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The English eventually did cross the bridge and murder the Vikings to death. The sagas say he killed 40 people before being taken down and t was only when an English pikeman floated underneath the bridge and skewered the Viking like a Swedish meatball at Ikea that the standoff ended. The Viking axeman held the English off for so long, the Vikings were able to form a shield wall on the other side of the river and prepare for whatever formation Harold was going to hurl at them. When the time came for the Anglo-Saxons to pursue, the bridge became a choke point the English just couldn’t cross – because of one angry ax-wielding Viking who was cutting down Englishmen like it was his job. When Harold II arrived, they were systematically cut down by the advancing Englishmen the rest had to flee across the bridge. The Vikings had no idea there was even an army in the area. This move totally caught the Norwegians by surprise. That’s where Harold rode, arriving in less than four days. The incoming Viking Army was already wreaking havoc on York and Northumbria and was waiting for the area to send more hostages to their camp at Stamford Bridge. When the English King learned about his brother landing in England, Harold took his waiting Army north to meet him. He was actually was waiting for William the Bastard, who was supposedly going to cross the English Channel. Harold was ready for an invasion, just not a Viking invasion from the North. It seems rude to poke them with a giant stick while they’re fighting. Tostig and Harold fighting at the court of Edward the Confessor.
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All Harold knew in September 1066 was that 300 Viking ships were on their way to England, and his good-for-nothing brother was floating along with them. One of them would be famously successful, and the other would get ended themselves. This had a lot to do with the two approaching forces who were trying to end his reign way earlier than he expected. 1066 was a tough year for Harold Godwinson, also known as Harold II, the last Anglo-Saxon king of England.
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