Joined Jun 2015
5,788 Posts | 129+
UK
I am most surprised that an archaeologist told you that no Scandinavians lived within Mercia. The eastern part of Mercia certainly formed part of the Danelaw whereas, as I mentioned, western Mercia was controlled by King Alfred as part of his kingdom of the Anglo-Saxons.
I must apologise for a mis-statement. The archaeologist was speaking within a context of the area of North Buckinghamshire. This is a part of Mercia but also part of historical Wessex.
My point that the Danelaw had a ragged edge stands.[/QUOTE]
Id think as a border it was obviously set. But ethnically, it was mixed. Alfred knew that his culture had survived, and saw no sense in continued conflicts, especially as more Norse could come (and did far later in Cnut). Id think the numbers of ethnic Saxons in East Anglia, Lincolnshire, or Yorkshire were high, as the Danes only were a loose ruling class who imposed their language/norms onto the masses. The same is true of Northumbria, I'd imagine.