The Normans were the people of Normandy, the north-western province of France that came into existence at the beginning of the 10th century. They are the band of Vikings that laid the foundation for the duchy of Normandy.
It started in the year of 911, at the so-called treaty of St Clair-sur-Epte. At that time and place Charles the Simple, king of the Wests Franks evidently granted territory about the lower Seine and the city of Rouen to a band of Viking led by one Rollo.
The term ‘Viking’ is rarely used in medieval Europe, a word which evoked fear and distrust in the minds of Europeans.
Normans name derives from ‘north men’, which means ‘men who came from the north’, and etymology that was well understood by the Normans themselves.
Despite the hostility of their neighbors, the Normans assumed Frankish ways: they accepted the religion, the language and the women of the Franks.
From Normandy they set out later to conquer southern Italy and the greater part of Britain and some established themselves elsewhere in Europe.
In the 11th and 12th centuries, the Normans, as they came to be known in English, became a people renowned throughout their new Frankish homeland and indeed, in an area stretching from Ireland to the Holy Land.
In the west, the Normans became the conquerors of England, after their successful invasion of 1066.
The Normans involvement in southern Italy began in 1013 at the shrine of St Michaels on Monte Gargano, when a Latin rebel against Byzantium authority in southern Italy, Meles, invited the Normans to serve him as mercenaries.
In the 1090s, Norman’s forces were instrumental participants in the First Crusade both in the journey to and capture of Jerusalem and in relations with the Byzantium emperor of the time, Alexius Commnenus.
The history of Normans
George Moore: Pioneer of Realism and Irish Literary Revival
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