Hedeby is first mentioned in the Frankish …

Years: 808 - 808

Hedeby is first mentioned in the Frankish chronicles of Einhard (804) who was in the service of Charlemagne, but was probably founded around 770.

The Danish king Godfred (Latin: Godofredus) in 808 destroys a competing Slav trade center named Reric, and it is recorded in the Frankish chronicles that he moved the merchants from there to Hedeby.

This may have provided the initial impetus for the town to develop.

The same sources record that Godfred strengthened the Danevirke, an earthen wall that stretched across the south of the Jutland peninsula.

The Danevirke joined the defensive walls of Hedeby to form an east-west barrier across the peninsula, from the marshes in the west to the Schlei inlet leading into the Baltic in the east.

The town itself is surrounded by earthworks on its three landward sides (north, west, and south).

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