- en.wikipedia.org HedebyHedeby is mentioned in Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Marsh King's Daughter. Name[edit]. Site of the former town of Hedeby.
- tr.qa.edu.vn tr/Hedeby2018 yılında UNESCO tarafından Hedeby ve Danevirke'deki Arkeolojik Sınır Kompleksi adı ile Dünya Mirası olarak ilan edilmiştir.
- worldhistory.org Hedeby/The town was briefly captured by the Franks in 934 CE and then reoccupied by them in 974 CE; the Danes did not succeed in taking Hedeby back until 983 CE.
- hejsonderborg.dk hedeby-a-viking-town/Having control of Hedeby meant that you had control of the North Sea-Baltic Sea traffic, and helped in the development of Hedeby as a major trading town.
- worldheritage-education.eu en/sites/haithabuHedeby and the Danevirke were inscribed as UNESCO-World Heritage Site as “Archaeological Border Complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke”.
- Hedeby and Danevirke are an outstanding testament to the Viking Age. ... Hedeby was a flourishing trade centre in this border region.
- worldatlas.com articles/what-was-hedeby.htmlThe earliest mention of Hedeby occurred in the 804 Frankish chronicles of Einhard, although the settlement was likely established in 770.
- medievalexcellence.com 2020/01/08/items-from-10th…Hedeby is located near the modern city of Schleswig, Germany on the Jutland Peninsula, but it was Scandinavia’s southernmost trading port in the Early Middle Ages.