Post on 27-May-2015
transcript
Anglo – Saxon PeriodHistory
Historical Background
BC 2800 - Stonehenge
Observatory? Temple? Calendar?Link to video about Stonehenge:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6oxmxPKoSE
2000 - 800 BC First people on the island came from
Iberian peninsula (Spain & Portugal). Still used Stone Age weaponry and tools. Most important of early conquerors were
Celts (two groups). Brythons settled on large island, Gaels on
small island (Ireland). The modern name of the large island,
Great Britain, evolved from the Brythons: Brython = Briton = Britain
800 - 600 BC Druids - Celtic priests
with many responsibilities.
Duty of priests to memorize and recite heroic poems in order to pass along tribal history and values.
They worshipped Germanic gods.
Druids, con’t
Religious, political, cultural leaders of Celtic tribes Believed all natural elements had a spirit (rocks, trees,
water, etc.) Oak=power of life, Mistletoe=balancing power of death
Came to an end with the influx of Christianity (monotheism-belief in one true god) briefly during Roman occupation, permanently in 597 AD when Pope Gregory sent emissaries to convert Anglo-Saxon kings and establish monasteries in G.B. (Augustine was principal emissary)
55 BC
In 55 BC, Julius Caesar made a hasty invasion and declared land.
True Roman invasion occurred in 45 AD.
Romans brought
Art Architecture Organized religion Roads Legal system (laws) Latin Language Towns/cities (London=Londinium) Military infrastructures (Hadrian’s Wall-built and patrolled by
Romans to keep Vikings out)
Romans called home in 5th century because of continued attacks to the territory-needed for defense
Bad news for the remaining inhabitants on G.B.!
Anglo-Saxon Period 449-1066 AD Next invaders of British Isles--Anglos, Saxons, and
Jutes. This is where we get the modern term for England:
Angloland = Angland = England Sailed from Denmark and Germany in 449--in search
of farm land. Drove Britons to west portion of island and to the
smaller island. There were resistance groups--villagers who tried to
fight off the invasion. One such group was led by a Roman descendant by the name of Artorius who may be part of the basis for the fictional King Arthur.
Christianity
Although present since 45 A.D., not strong until:
St. Augustine, along with 50 monks, arrived in England in 597 A.D., and converted King Ethelbert (King of Kent) to Christianity.
Effect: building of churches and monasteries (educational places).
Conversion of England changed the language in three main ways:
introduced large church vocabulary introduced words and ideas from as
far away as India and China gave incentive for Anglo/Saxons to
apply existing words to new concepts.
Also played role in unifying people--beliefs about wives, children, slaves
The Danish (Viking) Invasion
Occurred in 793 A.D. Invaders were more barbaric than the previous Anglo-Saxon invaders--killing, raping, and setting fire to entire villages
Norwegians to N. Eng. and Ireland Danes to E and S England By 850 half of England was in hands of
Danes; it was then they turned to Wessex Link to video about Viking Invasion:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iLPlmo3SS_0
Barbarian InfluenceBritain’s inhabitants were greatly influenced by Viking and
tribal invaders eradicating any Roman influenceBarbarians lived in a tribal community structure: King=AKA ring-giver Witan=Elders or wise men/king’s advisors Earl/thane=nobility of tribe-can trace lineage to king’s family Scop=bearer of history Warriors=central figure of society Freemen/Churls=independent landholders Thralls=Slaves Women=of no importance unless queen of tribe
Unification of Great Britain
King Alfred-871-899 AD- responsible for unifying all warring territories of Great Britain
Negotiated Danelaugh (treaty name) with King Canute, leader of the Danish Vikings-gave England 50 years of peace
Intended to unify all tribes and territories through religion and education-encouraged writing in Anglo-Saxon language, not Latin
Responsible for The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Ecclesiastical History of the English People
End of the Anglo-Saxon Era In January 1066, King Edward "the Confessor" died. He was
succeeded by the Earl of Wessex, Harold. This bothered a duke named William across the English Channel in Normandy. The royal family at Wessex had intermarried with royalty in Normandy. William had been the cousin of Edward the Confessor, and Edward had promised to make him his heir. William believed that he had a right to rule in England. Link to Youtube video of re-enactment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tF0U7olkPPg
Harold and William, the Duke of Normandy met in battle in 1066 at the Battle of Hastings
William was victorious (only because he and his troops were positioned on the TOP of a hill as Harold and his troops attempted to climb it to defeat William), and the Anglo-Saxon era came to an end