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Banners

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{{Stars2|Category=Weapons}}
 
{{Spears}}
Banners, standards, flags, gonfanon (gonfalon, guntfano) and pennons (pennants) were commonly adopted by the warriors of the 9th – 12th centuries. This article attempts to briefly outline what the authors currently know about the subject. The style of banner stays surprisingly consistent from the 9th to the 12th centuries and across Western Europe. For this reason we’ve decided to look at all the evidence together rather than, as we usually do, break the evidence into English, Carolingian, etc.<br>
===Pennons===
These are triangular flags or streamers.<br>
<galleryheights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">
File:Banner BL Harley 603 1000-1025AD.jpg‎ | 1000-1025AD English <br> BL Harley 603
File:Banner BL Harley 603 1025-1050AD.jpg‎ | 1025-1050AD English <br> BL Harley 603
These are rectangular flags ending in ‘swallowtails’.<br>
====Before 1066AD====
<galleryheights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">File:Banner Leiden I Maccabees f.15v.jpg | 850-950AD Carolingian <br> Leiden I Maccabees f.15v& f.22rFile:Banner Leiden I Maccabees f.22rBrussels ms 10066-77.jpg | 850900-950AD 1000AD Carolingian <br> Leiden I Maccabees f.22rBrussels ms 10066-77File:Banner Aachen Liuthar Gospels a.jpg | 990AD Ottonian <br> Aachen Liuthar GospelsFile:Banner Aachen Liuthar Gospels bBL Egerton 3763.jpg | 990AD 998-1018AD Ottonian <br> Aachen Liuthar GospelsBL Egerton 3763 f.112v & f.116vFile:Banner BL Add. 24199.jpg| 1000AD English <br> BL Add. 24199
File:Banner BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v.jpg | 1025-10505AD English <br> BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v
File:Banner BL Paris Lat. 8824 f.1v.jpg | 1025-10505AD English <br> Paris Lat. 8824 f.1v
File:Banner BL Cotton Tiberius C VI f.8v.jpg | 1050AD English <br> BL Cotton Tiberius C VI f.8vFile:Banner BL Cotton Tiberius C VI f.9r.jpg | 1050AD English <br> BL Cotton Tiberius C VI & f.9r
</gallery>
====After 1066AD====
<galleryheights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">File:Banner Dijon MS14 f.13v aWilliam Seal.jpg| 11091066-1111AD French 1087 <br> Dijon MS14 fSeal of William I (The conqueror)File:Seal William Rufus.13vjpg| 1087-1100 <br> Seal of William II (Rufus) File:Banner Dijon MS14 f.13v b.jpg| 1109-1111AD French <br> Dijon MS14 f.13v
File:Banner Dijon MS173 f133v.jpg| 1101-1133 French <br> Dijon MS173 f133v 'Moralia in Job'
File:Seal Henry I.jpg| 1100-1135AD English <br> Great Seal of Henry IFile:Banner Heildesheim St Albans Psalter 49.JPG| 1120-1145 <br> Heildesheim, St Albans PsalterFile:Seal King Alexander of Scotland.jpg| 1107-1124 <br> Seal of Alexander I of Scotland
</gallery>
<br>
===Triangular Banners===
A type of banner supported by the banner pole and a horizontal beam and similar in shape to the Viking weather vanes.
<gallery heights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">
File:Banner Girona, Beatus Of Girona f.242r.jpg| 976AD <br> Girona, Beatus Of Girona f.242r
File:Banner Boulogne MS20 f.29v.jpg| 1000AD Ottonian <br> Boulogne MS20 f.29v
File:Banner Bayeux Tapestry 65a.jpg| c.1076AD <br> Bayeux Tapestry
File:Coin BM 1915,0507.767 Anlaf Guthfrithsson 939-941AD.jpg| 939-941AD <br> Anlaf Guthfrithsson, King of York
File:Coin Cnut.jpg| 1016-1035<br> Cnut, King of England
 
