EXCERPTED FROM MY BOOK, OUR SUMMER IN ESTONIA: AMAZON.COM
In addition to staying at an authentic manor house, I had other historical interests for visiting Muhu. This island was the last mainstay and defender of ancient pagan Estonian freedom, a freedom that finally succumbed on this island to the forces of crusading Christianity represented by the German knights and the Danish king. There had been many confrontations between the two cultures, during the ever expanding German and Danish influence in the first two decades of the 13th century. From Riga the German knights expanded by land northwards into Estonia, while the Danes encroached from the sea, establishing a settlement at today’s capital, Tallinn, which means Danish Town. The native pagan Estonians sometimes accepted baptism as a convenience, but later would reject their fealty to Christianity, and continued their marauding ways, much to the dismay of the Baltic German knights. Considering the Estonians untrustworthy, the Knights were ready for a showdown. Having subdued most of present day Estonia, in February, 1227, a force of 20,000 warriors, led by the crusading Knights of the Sword, marched over the frozen Baltic Sea and laid siege to the marauding pagans in their stronghold on Muhu Island. It took six bitter winter days of battering siege warfare for the Knights to finally breech the ice-slicked twenty-five foot ramparts, and once through those defenses, showed no mercy. No longer trusting in Estonian heathen promises, all of them, men, women, and children were slaughtered. Crossing over the ice once more the victorious force invaded the last pagan Estonian stronghold on Saaremaa. Having witnessed the fate of those on Muhu, the remaining Estonians asked for mercy, and were granted their lives in exchange for Christian baptism and swearing fealty to the ruling Knights of the Cross and the Danish king. This turning point in Estonian history is marked by a simple monolith where the stronghold on Muhu was located, the bastion’s stones long ago being removed for other building purposes. Only the weed covered ramparts remain to give testimony to the epic struggle that occurred there almost 800 years ago.
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