The Danelaw - Alfred vs. Guthrum - Extra History - #1

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The king raised a cup and then stopped. There was a disturbance outside the hall. A drunken quarrel maybe? New guests? Suddenly, the door was kicked open and OH HEY! WHAT UP Y'ALL!? IT'S GUTHRAAAAAAM!!!

Yep. That sounds like Total War AI to me.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 73 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Ason42 ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 05 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Nice! I love extra credits, and the video they did in collaboration with CA for Rome 2 (The Punic Wars) was amazing. My wife (who's not exactly one to love history) loved watching it, I can't wait to see the whole series :D

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 41 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Edril ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 05 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

For those of you who don't know, CA actually kinda-sorta-kickstarted this series by sponsoring a video about the Punic Wars to promote Total War Rome 2 back in 2013. It's since become a series covering parts of history that don't get a lot of attention and I'd recommend checking out some of the other videos they've done. My personal favorite is the series on Admiral Yi Sun-sin, who basically saved Korea singlehandedly when it was invaded by Japan.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 38 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/pocketlint60 ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 06 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

So for a time, Alfred was Batman (but with an army).

Instead of just his butler.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 13 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Jonnydodger ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 05 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Just FYI, Extra Credits is great to get you interested in history, but I wouldn't take everything they say for truth since they get alot of stuff just plain wrong, and they get super defensive and salty about it.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 15 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Frathier ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 06 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Fun fact, that channel started doing history rather than their original beacuse CA sponsored them to make a punic war video.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 9 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Pasan90 ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 06 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

Extra History/Extra Credits in general is amazing and enthusiast of either gaming or history should check them out.

They have history material related to multiple Total War settings like the Sengoku Jedi of Shogun and the Justinian/Belisariusโ€™s western expedition of Attila.

They also have gaming material talking specifically about the TW games since Rome 2.

Seriously if you are in this subreddit youโ€™ll find stuff to like from them.

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 5 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/KarmaticIrony ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 06 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

[removed]

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 7 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/[deleted] ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 05 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies

