Ælla of Northumbria

While Norse sources claim that Ragnar's sons tortured Ælla to death by the method of the blood eagle, Anglo-Saxon accounts maintain that he died in battle at York on 21 March 867.Concerning the Norse claim, Roberta Frank reviewed the historical evidence for the ritual in her Viking Atrocity and Skaldic Verse: The Rite of the Blood-Eagle, where she writes: "By the beginning of the ninth century, the various saga motifs—eagle sketch, rib division, lung surgery, and 'saline stimulant'—were combined in inventive sequences designed for maximum horror."[1] She concludes that the authors of the sagas misunderstood alliterative kennings that alluded to leaving one's foes face down on the battlefield, their backs torn as carrion by scavenging birds.[9] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not name the Viking leaders, but it does state that "Hingwar and Hubba" (probably Ivar and Ubba) later killed King Edmund of East Anglia.Symeon of Durham lists the leaders of the Viking army as "Halfdene [Halfdann], Inguar [Ingvar], Hubba, Beicsecg, Guthrun, Oscytell [Ketill], Amund, Sidroc and another duke of the same name, Osbern, Frana and Harold.[13] According to Ragnarssona þáttr, the army that seized York in 866 was led by Hvitserk, Björn Ironside, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Ivar the Boneless and Ubba, sons of Ragnar Lodbrok, who avenged his death by subjecting Ælla to the blood eagle.
King of NorthumbriaOsberhtEcgberhtNorthumbriaNorthumbrianAnglo-Saxon ChronicleScandinavianNorse sagaslegendaryRagnar Lodbrokpit of snakesinvasion of NorthumbriaRagnarssona þáttrblood eaglebattle atRoberta FrankkenningsSymeon of DurhamtyrantGreat Heathen ArmyÆthelweardHistoria Regum AnglorumEdmund of East AngliaAbbo of FleuryHalfdeneOsberht of NorthumbriaEadwulf of BamburghHvitserkBjörn IronsideSigurd Snake-in-the-EyeIvar the BonelessOld NorseKing of DublinIrish annalsGofraid of LochlannAmlaíb ConungAuisleHector BoeceGeoffrey ChaucerThe Man of Law's TaleFrank ThringThe VikingsIvan KayeHistory ChannelVikingsOsburhAlfred the GreatJudith of FlandersThe Last KingdomBernard CornwellProsopography of Anglo-Saxon EnglandEcgberht IMonarchs of NorthumbriaBerniciaGlappaÆthelricTheodricFrithuwaldÆthelfrithEanfrithOswaldOswineŒthelwaldAlhfrithÆlfwine EcgfrithEaldfrithEadwulf IOsred ICoenredCeolwulfEadberhtOswulfÆthelwald MollEalhredÆthelred IÆlfwald IOsred IIOsbaldEardwulfÆlfwald IIEanredÆthelred IIRedwulfViking NorthumbriaRicsigeHalfdan IGuthfrith ISiefredusÆthelwoldAirdeconutEowilsHalfdan IIIngwærRagnall ISitric I CaechGuthfrith IIOlaf I GuthfrithsonSitric IIOlaf II CuaranRagnall II GuthfrithsonEric BloodaxeViking activity in Great BritainOffa of MerciaEdmund the MartyrÆthelred the UnreadyÆthelwulfEdward the ElderÆthelstanEadredÆthelred, Lord of the MerciansÆthelflædOdda, Ealdorman of DevonWulfhere, Ealdorman of WiltshireKnýtlingaHarthacnutHarold HarefootSvein KnutssonGuthredAmlaíb CuaránGofraid ua ÍmairOlaf GuthfrithsonRagnall ua ÍmairSweyn ForkbeardEcgberht I of NorthumbriaBurgred of MerciaCeolwulf II of MerciaEohric of East AngliaHalfdan RagnarssonGuthrumThorkell the TallBattle of Hingston DownBattle of AcleaBattle of YorkBattle of EnglefieldBattle of AshdownBattle of MeretunBattle of BasingBattle of ReadingBattle of ChippenhamBattle of CynwitBattle of EdingtonBattle of BenfleetThe DanelawButtingtonFirst StamfordThe HolmeTettenhallTempsfordSecond StamfordCorbridgeBrunanburhStainmoreMaldonBattle of PinhoeFirst AltonSt Brice's DayRingmereCnut's invasionBrentfordAssandunFulfordStamford BridgeDanelawJorvikNorth Sea Empirepetty kingdomsWessexMerciaEast AngliaTreaty of WedmoreTreaty of Alfred and Guthrum"Battle of Brunanburh" (poem)Cuerdale HoardEngland runestonesFurness HoardList of English words of Old Norse originNorse–GaelsNordic and Scandinavian diaspora in the United KingdomSilverdale HoardVale of York Hoard