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The term “danegeld” entered language as metaphor—paying off aggressors, surrendering to threats, short-term expedient that creates long-term problems.
The Kipling Poem:
Rudyard Kipling’s poem “Dane-Geld” (1911) captured the dilemma: “Once you have paid him the Dane-geld / You never get rid of the Dane.” The observation that paying extortion encourages repeat demands, that the payer becomes perpetual victim, resonated beyond Viking context.
The Strategic Lesson:
The historical danegeld experience illustrated principle that paying aggressors might buy temporary peace but encouraged future aggression, that strength demonstrated was more effective long-term than wealth surrendered, though the lesson was complicated by cases where paying was actually rational short-term strategy that bought time for eventually effective resistance.
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