The Viking Domesday Stone, a 9th-century grave markerfound on Lindisfarne Island.It is carved with s
The Viking Domesday Stone, a 9th-century grave markerfound on Lindisfarne Island. It is carved with seven armed menbrandishing their weapons.It is possible that the stone represents a Viking attack on themonastery, or the Anglo-Saxons defending it. Vikings raidedLindisfarne in 793, the first major large-scale Viking attack,beginning what is now called the “Viking Age”.The religious community stayed on the island, despite the continuingattacks against Britain. The Vikings began their conquest ofnorthern and eastern England in 870, and five years later most of themonks fled the island, taking the sacred relics of St. Cuthbert withthem.However, sculptural evidence after this time shows that a smallcommunity of monks remained at Lindisfarne, even though they stillfaced attacks from Viking and Scottish marauders. A new priorychurch was established in the 12th century, after theNorman invasion of 1066, and its ruins can still be seen today. -- source link
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