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  1. The Harrying of the North was a series of military campaigns waged by William the Conqueror in the winter of 1069–1070 to subjugate Northern England, where the presence of the last Wessex claimant, Edgar Ætheling, had encouraged Anglo-Saxon Northumbrian, Anglo-Scandinavian and Danish rebellions.

  2. The Harrying of the North. The winter of 1069 - 1070 is remembered in England as the most notorious period in the whole of King William’s reign. Faced with local rebellions in...

  3. Jan 18, 2019 · The Harrying of the North. Any lingering rebels across the north of England were mercilessly hunted down and executed or mutilated over the winter of 1069-1070 CE.

    • Mark Cartwright
  4. The Harrying of the North happened in wintertime, from October 1069 to March 1070. It essentially tried to make the north of England uninhabitable. All the land from York and Hull north (between the Rivers Tees and Humber) was essentially destroyed.

  5. Oct 7, 2019 · William I’s Harrying of the North of England over the winter of 1069/70 resulted in perhaps 150,000 deaths, reducing many victims to eating cats, dogs and even one another. So should it, asks Marc Morris, be branded a genocide?

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  7. Known as the Harrowing of the North, this destroyed crops, livestock and food stores, razed villages to the ground, and slaughtered the inhabitants. The death toll was put as high as 100,000, the majority of whom died from starvation following the famine which came in the wake of the “harrowing”.