The period referred to as the Viking Age
dates from around AD 800 to 1050. Wherever they lived, the Viking-age
Scandinavians shared common features such as house forms, jewelry, tools, and
other everyday equipment. When the Vikings settled in York, they clearly had
trouble saying the Saxon name for the city: Eoforwic (which is thought to mean
wild boar settlement), so decided to call it Jorvik (thought to mean wild boar
creek).
The Vikings had been raiding the coasts of England from the late
8th century, but in 865 a Viking army landed with the intention of conquering
rather than just raiding. The Vikings dominated York from the late Stn
century until the Norman Conquest. One of the more famous rulers from this era
was kthelwold, was the son of /Ethelred, the king of Wessex in the mid to late
9th century. Alfred the Great became king from this line.
Jorvik was part of a busy international
trading system, with thriving workshops, and well-established mints. However,
throughout Viking-age Scandinavia, the main occupation was the production of
food. Farming, fishing, and trapping were important community activities, and
the people were largely self-sufficient. This was possible due to the fertile
soils, good pasture, and well-stocked fishing grounds of the area.
Raiding and pillaging were a large part of
Viking history. When a Viking sacked a monastery, he literally hit the jackpot
since the local magnates used them for personal storage centers. These
religious centers were also where imported goods,
York Castle is a fortified complex in the city of York. The
complex includes castles, prisons, courts, and other buildings which were built
over the last nine centuries on the River Foss. While most of the complex is no
longer standing, the medieval Normal castle keep ruins are commonly known as
Clifford's Tower, which still stands today.
York was a Viking capital city in the 10th and 11th
centuries. In 1068, on William the Conqueror's first northern expedition after
the Norman Conquest, he built several castles across the north-east of England,
including one at York.
In 1190, York Castle was the location of one
of the worst pogroms in England during the medieval period. English Jews were
subject to considerable religious prejudice and primarily worked from towns and
cities in which there was a local royal castle that could provide them with
protection in the event of attacks from the majority Christian population.
By the 13th century, there was a well-established
system of castle guards in place, under which various lands around York were
granted in return for the provision of knights to protect the castle. King John
used York Castle extensively during his reign, using the keep as his personal
quarters for his own security. When the Military Order of the Knights Templar
was dissolved in England in 1307, York Castle was used to hold many of the
arrested knights.
In the 15th century, York Castle fell into
increasing disrepair. Richard III recognized the problem, and in 1483 he had
some of the most decrepit structures removed, but he died at the Battle of
Bosworth Field before the work to replace those could begin. By the 16th
century, it had become traditional to execute traitors by hanging them from the
top of Clifford's Tower.
The deterioration of York Castle continued into the reign of
Elizabeth I, and Robert Redhead, the tower keeper, became infamous at the time
for taking pieces of the castle and selling off the stonework for his own
profit. By the 18th century, the Female Prison and county jail were
combined to become the Debtors' Prison.
Kirkgate is a recreated Victorian street which has become the most
iconic part of York Castle Museum. The street is one of the oldest recreated
indoor streets of its kind in the world and the first to be opened in Britain.
Each shop and business on Kirkgate is named after a real business that operated
in late Victorian York. Some shops, like Banks Music and Sessions Printers, are
names still operating today; others are within living memory for many
residents, like Leak and Thorp Drapers shop.
Some of the shops sold to the rich, like
George Britton's grocers, importers of fine teas and coffees; others like
Thomas Ambler's grocers to the working class. Some did both —John Saville,
Pharmaceutical Chemist, would sell to leading citizens but also worked as a
surrogate doctor to the poor. An alleyway off Kirkgate, called Rowntree
Snicket, aims to portray the poverty of Victorian York. It includes a working
class
York Castle Museum is housed in 18th century prison buildings. Inside you can experience the crooked prison and meet their most notorious prisoner: the legendary highwayman, Dick Turpin. York Castle Prison focuses on the lives of eight former inmates, including the last woman to be burnt at the stake in Yorkshire, a Luddite, a notorious turnkey, a man who was beaten so badly in prison he died, and a young tearaway who went on to lead a successful life in Australia.
- Viking helmet
- Viking shield
- Viking longship
- Arctic animals craft
- Sugar cube igloos craft
- Seabird unit study & Seabird
- Vikings unit study
- Viking Adventure
- Usborne Time Traveler
- Viking Ships At Sunrise & Writing Pack
- Viking Tales
- Early Explorers (elementary)
- Early Explorers (preschool - K)
- The Usborne Book of Explorers from Columbus to Armstrong
- Viking Voyages board game (older kids)
Explore the art, history, geography, food, and culture of England in this cross-curricular unit study….perfect for families getting ready to travel abroad or folks who want to travel via unit studies! Each stop along the roadschooling trip covers a different facet of history and culture with unit information, resources, worksheets, activities, and more...
YES! I want 122 pages of FUN STUDIES!
- o Introduction & Geography of England
- o Portsmouth
- o The Mary Rose & naval archaeology
- o London
- o The British Museum & archaeology
- o The Wallace Collection & medieval history
- o The Tower of London / London Bridge & the Tudors
- o Buckingham Palace & royalty
- o Victoria and Albert Museum & medieval art
- o Thames / Globe Theater & Shakespeare
- o Sherlock Holmes Museum & British Literature
- o Abbey Road & British Invasion
- o Leeds
- o Royal Armouries & middle ages
- o York
- o Jorvik & Vikings
- o York Castle & archaeology
- o Haltwhistle
- o Hadrian’s Wall & ancient Celts
- o Vindolanda & archaeology
- o Alnwick
- o Alnwick Castle & architecture
- o Poison Garden & herbs
- o Barter Books & WW2 history
- o Alnmouth
- o North Sea & train history
- o Newcastle o Segedunum & ancient Romans
- o Tips & Tricks for Travelling in England
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