Battle of Maldon

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Definition

Proper noun A historical battle fought in 991 AD near the River Blackwater in Essex, England, where an invading Viking army defeated the Anglo-Saxon forces led by Byrhtnoth. The event is famously commemorated in a surviving fragment of Old English heroic poetry.

Usage

The term is used to refer specifically to this historical event and the Old English poem that records it. * Historians study the Battle of Maldon to understand late Anglo-Saxon military tactics. * The poem The Battle of Maldon is a primary source for Old English language and heroic ideals.

Advanced Usage
  • As a cultural reference: The battle and poem are often cited as emblematic of the Anglo-Saxon heroic code, particularly the concept of holding one's ground and loyalty unto death.
    • The commander's last stand was compared to the ethos of the Battle of Maldon.
Variants and Related Words
  • The Battle of Maldon: The full, most common title of the poem.
  • The Poem of Maldon: An alternative, less common reference to the literary work.
Synonyms
  • There are no direct synonyms for this proper noun referring to a unique historical event. It can be described contextually as a Viking victory in 991 or the Maldon conflict.
Related Phrases
  • "To stand like Byrhtnoth": A literary allusion meaning to make a defiant, perhaps strategically unwise, last stand. (Derived from the poem's narrative).
    • Outnumbered and surrounded, the unit decided to stand like Byrhtnoth at the bridge.
Notes

This term functions almost exclusively as a proper noun naming a singular event and its associated literary artifact. It is not used in a general sense.

Noun
  1. a battle in which the Danes defeated the Saxons in 991; celebrated in an old English poem

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