Harold's fyrd were ready to defend
England's southern coast all through
the spring and summer of 1066, but
as September came, the fyrd had to
be disbanded for the harvest. By
mid-September, Hardrada and Tostig
had launched their invasion, which
Harold heard about on 19th
September.
Reasons for it
Morcar, Earl of Northumbria, and his
elder brother Edwin, Earl of Mercia, had
gathered an army to defend the North.
Hardrada and Tostig had landed with
10,000 warriors on the River Humber
and then marched up towards York.
Morcar and Edwin decided to meet
them in open battle at Gate Fulford
rather than defend the fortified city
of York.
Events of it
Edwin and Morcar were outnumbered
As the English shield wall surged forward
against Tostig's weaker troops, Hardrada
hit the English troops with his best warriors
from the side {a clever flanking tactic}
Thousands of English troops were
killed or wounded, making them
unavaliable to fight against the
Norman invasion. Hardrada and Tostig
took many English hostages.
Harold was forced to come north to deal with
Hardrada and Tostig, with consequencesfor
the Battle of Hastings.
The English were positioned with marshland
behind them, which meant that when they were
pushed back they became stuck in mud and were
massacred.
Although leaving the southern coast turned out to be
a terrible decision for Harold II, there were good
reasons at the time to think the threat of invasion
from Normandy had passed for 1066. The Channel
was notorious for winter storms, making a
September crossing extremely risky. The wind was
also still blowing from the north when Harold set off,
thus keeping William bottled up in port in Normandy.
Stamford Bridge
Having led a rapid march to
the north, gathering troops
along the way, Harold's army
surprised the Viking army at
Stamford Bridge.
Harold was victorious.
Both Hardrada and
Tostig were killed in the
battle.
The Vikings had left their
armour with their ships. The
English broke their shield
wall.
Significance
King Harold achieved a
great victory, defending
England from invasion.
However, William invaded in
the south while Harold was
in the north.
Harold had to rapidly
move south again, tiring
his housecarls.
Harold's victory may
have made him
complacent about
William's threat.
The battles in the north may have
prevented troops reaching Hastings
from Mercia and Northumbria.
Hastings
Norman Knights V. English
housecarls.
Norman knights- ADVANTAGES --
Highly trained, heavily-armoured
mounted knights could launch
devastating charges using their height
advantage to beat down foes.
DISADVANTAGES -- horses were vulnerable to
attack, advantages of a cavalry charge were
lost if horses had to run uphill.
English housecarls - ADVANTAGES
-- a disciplined shield wall was very
hard to break. Housecarls knew how
to fight together and their axes
were highly effective.
DISADVANTAGES -- once
the shield wall began to
break, housecarls were
vunerable to cavalry and
archer attacks.
Norman foot soldiers V.
English fyrds.
William's foot soldiers were a
mixture of Normans and mercenaries
from across Europe. There were
lightly armoured archers and
crossbowmen and heavily armoured
foot soldiers. Foot soldiers may not
have trained with knights, making
coordinated attacks difficult.
While thegns had
good weapons,
many of Harold's
general fyrd
would have had
farm tools and
long knives. There
were few archers,
General fyrdsmen
were not well
trained.
Key events
2) Harold's army
was able to
position itself
along a ridge at
the top of a hill.
That meant that
William had to
attack up hill.
1) William's
scouts
spotted
Harold's
advancing
army - Harold
failed to
achieve a
surprise
attack.
3) The battle lasted eight hours - a
very long time for a medieval battle.
This was perhaps because the two
sides were quite evenly matched.
There were different phases to the
battle.
4) William's archers were first to atack, but the
archers had to stay out of the English javelin
range and the English shield wall knew how to
catch the arrows on their shields.
5) William's foot soldiers and knights
were beaten back by the shield wall
initially. The English housecarls did
great damage to horses and men
with their two-handed axes.
6) At one point the Norman army was
panicking that William had been killed.
William tipped back his helmet to
show he was still alive.
7) A feigned retreat {or a real retreat}
meant English fyrdsmen left the shield
wall to chase after retreating Normans.
The English were then surrounded and
cut down.
8) The shield wall was
gradually thinned out.
Norman knights then
charged through it and
caused great damage.
Norman archers also
became more effective as
the shield wall failed.
9) Harold
and his
brothers,
Gyrth and
Leofwine,
and their
housecarls,
made final
stands at
the top of
the hill,
fighting to
the death.
Harold and
his brothers
died.
10) The rest of
the English
army then ran
for it. The
Bayeux
Tapestry ends
with the
words {in
Latin} : 'and
the English
turned and
fled'.