo Saxon England by reading Bernard Cornwell books about Uhtred of Bebbanburg. But those are mostly fictions and it took place about 100 years ago. I knew nothing about the time period which this book covered 1000-1066.
And as a history buff, I was eager to dive into this book and I am not disappointed. This is the whirlwind of treacheries, scheming, wars, pillages, alliances, massacres – real life Game of Thrones.
It is a little bit complex for me to narrate the story here. But I bet if you are into medieval history, you will like this book.
It will be better if you take notes during your read, just to keep up with unfamiliar Anglo-Saxon and Northman names.
In the six decades leading up to 1066, England endured a chaotic power struggle between Vikings, Anglo-Saxons, and Normans that would forever reshape its future.
This gripping history chronicles the battles, political maneuvers, and domineering figures of this dramatic era. Meet cunning Viking warlords and belligerent Saxon kings. Encounter ruthless Norman dukes and strategic queens like Emma of Normandy who altered dynasties through marriage.
Exploring sixty years of violent conflicts, this thorough and engrossing book illuminates the epic struggle for dominance in medieval England.
Thanks, NetGalley, for the ARC I received. This is my honest and voluntary review.
Saga Englands frá árinu 1000 til 1066. Mjög forvitnileg og mjög flókin saga.
Þarna voru Engilsaxar, Víkingar og menn frá Normandy að berjast um yfirráðin á Englandi. Það var sjaldan friður og mjög margar orustur og margir drepnir. Bara það að fylgjast með hver var kóngur hverju sinni var flókið.
Það koma óendanlega margir við sögu og nöfnin eru mörg hver lík, svo það reyndi alveg á að athyglina að vita hver var hver. Það var líka nóg af leynimakki og fólk sveik hvort annað unnvörpum, þannig að það var líka flókið að halda utan um það hver væri í hvaða liði hverju sinni.
Sem sagt, maður þurfti að hafa sig allan við að fylgjast með – en það var alveg þess virði.
A vivid and expert account of one of the most turbulent century's in English history, the battle of these isles during this period has spawned an industry based on it. I feel like Hollway's narrative account draws you closer to the action and gives you an interesting insight into the characters involved during this period, especially Godwin. Definitely a good starting point for those wanting to have a clarification on the politics and players during the years 1000-1066. For those who know already, it gives you a fresh perspective on things and how certain decisions, had they been handles differently, would have re-written the course of history.
The majority of history books are simply a dry recitation of facts—Don Holloway’s writing is not in that vein. I enjoyed the telling of this period of history. Although, the leaders were brutal with blindings and cutting off of hands and feet and, as usual, the common people suffered because of competition among the nobles. Nothing was honest or honorable, but always claimed to be. I was always a William fan, but Harold was chosen to be king in the traditional manner by the witan and should have remained so. William was an incredible force, and his ambitions created what is most dear to me—English.
It helped that I have immersed myself in a bit of other media before reading this, which helped keep my head somewhat above water in tracking the characters. It is hard, but probably worthwhile to include them all, because they demonstrate how interlinked England was with both Scandinavia and Normandy in the lead-up to the Conquest.
Other than Sweyn Godwinson disappearing abruptly from the text, it flowed well together and was a fast read. I am sure there are potential disputes over the sourcing, but Hollway at least gives the impression he did a good job with picking and choosing.
Between the turn of the millennium in the year 1000 and the climactic Battle of Hastings in 1066, the rule of England was a complex process. Between Anglo-Saxons, Danes and Normans, the webs of family ties, loyalty and enemies stretched over the North Sea and the throne changed hands many times. In this book Holloway shows how the separate strands linked and how history was made. It is a complicated tale (many protagonists have similar names) but reads like an Early Medieval epic.
If you are looking for a quick, easy read, this is not the book for you. If you want a detailed, historically accurate account that takes into consideration the various, sometimes contridictory evidence, you will be more than satisficed with this excellent work.
The amazing story of Aethelraed of England and the battles leading up to the Norman Conquest. This book is interesting even if you’ve read a lot about the period.
Don Hollway brings the chaos of eleventh-century England to life in this fascinating work of historical nonfiction. Dividing the book into sections based on the major players (the Vikings, the Normans, the Anglos, and the Saxons), Hollway clearly denotes the years at the beginning of the chapters and does a fantastic job of engaging with the historical record and the relevant documents throughout this compelling book. Hollway’s prose is very concise and engaging, as he has compiled and organized this book in a way which keeps readers engaged with the various battles, rulers, and historical events. Hollway has done a fantastic job in keeping the readers’ attention and limiting potential confusion over the various names and the difficulties of early languages and the translations to modern English. Hollway has also included several fascinating historical women throughout this book such as Emma of Normandy, among others, and he credits these women with some incredible actions and deeds from the chaotic, violent upheavals of the eleventh century British isle. Battle for the Island Kingdom is a great introduction to eleventh century England for new and familiar readers alike, and Hollway has done a fantastic job recreating this incredible, exciting, and wonderful period of history.
Thanks to NetGalley and Osprey Publishing for the advance copy.