</gallery>
<br>
==From Literature==
For a full list of banners mentioned in primary sources see [[Banners from Literature]].<!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- --br><br>Included here are only those quotes that describe the appearance of banners. I have omitted those quotes that just describe the banner as golden. <br><br>====Bede – Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 731AD===*:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"His [King Edwin] dignity was so great throughout his dominions, that not only were his banners borne before him in battle, but even in time of peace, when he rode about his cities, townships, or provinces, with his thegns, the standard-bearer was always wont to go before him. Also, when he walked anywhere along the streets, that sort of banner which the Romans call Tufa, and the English, Thuuf, was in like manner borne before him." [SELLAR 1907] 
* Osthryth, queen of the Mercians
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"...that there might be a perpetual memorial of the royal character of this holy man [King Oswald], they hung up over the monument his banner of gold and purple." [SELLAR 1907]
 <!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->===Capitulary of Charles the Bald, 843-877AD===*:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“Let our envoys (missi nostril) see that the troops of every bishop, abbot, and abbess, march forth properly equipped, and with their Gonfalonier (cum Guntfannonario).” [HEWITT 1885: p.166] <!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->===Beowulf, c.1000AD===*:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"High o'er his head they hoist the standard,<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">a gold-wove banner; let billows take him,<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">gave him to ocean." [GUMMERE 1910] *:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"To Beowulf gave the bairn of Healfdene<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">a gold-wove banner, guerdon of triumph,<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">broidered battle-flag" [GUMMERE 1910] *:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"His glance too fell on a gold-wove banner<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">high o'er the hoard, of handiwork noblest,<br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">brilliantly broidered; so bright its gleam," [GUMMERE 1910] <!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->===The Song of Roland, 1040-115AD===*Verse 4 :<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"And Geoffrey of Anjou, the bearer of the King's gonfalon" [BACON 1914] *Verse 33 :<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Through Cerdagne, and through the valleys and the mountains they marched on, <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Until of the French army they saw the gonfalon. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Where aU the twelve companions with the French rear-guard <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">King Marsile will not tarry till he have joined the fray" [BACON 1914] 
*Verse 39
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"They held Valentian lances, and shield on shoulder wore. <br>
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">White and blue and vermilion were the gonfalons they bore." [BACON 1914]
*Verse 59:<span style="font!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --style: italic; color: green">"Then an embroidered banner he gave unto Grandoign <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">To lead his men against the Franks that battle they might join. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">And therewithal was given to Grandoign the whole command." [BACON 1914]=Late Roman Draco Standards==
{{evidence|Art =<gallery heights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">File:Banner St. Gallen Cod.22 140.jpg | c.883-900AD Carolingian <br> St. Gallen Cod.22 140File:Banner Bayeux Tapestry 71a.jpg | c.1076AD English <br> Bayeux Tapestry</gallery>|Literature =*Verse 125About Witikind, an adversary of Charlemagne:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"And onwards Geoffrey Hic arripiens signum quod apud eo habebatur sacrum, leonis atque draconis desuper aquilae volantis insignitum effigie ..." [OAKESHOTT 1960:p178]* Henry of Anjou bore the great Oriflame — <br>Huntingdon, Historia Anglorum c.1129-c.1154.:AD 752 Battle of Burford:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Because it was Saint Peter's“Ethelhun who led the West-Saxons, it bore bearing the Roman nameroyal standard, a golden dragon, transfixed the standard-bearer of the enemy." [BACON 1914BOHN 1853:p.130]:NoteAD 1016 Battle of Assandun: Oriflame <span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“King Edmund distinguished himself for his valour. For perceiving that the Danes were fighting with more than ordinary vigour, he quitted his royal station which, as was wont, he had taken between the name of Charlemagne's bannerdragon and the ensign called the Standard,....” [BOHN 1853:p.194]|Archaeology
*Verse 137|Discussion =}}The idea of a 'Dragon of Wessex' is an invention of E. A. Freeman in the C19th. [CHANEY 1970:p.128]<span style="font-style: italic; color: green"br>Oakeshott refers to "Right ... be the end would have been different. But Harold was struck, and cut down by a Norman sword when William's knights burst through the PrinceHuscarles to trample down the Dragon standard and Harold's body his golden banner bore. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">He smote him dead seven hundred of his servitors beforethe Fighting Man." [BACON 1914OAKESHOTT 1960:p.180]but we are unable to find anything that this reference to a dragon standard could be based on.
*Verse 142:<span style="font!-- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------style: italic; color: green">"Ogier the Dane and Charlemagne well the great strokes laid on, <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">And Neimes and Geoffrey of Anjou that bore the gonfalon. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Ogier the Dane in all things a hero good was he. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">He spurred the steed beneath him, and let him gallop free. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">On him who bore the Dragon he let drive a buffet dread. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Down to the earth before him he hurled Lord Amboire dead. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">And the banner of King Baligant in that hour came to ground. <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">And Baligant beheld it fall, and the ensign of Mahound <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Without a man to guard it. In his heart he saw it plain <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green"br>How wickedness was on his side and the right with Charlemagne" [BACON 1914]
