The
Viking
Age
is
the
name
of
the
period
between
793
A.D
and
1066
A.D
in
Scandinavia.
This
reflects
to
the
latter
half
of
the
early
Iron
Age.
During
this
period,
Scandinavian
warriors
and
traders
--
called
Vikings
--
traded,
raided,
plundered
and
explored
large
parts
of
Europe
the
Middle
East,
northern
Africa
and
according
to
some
sources
also
America.
The
exact
beginning
of
the
Viking
Age
is
commonly
set
at
at
793
when
Vikings
attacked
the
British
island
Lindisfarne
and
its
end
is
marked
by
the
failed
invasion
attempt
on
England
by
Harald
Hårdråde
in
1066.
The
Viking
longboats
were
uniquely
suited
to
both
deep
and
shallow
waters,
thus
extending
the
reach
of
Viking
raiders
not
only
along
coastlines,
but
also
to
areas
along
the
banks
of
major
rivers.
Rurik
founded
the
first
Russian
state
with
a
capital
at
Novgorod.
Vikings
continued
south
on
rivers
to
the
Black
Sea
and
then
on
to
Constantinople.
France
was
particularly
hard-hit
by
these
raiders,
who
could
sail
down
the
Seine
with
near
impunity.
The
region
now
known
as
Normandy
was
rendered
practically
uninhabitable
by
the
depradations
of
these
recurring
raids.
Eventually,
the
French
king
Charles
the
Simple
was
able
to
make
an
agreement
with
Hrolf
Ganger,
later
named
Rollo.
Charles
gave
Hrolf
the
title
of
Duke
and
granted
him
and
his
followers
possession
of
the
ravaged
land
of
Normandy.
In
return,
Hrolf
swore
fealty
to
Charles,
converted
to
Christianity,
and
undertook
to
defend
the
northern
region
of
France
against
the
incursions
of
other
Vikings.
The
results
were,
in
a
historical
sense,
rather
ironic;
several
generations
later,
the
Norman
descendants
of
these
Viking
settlers
not
only
identified
themselves
as
French,
but
carried
the
French
language
and
culture
into
England
during
the
Norman
Conquest.