Transcript Slide 1

The Anglo-Saxons
Their History, Culture, Language, and
Literature
Overview of Events
 Ancient
Britain
 Roman Britain
 Coming of the Anglo-Saxons – The English
language begins
 Anglo-Saxon Culture, Religion, and Social Order
 Beginning of the literary tradition
 Second Viking invasion
Ancient Britain 2000 - 43 A.D.
 Inhabited
by Britons and Celtic people
 Farmers and hunters
 Society organized into clans
 Ruled by tribal chieftains elected from the class of
pagan priests
 Priests known as the Druids
Roman Britain 43 – 449 A.D.
43 A.D. – Romans, under Claudius’s rule, conquer Britain.
 Brought their law, culture, comforts, and Latin language to
the land.
 The Celts become “Romanized,” tribal disputes stop, and
things are fairly peaceful.
 Britons were converted to Christianity with the rest of the
Roman Empire in the 4th century.
 5th century – Roman occupation ends.

Arrival of the Anglo – Saxons
5th Century A.D.
 Withdrawal
of the Romans left the native Britons
vulnerable.
 Next 100 years – Britons were invaded by
seafaring, Germanic invaders.
 Three tribes known as Angles, Saxons, and Jutes.
 Invasion forced natives to retreat to Wales.
 Anglo-Saxon
 Old
Occupational Areas
English Period begins in 449.
Anglo-Saxon Culture
A.S. brought legends about ancient German heroes and
kings.
 Warriors were celebrated in lays or songs sung at feasts by
a gleeman or scop.
 Lays accompanied by the harp or lyre.
 Songs composed orally – for entertainment, but also kept
history alive.
 Kings would entertain friends in mead halls, named for the
drink mead made from fermented honey.

Heorot – The Meadhall in Beowulf
Anglo-Saxon Religious Beliefs
(Before Christianity)
 A.S.
were Pagans. Christianity of Roman times
kept alive only in remote regions.
 Every human life in the hands of fate.
 Worshipped ancient Germanic gods: Tiu, god of
war and the sky; Woden, chief of the gods; and
Fria, Woden’s wife.
 Tuesday,
Wednesday, and Friday
Anglo-Saxon Society
Organized into a class of warriors known as earls or
thanes.
 These warriors protected and were devoted to the king,
who was chosen by a witancouncil of elders.
 There was also a class of freemen known
as churls.
 Slaves were known as thralls.
 Women, as “peace-weavers”

Return of Christianity
 All
of England converted to Christianity upon the
arrival of Augustine in 597 A.D.
 Augustine began by converting King Ethelbert of
Kent.
 Rest of England soon followed.
 Monasteries built.
 By 731 A.D.-Christianity well-rooted
The Scribes
 In
monasteries, scribes produced books by hand.
 Books were usually religious in nature.
 Focused on saints’ lives and sermons.
 There were also copies of the oral literature.
 Because of these Christian scribes, Anglo-Saxon
culture was recorded.
 “Father of English History” – the Venerable Bede,
a Northumbrian monk.
Anglo-Saxon
Themes
and kingship – the relationship between
kings and their thanes (warriors).
 Wergild- “man price” or retribution for the death of
one’s family member.
 Heroism
 After
the arrival of Christianity, their relationship with
God takes on these themes.
Themes cont’d.
 Wyrd-
 Exile-
“Fate” controlled one’s destiny.
the cost of being abandoned or apart from
one’s tribe and society.
The Danish Invasion
 Vikings
(warriors) carried their piracy to the
British Isles, bringing destruction and fear.
 Despite England’s efforts to defend itself, most of
northern, eastern, and southern England fell to the
Danes by the middle of the ninth century.
 Only
the Saxon kingdom of Wessex fought the Danes
to a standstill.
Weapons of War
A Typical Village
Old English: Caedmon’s Hymn

Verse Early Saxon
Nu sculon herigean
heofonrices weard,
meotodes meahte
and his modgeþanc,
weorc wuldorfæder,
swa he wundra gehwæs,
ece drihten,
or onstealde.
He ærest sceop
eorðan bearnum
heofon to hrofe,
halig scyppend;
þa middangeard
moncynnes weard,
ece drihten,
æfter teode
firum foldan,
frea ælmihtig.
Anglo-Saxon Occupational Areas




Angles- Northern and
Midland Sections –
Northumbria, Mercia, East
Anglia
Saxons- Southern sections
– Wessex, Essex, Sussex
Jutes- Southeastern
Province, which became
the kingdom of Kent
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