==The Viking 'Raven Banner'=={{evidence|Art =<!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -gallery heights=150px mode="Packed" style="text-align:left">File:Banner Bayeux Tapestry 53b.jpg | c.1076AD English <br> Bayeux Tapestry</gallery>|Literature ===William ==The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (890-1116AD)====*AD 878 :<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“And in the winter of this same year the brother of PoitiersIngwar and Healfden landed in Wessex, The Deeds in Devonshire, with three and twenty ships, and there was he slain, and eight hundred men with him, and forty of Williamhis army. There also was taken the war-flag, Duke which they called the RAVEN.” [INGRAM 1912]<br>Swanton’s translation [SWANTON 2000:p.77] of Normandy Anglo-Saxon Chronicle E <span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“.. and King there the banner which they called ‘Raven', was taken.” </span> It's also mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle's B, C and D (B was written in the second half of England (Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorumthe C10th, probably in the 970's) but it is not mentioned in the oldest surviving copy of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, A (written from c.1071AD ===890AD to 1070AD).
<!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->===William =Asser's The Life of Malmesbury, Chronicle of the Kings of England Alfred (Gesta Regum Anglorum1000AD) c.1125AD====*“The king himself on foot:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"...and there they gained a very large booty, stood with his brother, near and amongst other things the standardcalled '''Raven'''; in order for they say thatthe three sisters of Hingwar and Hubba, while all shared equal dangerdaughters of Lodobroch, none might think of retreatingwove that flag and got it ready in one day. This standard William sentThey say, after the victorymoreover, that in every battle, wherever that flag went before them, if they were to gain the popevictory a '''live crow would appear flying on the middle of the flag''' ; but if they were doomed to be defeated it was sumptuously embroideredwould hang down motionless, with gold and precious stonesthis was often proved to be so. " [GILES 1848:p62]A major doubt exists regarding the authenticity of this chapter in Asser's Life of Alfred. It has been fairly well proved that Bishop Parker added this chapter directly from The Annals of St Neots in his 1574AD published version of Asser's Life of Alfred. [STEVENSON 1904] The original sole surviving Anglo-Saxon manuscript, Cotton MS Otho A xii, was lost in the form Cotton Library fire of a man fighting1731AD.” [GILES 1847:pThe two remaining transcripts have both been affected to varying degrees by Bishop Parkers interpolations.276]
<!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->===Master Wace, =The Chronicle Annals of the Norman Conquest St Neots (Roman de Rou1120-1140AD), c.1174===*Line 11,450=:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“When Harold had made all ready, and given his orders, he came into ""<br>Although written in the midst of the EnglishC12th, and dismounted by the side The Annals of the standard, Leofwin and Gurth, his brothers, were with him; and around him he had barons enough, as he stood by his gonfanon, which St Neots was based in truth part on a noble one, sparkling with gold and precious stones. After now missing early version of the victory William sent it to the apostle, to prove and commemorate his great conquest and gloryAnglo-Saxon Chronicle.[TAYLOR 1837SWANTON 2000]</span><br>
====Saga of Olaf, Tryggvi's Son. (c.1260AD)====:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">“L’apostoile li otreia"...Take thou here this banner which I have made with all my skill, un gonfanon li enveia, un gonfanon et un anel, mult precios e riche e bel; si come and I ween that it ditwill bring victory to him before whom it is borne, desoz la pierrebut death to its bearer." The banner was wrought with cunningly executed handiwork and elaborate art. It was made in the shape of a raven, aveit un des cheveuls Saint Pierre”[MICHEL 1836: pand when floating in the wind it resembled the raven flying.147]" </spanbr> Charlemagne: An Anglo-Norman Poem This saga is part of the Twelfth Century edited by Francisque Michel 1836Flateyjarbók written between 1387AD to 1394AD and contains expanded version of some of the sagas from the Heimskringla.
<!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- --br>===Snorri Sturluson, Heimskringla (The Chronicle of the Kings of Norway), c.1225AD===|Archaeology* Saga of King Harald Grafeld and of Earl Hakon Son of Sigurd|Discussion:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"The sharp bow-shooter on the sea:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Spread wide his fleet, for well loved he:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">The battle storm: well loved the earl:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">His battle-banner to unfurl,:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">O'er the well-trampled battle-field:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">He raised the red-moon of his shield;:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">And often dared King Eirik's son:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">To try the fray with the Earl Hakon." [LAING 1844]}}
<!-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->* Harald Harfager's Saga:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green"br>The forecastle men were picked men, for they had the king's banner." [LAING 1907]
