![]() The advance of the Vikings was stopped only in 878 as a result of the victory of Alfred the Great’s Anglo-Saxon army under Eddington, which ensured the preservation of Wessex’s independence and led to the unification of the remnants of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms into a single state. In 877, several Danes’ armies settled in eastern Mercia, which marked the beginning of the “Five Burgs area”. The first territorial division of the conquered lands between the Danish armies, indicating the transition of the Vikings to sedentary life, dates to 876. Danish military forces were constantly reinforced by the arrival of new Scandinavian troops in England. In 873, the Danes seized the eastern part of Mercia and put the rest of their appointee Kelvulf on the throne. Although the Anglo-Saxons managed to win the battle of Ashdown, this did not stop the advance of the Vikings, and King Alfred the Great was forced to buy a truce. Subjugating all of East Anglia, in 870 they moved to Wessex and set up camp in the Reading area. Having made East Anglia its ground base, in 866 the Vikings captured York, and the following year defeated the army of Northumbria and put their protege Egbert I on the throne of this kingdom. The first large Danish army landed on the coast of East Anglia in 865, led by Ivar and Halfdan, the sons of the Danish king Ragnar Lodbrok. The disintegration of the English state in the middle of the 9th century allowed the Vikings to proceed to the systematic conquest of England. In the first half of the 9th century, Danish raids began. Initially, these were the Norwegians, who in 793 pillaged Lindisfarne, and soon founded colonies in Ireland, on the Orkney and Shetland Islands. The attacks of the Scandinavian Vikings on the coast of Britain began at the end of the VIII century.
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