Growing up in the UK we're taught about the Vikings up until 1066 and then it's made out that the Vikings just disappeared and stopped raiding. While they may have stopped raiding in the British Isles surely they continued raiding elsewhere?
If so when did the Northmen stop raiding and when did being a Viking as a job die out?
While much more can always be said, I hope some of my previous posts might be useful in clarifying the points:
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As OP wonders above, "The Viking Age(s)" is the historiographical rather than objective historical periodization, that is to say, the period defined primarily by modern historians. While "from 793 CE to 1066 CE" is certainly the most famous one, defined by two symbolic on the Vikings in England, it is not the only one, and there were most probably been possible raids prior to 793 as well as after 1066.
As I explained in the linked post, for Scandinavians, "The Viking Age" is actually one of the sub-period of the Iron Age before the establishment of Christian kingdoms in their homelands with indigenous written evidence.
(Added): Latest after about 1120s/ 1140s onward, medieval British sources also ceased to describe the contemporary Scandinavian neighbors as raiders, and rather described them as Christian neighbors.