<!-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->* Saga of ==Harald Hardrade's 'Land-waster' Banner== :* OF ULF AND HALDOR.::<span style="fontAlso known as Land-style: italic; color: green">"When Harald came to the castle gate his standard-bearer fell, and Harald said to Haldor, "Do thou take up the banner nowravager." Haldor took up the banner, 'Landøyðan' and said foolishly, "Who will carry the banner before thee, if thou followest it so timidly as thou hast done for a while?" But these were words more of anger than of truth; for Harald was one of the boldest of men under arms'' in Icelandic." [LAING 1907]<br> :* BATTLE AT A FOURTH CASTLEThe Heimskringla was written around c.1230AD by Snorri Sturluson.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green"br>"The coffin was borne high in the air, and over it was a tent * '''Saga of costly linen and before it were carried many bannersHarald Hardrade." [LAING 1907]''' From the Heimskringla :* TREATY BETWEEN HARALD AND SVEIN BROKEN.Treaty between Harald and Svein broken
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"A little after this it happened that Harald and Svein one evening were sitting at table drinking and talking together, and Svein asked Harald what valuable piece of all his property he esteemed the most.<br>
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">He answered, it was his '''banner Land-waster'''.<br>
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Harald replied, it was a common saying that he must gain the victory before whom that banner is borne, and it had turned out so ever since he had owned it.<br>
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Svein replies, "I will begin to believe there is such virtue in the banner when thou hast held three battles with thy relation Magnus, and hast gained them all."" [LAING 1907]
 :* THE FALL OF EINAR AND EINDRIDE.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"After Einar's murder the king was so much disliked for that deed that there was nothing that prevented the lendermen and bondes from attacking the king, and giving him battle, but the want of some leader to raise the banner in the bonde army." [LAING 1907] :* OF KING SVEIN'S ARMAMENT.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"And when King Svein's '''banner''' was cut down, and his ship cleared of its crew, all his forces took to flight, and some were killed." [LAING 1907] :* KING HARALD'S BATTLE WITH EARL HAKON::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Earl Hakon had the same '''banner''' which had belonged to King Magnus Olafson." [LAING 1907]<br> <br>::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"When the war-cry was raised the earl let his '''banner '''advance; but when they came under the hill the king's army rushed down upon them, and killed some of the earl's people, and the rest fled. The Northmen did not pursue the fugitives long, for it was the fall of day; but they took Earl Hakon's '''banner '''and all the arms and clothes they could get hold of. King Harald had both the '''banners '''carried before him as they marched away. They spoke among themselves that the earl had probably fallen. As they were riding through the forest they could only ride singly, one following the other. Suddenly a man came full gallop across the path, struck his spear through him who was carrying the earl's '''banner, ''' seized the '''banner-staff''', and rode into the forest on the other side with the '''banner.''' When this was told the king he said, "Bring me my armour, for the earl is alive." Then the king rode to his ships in the night; and many said that the earl had now taken his revenge." [LAING 1907] :* THORD'S DREAM.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"He saw a great battle-array on the land; and he thought both sides began to fight, and had '''many banners''' flapping in the air." [LAING 1907] :* OF HARALD'S ORDER OF BATTLE.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"The king's '''banner '''was next the river, where the line was thickest. It was thinnest Battle at the ditch, where also the weakest of the men were. When the earls advanced downwards along the ditch, the arm of the Northmen's line which was at the ditch gave way; and the Englishmen followed, thinking the Northmen would fly. The '''banner''' of Earl Morukare advanced then bravely." [LAING 1907] :* THE BATTLE AT THE HUMBER.Humber
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"He ordered the '''banner''' which was called the '''Land-ravager''' to be carried before him, and made so severe an assault that all had to give way before it;" [LAING 1907]
 :* EARL TOSTE'S COUNSEL.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Then King Harald ordered his '''banner Land-ravager''' to be set up; and Frirek was the name Skirmish of him who bore the '''banner'''." [LAING 1907] :* OF KING HARALD'S ARMY.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"The king himself and his retinue were within the circle; and there was the '''banner''', and a body of chosen men. Earl Toste, with his retinue, was at another place, and had a '''different banner'''." [LAING 1907] :* FALL OF KING HARALD.::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"King Harald Sigurdson was hit by an arrow in the windpipe, and that was his death-wound. He fell, and all who had advanced with him, except those who '''retired with the banner'''. There was afterwards the warmest conflict, and Earl Toste had taken charge of the '''king's banner'''." [LAING 1907] :* SKIRMISH OF ORRE.Orre
::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Eystein Orre came up at this moment from the ships with the men who followed him, and all were clad in armour. Then Eystein got '''King Harald's banner Land-ravager'''; and now was, for the third time, one of the sharpest of conflicts, in which many Englishmen fell, and they were near to taking flight." [LAING 1907]
<!-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->* The Ynglinga Saga<br>:* OF KING HAKE== Viking Weather Vanes ==:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"There was a great battle, in which King Hake went forward so bravely that he killed all who were nearest to him, and at last killed King Eric, and cut down the '''banner'7 'weather vanes' have been found and a depiction of the two brothersthem can be found on a carving from Bergen."
:* OF EGIL AND TUNNE:<span style="font!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --style: italic; color: green">"As soon as <br>==King Egil perceived the tumult, he prepared for defence, and set up his Harold’s ‘Fighting Man’ banner; but many people deserted him, because Tunne and his men attacked them so boldly, and ==King Egil saw that nothing was left but to flyHarold’s personal banner is described by three sources although only two of them mention the ‘Fighting Man’."
