with Dane axes, from the 12th-century
Madrid Skylitzes manuscript. Through the course of the 9th to the 11th centuries, the Dane axe began to gain further popularity outside of Scandinavia, either through Viking trade or influence or independent developments; such as England, Ireland and Normandy. Historical accounts may depict the Dane axe as the weapon of some of the warrior elite in this period, such as the
Huscarls of Anglo-Saxon England. In the
Bayeux tapestry, a visual record of the ascent of
William the Conqueror to the throne of England, the axe is almost exclusively wielded by well armoured huscarls. These huscarls formed the core bodyguard of
King Harold at the
Battle of Hastings. A Dane axe, perhaps King Edward's, is offered to Harold before he is crowned. The Bayeux Tapestry also depicts a huscarl cleaving a
Norman knight's horse's head with one blow. The Dane axe is also known to have been used by the
Varangian Guard, also known as (), the "axe-bearing guard", who were mercenary soldiers from northern and eastern Europe employed by the
Byzantine emperors. One surviving ivory plaque from 10th-century
Constantinople depicts a Varangian holding an axe that is at least as tall as its wielder. The Dane axe became widely used throughout Europe from the 10th century, with axes gaining acceptance as a knightly weapon not long after; albeit not achieving the status of the sword. They also began to be used widely as an infantry polearm, with the haft lengthened to about . The 13th and 14th centuries also saw form changes, with the blade also lengthening, the rear horn extending to touch or attach to the haft. The lengthened weapon, especially if combined with the lengthened blade, was called a
sparth in England. Some believe this weapon is the ancestor of the
halberd. While the use of the Dane axe continued into the 14th century, axes with an armour-piercing back-spike and spear-like spike on the forward end of the haft became more common, eventually evolving into the
poleaxe in the 15th century. The simple Danish axe continued to be used in the West of Scotland and in Ireland into the 16th century. In Ireland, it was particularly associated with
gallowglass mercenaries. == Famous historical figures associated with the axe ==