nice

๐Ÿ‘๏ธŽ︎ 2 ๐Ÿ‘ค๏ธŽ︎ u/Neutral_Fellow ๐Ÿ“…๏ธŽ︎ Apr 05 2018 ๐Ÿ—ซ︎ replies
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The year is 865. Dragon ships push up on the shores of East Anglia. For 72 years, since the Viking raid on Lindisfarne, Northmen have ravaged the coasts of Britain. But this is no raid. It's the great heathen army. They come seeking farmland, driven from Scandinavia by crop failures and political instability. They are not here for treasure; they are here to found a nation. [Song: Birth of the People from Actraiser] This series is brought to you by a Total War saga: Thrones of Britannia. A new strategy game set during this time period. Ten bloody years pass. The great army has toppled thrones and slain kings. Of the four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms that existed on their arrival, two have been overthrown, and a third is melting away like winter ice. Only Wessex still stands. King Halfdan, the great army's leader, has decided to settle and dig in around the Danish held city of York. He had invaded Wessex two years before, but the young king, Alfred, had paid him a Danegeld, a tributary bribe never to return. But the army's other king, Guthrum, had taken no Danegeld, and made no vow, and Guthrum craved a kingdom of his own. He had also been watching this young king, Alfred, and knew his position was precarious. Halfdan had nearly finished him off. The Wessex military was based on a fyrd system, peasant militias, which took time to call up and would desert if held too long. That made Alfred slow to respond, and weak during sieges. Alfred also had some pretty bad scouts. Guthrum's scouts though, were skilled. Very skilled. He sent them to scour Wessex, and they quickly found a way in. In midwinter, Guthrum's army slipped out of their base at Cambridge. They used back roads and low ground. Anyone who encountered them did not live to tell the story. Guthrum marched a hundred and seventy miles [273km] into Wessex, straight to the town of Wareham without raising a single alarm. The vikings fell upon Wareham without warning, sacking it for provisions and holing up in its earthen fort. Gutrhum hadn't marched all this way just to sack a town. Wareham was to be a beachhead. Once his allies marshaled their fleet - - the largest since the great army first arrived - - a hundred and twenty dragon ships would come to join him. Alfred could see what Guthrum was up to, though. He raised the fyrd, and bottled Wareham up in a siege. And that stalemate would continue for nearly a year. Guthrum's provisions drained, and Alfred's militia eventually started to trickle home. And those a hundred and twenty dragon ships were still nowhere to be seen. Tiring of this, Alfred offered to negotiate. Gutrhum accepted, and went to haggle with this young king. Each sized the other up. "All right, here's the deal." said Alfred. "I will pay you this Danegeld if you march north and never return to Wessex." "Okay," said Guthrum. Okay, that was too easy. Alfred didn't buy it. "Swear it to me on these holy relics." "What, this box of bones?" "Uh. Yeah. Okay, I swear. Sure." "And! And! We'll also exchange high ranking hostages, "and I get to pick. "I want them." "You--you mean these possible rivals to my power? "[pbbf] Sure, all yours, pal. "Uh... A-and--and! And, you have to swear to me on your arm ring, the one dedicated to Thor." "That's not a thing, but whatever makes you happy, kid." Money and hostages changed hands, and Guthrum prepared to move out. Alfred celebrated. This Guthrum was a different kind of Dane: one he could work with. Halfdan had negotiated for a year before coming to terms, but this was solved within days. Perhaps God had finally begun to turn the hearts of these pagans. And it was right around that moment that Gutrhum slaughtered his hostages, killed all of Alfred's horses, and rode hard west to take Exeter. Now, he had a fresh fortress full of provisions, and could hold out another year. The fleet could just as easily meet him at Exeter. And if it had landed at Wareham as originally planned, well, then they would just snare Alfred between them. Alfred had essentially just paid Guthrum to move house. But the fleet still hadn't come. Months passed. Food dwindled. Warriors got restless. Being under siege for well over a year will start to wear anybody out. Alfred, again, offered to negotiate, and Guthrum agreed. "Still waiting on that giant viking fleet?" Alfred asked. "No." "Maybe." "Why?" "Because, turns out, it got lost in a fog! "And it wrecked on the coast. "It's gone! I guess you shouldn't have broken a vow sworn on holy relics," "It's gone! I guess you shouldn't have broken a vow sworn on holy relics, *kid*?" This time, there was no haggling. Guthrum aggreed to all Alfred's terms. He gave up hostages, and took none. Then, he crawled north into Mercia and settled down to plow, cowed and reformed. A new man. Months passed, until 12th night, 877. The Court of Wessex was feasting. Botching things with Guthram had frayed Alfred's reputation with the nobles, and, to help mend the rift, he had gathered the court at Chippenham to renew their oaths. Twelve nights of Christmas toasts and merriment: a celebration of surviving another year. The king raised a cup, and then, stopped. There was a disturbance outside the hall. A drunken quarrel, maybe? New guests? Suddenly, the door was kicked open and OH HEY WHAT UP Y'ALL IT'S GUTHRUUUUM! It was a master stroke, Guthrum's greatest surprise attack. Oh, he had had to bribe a few Wessex noblemen to pull it off, but he had lots of money from that nice fat Danegeld Alfred paid. And, he had timed the strike to fall on 12th night, when the Wessex guards would