<!-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->* King Olaf Trygvason's Saga:* BATTLE WITH THE JOMSBORG VIKINGS:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Earl Sigvalde's banner was displayed in the midst 'William of his armyPoitiers, Gesta Willelmi ducis Normannorum et regis Anglorum''' (The Deeds of William, Duke of Normandy and right against it Earl Hakon arranged his force for attackKing of England) c."1071AD<br>
:* THE THRONDHJEM PEOPLE BAPTIZED'''William of Malmesbury, Chronicle of the Kings of England''' (Gesta Regum Anglorum) c.1125AD:*::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"But as Skegge was killedThe king himself on foot, there was no leader stood with his brother, near the standard; in order that, while all shared equal danger, none might think of retreating. This standard William sent, after the bondes' army victory, to raise the pope; it was sumptuously embroidered, with gold and precious stones, in the form of a '''bannerman fighting''' against King Olaf; so they took the other condition, to surrender to the king's will and obey his order." [GILES 1847:p.276]
:* CREW ON BOARD OF THE LONG SERPENT'''Master Wace, The Chronicle of the Norman Conquest''' (Roman de Rou), c.1174:* Line 11,450::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Ulf “When Harold had made all ready, and given his orders, he came into the Red was the name midst of the man who bore King Olaf's '''bannerEnglish,''' and was in dismounted by the forecastle side of the Long Serpent; standard, Leofwin and Gurth, his brothers, were with him was Kolbjorn the marshal; and around him he had barons enough, Thorstein Uxafotas he stood by his gonfanon, which was in truth a noble one, sparkling with gold and Vikar of Tiundalandprecious stones. After the victory William sent it to the apostle, a brother of Arnliot Gellineto prove and commemorate his great conquest and glory."” [TAYLOR 1837]</span><br>
:* OF KING OLAF.:<span style="font!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --style: italic; color: green">"When King Olaf saw that the scattered forces of the enemy gathered themselves together under the '''banners''' of their ships, he asked, "Who is the chief of the force right opposite to us?""<br>==The Papal Banner==
<!-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->
* Saga of Olaf Haraldson
:* OF THE FEAST
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"As they rode up to the house, and were near the room, they saw on the other side of the house the '''banners''' of Olaf coming waving; and there was he himself, with about 100 men all well equipped."
:* OF THE BATTLE AT NESJAR.:<span style="font!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --style: italic; color: green">"He had a white banner on which was a serpent figured. but when they saw the king<br>==Charlemagne's fleet coming they began to bind the ships together, to set up their 'Oriflame''banners''', and to make ready for the fight."==
:==== The song of Roland ====* EARL SVEIN'S FLIGHT.Verse 226:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Their banner was brought up to And onwards Geoffrey of Anjou bore the ship that was nearest the earlgreat 's, and the king himself followed the banner. So says ''Oriflame''' — <br>:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Sigvat: -- <br>Because it was Saint Peter's, it bore the Roman name." [BACON 1914]
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"`On with the king!' his banners waving::<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">`On with the king!' the spears he's braving!:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">`On, steel-clad men! and storm the deck,:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Slippery with blood and strewed with wreck.:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">A different work ye have to share,:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">His banner in war-storm to bear,:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">From your fair girl's, who round the hall:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Brings the full mead-bowl to us all.'" :* MURDER OF OLAF'S COURT-MEN.:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">There were twelve of Hrorek's men there, and among them Sigurd Hit, who had been his banner-man, and also little Fin.":* OF THE BAPTISM OF THE VAGABOND FOREST-MEN:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">The king then took them into the troop of his court-men, and said they should fight under his banner in the battle." :* KING OLAF'S SPEECH.:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">I will let my banner go forward in the middle of the army, and my-court-men, and pursuivants shall follow it, together with the war forces that joined us from the Uplands, and also those who may come to us here in the Throndhjem land. On the right hand of my banner shall be Dag Hringson, with all the men he brought to our aid; and he shall have the second banner. And on the left hand of our line shall the men be whom the Swedish king gave us, together with all the people who came to us in Sweden; and they shall have the third banner.<br------------------------------------------------------------------------ -->
<br>
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Now let the men divide themselves into separate flocks, and then each flock into ranks; then let each man observe well his proper place, and take notice what banner he is drawn up under."= The Caroccium ==
:* OF KING OLAF'S SKALDS.
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Thormod replies, "It may be, sire, that ye now require prayers most; but it would be thin around the banner-staff if all thy court-men were now on the way to Rome."
:* KING OLAF COMES TO STIKLESTAD
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Then he placed his army in battle array, and raised his banner. Dag was not yet arrived with his men, so that his wing of the battle array was wanting. Then the king said the Upland men should go forward in their place, and raise their banner there."
:* THORD FOLASON.
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Thord Folason carried King Olaf's banner. So says Sigvat the skald, in the death-song which he composed about King Olaf, and put together according to resurrection saga: --<br>
 
