As I'm writing up this post, a question came to mind: Was the Battle of Thetford not a Saxon victory? I'd been thinking this was the later Battle of Ringmere in 1010, which was a Danish victory. Will the Northmen be driven out by fyrdmen later? I'm trying to square the timeline with the [i]Anglo-Saxon Chronicle's[/i] account of the battle, which states this: [hider=A-S Chronicle, Tr. James Henry Ingram] [u]A.D. 1004.[/u] This year came Sweyne with his fleet to Norwich, plundering and burning the whole town. Then Ulfkytel agreed with the council in East-Anglia, that it were better to purchase peace with the enemy, ere they did too much harm on the land; for that they had come unawares, and he had not had time to gather his force. Then, under the truce that should have been between them, stole the army up from their ships, and bent their course to Thetford. When Ulfkytel understood that, then sent he an order to hew the ships in pieces; but they frustrated his design. Then he gathered his forces, as secretly as he could. [b]The enemy came to Thetford within three weeks after they had plundered Norwich; and, remaining there one night, they spoiled and burned the town; but, in the morning, as they were proceeding to their ships, came Ulfkytel with his army, and said that they must there come to close quarters. And, accordingly, the two armies met together; and much slaughter was made on both sides.[/b] There were many of the veterans of the East-Angles slain; but, if the main army had been there, the enemy had never returned to their ships. As they said themselves, that they never met with worse hand-play in England than Ulfkytel brought them. [/hider] WIll that defeat occur later in the day, perhaps, possibly as a driving force to send our characters westward?