The annual Largs Viking Festival gets underway on 1st of September and lasts until 9th September. This is the 38th year of the event which has grown in popularity and received international acclaim. As well as a Viking Village providing a glimpse of life in the 13th century for Norse warriors, there are a range of activities taking place throughout the nine days. The Festival starts with a parade and opening cermony. Aerial displays, music and dancing will take place during the week. There is also the regular Hakon Hakkonsson Lecture at the Vallhalladarome at the Vikingar. This year's lecture concerns Viking women in Scotland by Dr Stephen Harrison of the University of Glasgow. There will also be a Battle of Largs re-enactment and fireworks display known as the Festival of Fire and more information can be obtained from the Largs Viking Festival website.
The Festival marks the 1263 Battle of Largs, the last mainland battle between the Scots and Norse. There had been Viking interventions into Scotland and the surrounding islands since the 8th century AD. The Northern Isles of Shetland and Orkney were known to the Norse as Norðreyjar. The Southern Isles forming the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles (sometimes known as The Kingdom of the Isles) consisting of the Hebrides, the islands in the Firth of Clyde and the Isle of Man were known as Suðreyjar..
For centuries the Norse - Gael kingdoms of the Hebrides and Isle of Man came under the influence of Norway, as did the Northern Isles of Shetland and Orkney. Both King Alexander II of Scotland in the 1240’s and then later his son King Alexander III tried to purchase, then when this failed, attempted military force to gain the Isles. King Hákon Hákonarson of Norway (1204 to 1263) sought to defend the lands against the expanding power of Scotland. It was the Treaty of Perth agreed on 2nd July 1266 between Norway and Scotland that sought to end these conflicts. Under the treaty Scotland was given sovereignty of the Hebrides and Isle of Man upon agreement of payment to Norway. At the same time Scotland recognised Norwegian sovereignty over Shetland and Orkney. Those Northern Isles did not become part of the Kingdom of Scotland until 1471. Norwegian law was not abolished in Shetland until 1611 and the Norse based language of Norn continued in common use for over two centuries after that.
It was during the many years of conflict between Scotland and Norway that the Battle of Largs took place in the reign of King Alexander III (4 September 1241 – 19 March 1286). Largs (Scottish Gaelic: An Leargaidh Ghallda) is a town on the Firth of Clyde in North Ayrshire (Scottish Gaelic: Siorrachd Àir a Tuath) near where the battle took place in 1263. The battle itself was an indecisive one and was fought during the Norwegian expedition of 1263. This was part of King Hakon Hakonarson of Norway’s campaign to reassert Norwegian sovereignty over the western seaboard of Scotland. It was fought in a period when Alexander II and his son Alexander III were trying incorporate that region into Scotland.