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">"Thord. I have heard, by Olaf's side,
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Where raged the battle's wildest tide,
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Moved on, and, as by one accord
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Moved with them every heart and sword.
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">The banner of the king on high,
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Floating all splendid in the sky
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">From golden shaft, aloft he bore, --
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">The Norsemen's rallying-point of yore."
 
:* KING OLAF'S DREAM.
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">There a slumber came upon him, and he slept a little while; but at the same time the bondes' army was seen advancing with raised banners, and the multitude of these was very great.
 
 
:* OF ARNLJOT GELLINE'S BAPTISM
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Thereupon Arnljot was baptized. The king taught him so much of the holy faith as appeared to him needful, and placed him in the front rank of the order of battle, in advance of his banner, where also Gauka-Thorer and Afrafaste, with their men, were.
 
:* OF THE LENDERMEN
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Thorer replies thus to his speech: "I do not confide in myself so much as to raise the banner against King Olaf, or, as chief, to lead on this army;
 
:* KALF ARNASON'S SPEECH
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Will ye now adopt my proposal -- then shalt thou, friend Thorer, and thou, Harek, go under the banner which we will all of us raise up, and then follow.
 
:* HOW THE LENDERMEN SET UP THEIR BANNERS.
:<span style="font-style: italic; color: green">Kalf Arnason then raised his banner, and drew up his house-servants along with Harek of Thjotta and his men. Thorer Hund, with his troop, was at the head of the order of battle in front of the banner; and on both sides of Thorer was a chosen body of
bondes, all of them the most active and best armed in the forces. This part of the array was long and thick, and in it were drawn up the Throndhjem people and the Halogalanders. On the right wing was another array; and on the left of the main array were drawn up the men from Rogaland, Hordaland, the Fjord districts, and Scgn, and they had the third banner.
 
235. OF THE PREPARATIONS OF THE BONDES.
 
When the bondes' men and array were drawn up the lendermen
addressed the men, and ordered them to take notice of the place
to which each man belonged, under which banner each should be,
who there were in front of the banner, who were his side-men, and
that they should be brisk and quick in taking up their places in
the array; for the army had still to go a long way, and the array
might be broken in the course of march. Then they encouraged the
people; and Kalf invited all the men who had any injury to avenge
on King Olaf to place themselves under the banner which was
advancing against King Olaf's own banner. They should remember
the distress he had brought upon them; and, he said, never was
there a better opportunity to avenge their grievances, and to
free themselves from the yoke and slavery he had imposed on them.
"Let him," says he, "be held a useless coward who does not fight
this day boldly; and they are not innocents who are opposed to
you, but people who will not spare you if ye spare them."
 