be celebrating and drunk on Wassail. Where Alfred clearly knew nothing of the Danes, Guthrum had studied his enemy's culture and used it to his advantage. Where was Alfred, anyway? This strike would only be complete when he was captive or dead. But as Guthrum's men turned Chippenham inside out, the young king was nowhere to be found. Ah, he'd probably escaped to the Somerset marshes with an handful of men. No matter. He was dethroned, out of power, ruling from a mire. Alfred could be king of the muck for all Guthrum cared. Because every week Alfred hid, more Wessex noblemen recognized Guthrums claim, and Danish reinforcements were coming. But there was some difficulty. Small parties of Danes did occasionally turn up slaughtered on the road. Anglo-Saxon gangs, possibly remains of the broken army, ransacked camps at night, stealing supplies and weapons. They attacked, then disappeared. Viking tactics. And then, the marauders hit the Wessex nobles who had taken Guthrum's gold, one by one. Stories circulated that Alfred lived. That he was still a ring giver. That he walked abroad, punishing traitors. Guthrum was tied down, repressing small uprisings and responding to these marauders, unable to secure all of Wessex. He needed more men. But when his reinforcements landed at Devon, they met a small force, an elderly lord and his untrained peasants, holding a fort. As the vikings prepared a siege, not even equipped for battle, the peasants sallied out in a desperate, furious assault. Eight hundred Danes lay slain, a whole army, gone. It was almost a relief when Guthrum then heard reports of Alfred gathering an army at Egbert's stone. Finally, the ghost king shows himself. Time to banish him. The armies met at Edington. The Wessex men advanced, shouting prayers to the Virgin, Saint Cuthbert, and rest of their weird Christian gods. The armies exchanged a rain of insults, and then, one of spears. Shield walls met with the sound of a ship's keel striking rocks. The shoving began. Spears probed and struck like viperheads. The Danish line bowed inward. Alfred had numbers on his side, and desperation as well. The Danes could always settle in the conquered lands back East if things went bad, but these Anglo-Saxon men of Wessex had nowhere to retreat to. The Danes broke, cut down as they fled. Guthrum himself rode for Chippenham, with a small party, slamming the gates behind him. Once again, a siege. But this time, the Danes didn't have the food, the men, or the heart. Twelve days later, Guthrum offered to talk. Alfred set the terms. Guthrum must march for East Anglia, and never return. For real this time. And no Danegeld. Further, Guthrum must accept Christian baptism. Alfred would be his godfather. With his life thus rededicated to god, Guthrum would rule East Anglia as a friend of Wessex. Guthrum agreed. After all, maybe there was something to this Christian god that had wrecked his fleet. It seemed to be working for Alfred anyway. Plus, I mean, Guthrum already worshipped a lot of Gods. So, sure, throw one more on the pile. At the baptismal, Alfred himself pushed Guthrum's head into the font and gave him his new Christian name: ร†thelstan. A twelve day feast followed, a symbolic reminder of when Guthram ruined Christmas. Alfred showered his nobles with gifts, a ring giver once more. Guthrum sat in his stained baptismal robes, accepting Alfred's gifts like just another Wessex thane. Then, he limped back to East Anglia to secure his previous conquests, and rule the kingdom of Guthrum. And, surprisingly, it appears he kept the treaty. Whether due to religious conversion, pragmatic statecraft, or just not wanting to tangle with Alfred again, Guthrum opted out of future attempts to conquer Wessex. He ministered his own realm, minting coins printed with his Christian name, Alfred's one friend in Danish territory. And with that continued peace came another treaty: The Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum, laying out a political boundary between Wessex and the Danish controlled kingdoms, a land where Danes ruled, and their laws held sway: The Danelaw. Guthrum had his kingdom, and though it would last less than a century, [Outro music begins] Guthrum had his kingdom, and though it would last less than a century, [Outro music begins] it would change England forever. [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] This video is brought to you by Thrones of Britannia, [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] a strategy game that combines huge real time battles with a deep sandbox campaign. [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] You can lead Alfred and his forces, Guthrum's viking army, [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] or pick from eight other factions to build your kingdom, and rewrite the history of the British Isles. [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music] Click the link in the description to find out more. [Music: Odds and Ends by Kiner Brothers Music]
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Channel: Extra Credits
Views: 1,655,348
Rating: 4.9310322 out of 5
Keywords: daniel floyd, documentary, extra credits, extra credits history, extra history, history, history lesson, james portnow, learn history, study history, world history, the danelaw, creative assembly extra history, viking history, england history, wessex, king halfdan, guthrum, king alfred, danes, โ€œOH HEY WHAT UP Yโ€™ALL ITโ€™S GUUUUTHRUUUUUUM!โ€, ร†thelstan, aethelstan, east anglia, kingdom of guthrum
Id: _K6P3T0NIjo
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 10min 55sec (655 seconds)
Published: Thu Apr 05 2018
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