236. OF THE KING'S AND THE BONDES' ARMIES.
Thereafter the bondes' army advanced to Stiklestad, where King
Olaf was already with his people. Kalf and Harek went in front,
at the head of the army under their banners.
 
238. BEGINNING OF THE BATTLE OF STIKLESTAD.
Now came Thorer Hund, went forward in front of the banner with
his troop, and called out, "Forward, forward, bondemen!"
 
 
 
 
"Midst in their line their banner flies,
Thither the stoutest bonde hies:
But many a bonde thinks of home,
And many wish they ne'er had come."
 
 
 
Now the ranks in front of the king's
banner began to be thinned, and the king ordered Thord to carry
the banner forward, and the king himself followed it with the
troop he had chosen to stand nearest to him in battle; and these
were the best armed men in the field, and the most expert in the
use of their weapons. Sigvat the skald tells of this: --
 
"Loud was the battle-storm there,
Where the king's banner flamed in air.
The king beneath his banner stands,
And there the battle he commands."
 
 
 
239. THORGEIR OF KVISTSTAD'S FALL
At the same instant Thord stuck
the banner-pole so fast in the earth that it remained standing.
Thord had got his death-wound, and fell beneath the banner.
 
At the same time Dag Hringson came up with his people, and began
to put his men in array, and to set up his banner; but on account
of the darkness the onset could not go on so briskly, for they
could not see exactly whom they had before them.
 
 
240. KING OLAF'S FALL.
"Warrior! who Olaf dared withstand,
Who against Olaf held the land,
Thou hast withstood the bravest, best,
Who e'er has gone to his long rest.
At Stiklestad thou wast the head;
With flying banners onwards led
Thy bonde troops, and still fought on,
Until he fell -- the much-mourned one."
 
 
241. BEGINNING OF DAG HRINGSON'S ATTACK.
There a great number of the bondes fell,
and these lendermen, Erlend of Gerde and Aslak of Finey; and the
banner also which they had stood under was cut down.
 
246. OF THORMOD KOLBRUNARSKALD.
Thormod Kolbrunarskald was under King Olaf's banner in the
battle; but when the king had fallen, the battle was raging so
that of the king's men the one fell by the side of the other, and
the most of those who stood on their legs were wounded.
 
Saga of Magnus the Good
32. SVEIN'S FLIGHT
"Spattered with mud from heel to head,
Our gallant lord his true men led.
Will Lund's earl halt his hasty flight,
And try on land another fight?
His banner yesterday was seen,
The sand-bills and green trees between,
Through moss and mire to the strand,
In arrow flight, leaving the land."
 
34. BATTLE AT HELGANES
"And now the Norsemen storm along,
Following their banner in a throng:
King Magnus' banner flames on high,
A star to guide our roaming by.
To Lund, o'er Scania's peaceful field,
My shoulder bore my useless shield;
A fairer land, a better road,
As friend or foe, I never trod."
 
Across Fiona's moor again,
The paths late trodden by our men
We tread once more, until quite near,
Through morning mist, the foes appear.
Then up our numerous banners flare
In the cold early morning air;
And they from Magnus' power who fly
Cannot this quick war-work deny."
 
35. OF KING MAGNUS'S CAMPAIGN.
"To fair Fiona's grassy shore
His banner now again he bore:
He who the mail-shirt's linked chains
Severs, and all its lustre stains, --
He will be long remembered there,
The warrior in his twentieth year,
Whom their black ravens from afar
Saluted as he went to war."
 
Magnus Barefoot's Saga
 
27. FALL OF KING MAGNUS
The king answered, "Call all the men together with the war-horns
under the banner, and the men who are here shall make a rampart
with their shields, and thus we will retreat backwards out of the
mires; and we will clear ourselves fast enough when we get upon
firm ground."
 
Vidkun Jonson instantly killed the man who had
given the king his death-wound, and fled, after having received
three wounds; but brought the king's banner and the sword Legbit
to the ships.
 
Saga of Magnus the Blind and of Harald Gille
 
2. OF THE FORCES OF HARALD AND MAGNUS.
Then the war-horns sounded, and all Harald's men went out from
the house to an enclosed field, and set up their banners. King
Harald had on two shirts of ring-mail, but his brother Kristrod
had no armour on; and a gallant man he was.
 
12. OF MAGNUS THE BLIND.
On Hlesey's plain the foe must quail
'Fore him who dyes their shirts of mail.
His storm-stretched banner o'er his head
Flies straight, and fills the foe with dread."
 
Saga of Sigurd, Inge, and Eystein, the Sons of Harald
 
2. OF SIGURD SLEMBIDJAKN
It is related that Thjostolf Alason carried King
Inge in his belt as long as the battle lasted, and stood under
the banner
 
27. OF GREGORIUS DAGSON
It is true that there is but little help in thee on account of thy ill health, but I should think thy will should not be less to hold thy hand
over thy friends, and I am now quite ready to go from hence to
meet Sigurd, and my banner is flying in the yard."
 
Saga of Hakon Herdebreid ("Hakon the Broad-Shouldered")
 
3. KING HAKON'S FLIGHT
There the man who carried his banner was slain,
just as he was going to step on shore. Gregorius ordered Hal, a
son of Audun Halson, to take up the banner, which he did, and
bore the banner up to the pier.
 
11. KING HAKON'S FLIGHT
Thereupon he ordered his banner to be set up, which
was done; and they rowed across the river.
 
14. OF THE FALL OF GREGORIUS DAGSON
Then he ordered the banner to be advanced, and
immediately went out on the ice with the men.
 
18. KING INGE'S FALL
An assault was made against King Inge's banner, and in this conflict
King Inge fell; but his brother Orm continued the battle, while
many of the army fled up into the town.
 
Magnus Erlingson's Saga
 
10. EARL SIGURD'S CONDEMNATION
The people of Viken were very friendly to Erling and
King Magnus, principally from the popularity of the late King
Inge Haraldson; for the Viken people had always served under his
banner.
 
13. OF EARL SIGURD'S BATTLE ARRAY
We have a good battle-field. Let them
cross the bridge; but as soon as the banner comes over it let us
then rush down the hill upon them, and none desert his
neighbour."
 
14. EARL SIGURD'S FALL
They first used spears then edge weapons; and the earl's banner soon
retired so far back, that Erling and his men scaled the ridge
 
42. THE FALL OF KING EYSTEIN.
Then the Birkebeins' banner was cut down; those who
were nearest gave way and some took to flight
 
==Late Roman Draco Standards==
 
{{evidence
|Art =
<gallery>
File:Banner St. Gallen Cod.22 140.jpg | c.883-900AD Carolingian <br> St. Gallen Cod.22 140
File:Banner Bayeux Tapestry 71a.jpg | c.1076AD English <br> Bayeux Tapestry
</gallery>
|Literature =
{{Quote|50|
"Hic arripiens signum quod apud eo habebatur sacrum, leonis atque draconis desuper aquilae volantis insignitum effigie ..."
|
About Witikind, an adversary of Charlemagne. [OAKESHOTT 1960:p178]
}}
|Archaeology
 
|Discussion =
}}
"... be the end would have been different. But Harold was struck, and cut down by a Norman sword when William's knights burst through the Huscarles to trample down the Dragon standard and Harold's banner of the Fighting Man." [OAKESHOTT 1960:p.180]
<!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -->
<br>
==References==
{{Ref|Book=Anderson, Hjjaltalin & Goudie 1873}}
{{Ref|Book=Bacon 1914}}
{{Ref|Book=Bohn 1853}}
{{Ref|Book=Chaney 1970}}
{{Ref|Book=Giles 1847}}
{{Ref|Book=Giles 1848}}
{{Ref|Book=Gummere 1910}}
{{Ref|Book=Hewitt 1855}}
{{Ref|Book=Laing 1907}}
{{Ref|Book=Oakeshott 1960}}
{{Ref|Book=Sellar 1907}}
{{Ref|Book=Stevenson 1904}}
{{Ref|Book=Swanton 2000}}
{{Ref|Book=Taylor 1837}}
<nocite>
BACON1914
GILES1847
GUMMERE1910
HEWITT1885
LAING1907
OAKESHOTT1960
SELLAR1907
SWANTON2000
TAYLOR1837
</nocite>
<biblio force=false>#[[Template:Bib]]</biblio>
<HarvardReferences />