Historical Foundation: A solid understanding of general historical concepts and timelines is essential to contextualize the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain within broader historical developments.
Knowledge of Roman Britain: Familiarity with the decline and withdrawal of the Roman Empire from Britain is crucial, as the Anglo-Saxon invasion occurred in the aftermath of Roman rule.
Early Medieval European History: A basic grasp of the early medieval period in Europe, including events like the Migration Period, provides context for the movements of various Germanic tribes, including the Anglo-Saxons.
Political Structures: Some knowledge of the political structures of pre-invasion Britain and the Anglo-Saxon social and political systems contributes to a comprehensive understanding of the period.
Cultural and Religious Context: Understanding the cultural and religious dynamics of both the indigenous British population and the incoming Anglo-Saxons is important for appreciating the complexity of the invasion.
Archaeological Awareness: Familiarity with archaeological evidence related to the Anglo-Saxon period aids in interpreting material culture and supporting historical narratives.
Critical Thinking Skills: The ability to critically analyze historical sources and varying interpretations is crucial for navigating the complexities of the Anglo-Saxon invasion.
Language and Literature (Optional): While not mandatory, familiarity with Old English language and literature, such as Beowulf, can provide additional insights into the cultural and literary aspects of the period.
Course-Specific Requirements: Review any specific prerequisites or recommendations provided by the instructor in the course syllabus or guidelines.
Lecture
three: The Anglo-Saxons invasion of Britain (410-1066AD)
1. Introduction
The Anglo-Saxon period
in Britain spans approximately six centuries from 410-1066AD. The
period used to be known as the Dark Ages, mainly because written sources
for the early years of the Saxon invasion are scarce. However, most historians
now prefer the terms 'early middle ages' or 'early medieval
period'. The Anglo-Saxon period was a time of war, of the breaking up of
Roman Britannia into several separate kingdoms, of religious conversion, and,
after the 790s, of continual battles against a new set of invaders: the Vikings.
2. Anglo-Saxon Invasion
Historical Facts
Anglo-Saxon mercenaries
had for many years fought in the Roman army in Britain, so they were not total
strangers to the island. Their invasions were slow and began even before the
Roman legions departed. When the Roman legions left Britain, the
Germanic-speaking Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians began to arrive – at
first in small invading parties, but soon in increasing numbers. Initially,
they met little firm resistance from the relatively defenceless inhabitants of
Britannia. Around 500 AD, however, the invaders were resisted fiercely by the
Romano-British, who might have been led by King Arthur, if he existed –
and there is no hard evidence that he did. However, the monk Gildas,
writing in the mid-6th century, talks about a British Christian leader called
Ambrosius who rallied (grouped or assembled)
the Romano-British against the invaders and won twelve battles. Later
accounts call this leader Arthur.
The Celtic areas of
Britain regarded the Saxons as enemies and foreigners on their borders: their
name became Sassenachs to the Scottish
and Saesneg to
the Welsh. The various Anglo-Saxon groups settled in different areas of the
country. They formed several kingdoms, often changing, and constantly at war
with one another. These kingdoms sometimes acknowledged one of their rulers as
a ‘High King'. By 650-850 AD, there were seven separate kingdoms called the
Heptarchy[1] which
are:
1. Kent,
settled by the Jutes.
2. Mercia,
whose best-known ruler. This large kingdom stretched over the Midlands.
3. Northumbria,
where the monk Bede (c. 670-735)
4. East
Anglia, made up of Angles.
5. Essex (East
Saxons). Here the famous Battle of Maldon was fought against the Vikings in
991.
6. Sussex:
the South Saxons settled here.
7. Wessex (West
Saxons), later the kingdom of King Alfred, the only English king ever to have
been called ‘the Great', and his equally impressive grandson, Athelstan, the
first who could truly call himself ‘King of the English'.
By 850 AD the seven kingdoms had been consolidated into three large
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms: Northumbria, Mercia, and Wessex. The Anglo-Saxons had
become a Christian people.
3.
The
Role of Alfred the Great in the Defense against External Enemies
King Alfred, called
‘the Great' because he is the only king amongst the other Heptarchy’s king who
resisted the Vikings invasion and could maintain his kingdom Wessex and the
Anglo-Saxon presence in Britain. His achievement can be summarized as follows:
- He
defeated the Vikings in the Battle of Edington in 878, and then converted
their leader Guthrum to Christianity.
- He
recaptured London from the Vikings and established a boundary between the
Saxons and the Vikings - the area ruled by the Vikings was known as the
Danelaw.
- He strengthened
his kingdom's defences by creating a series of fortresses and a decent
army.
- He built
ships against Viking sea attacks which marked the beginning of the English
navy.
- He had
books translated into English and promoted learning;
- He founded
monasteries.
- He
commissioned the writing of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a historical record
of the Anglo-Saxons in Britain.
After 793, when the Vikings raided Lindisfarne Monastery, the
history of the Anglo-Saxons became entangled (linked) with that of the Vikings. In
many ways they were similar: in language, religion, and Northern European
origins, yet they are not the same.
4. The Anglo-Saxon Cultural Facts
4.1.
Languages of the Anglo-Saxons
The Anglo-Saxons spoke the language we
now know as Old English, an ancestor of modern-day English. Its closest cousins
were other Germanic languages such
as Old Friesian, Old Norse, and Old High German. The surviving Anglo-Saxon
manuscripts from Anglo-Saxon England show the different dialects spoken in
different parts of the country, such as West Saxon, Northumbrian, and Mercian.
The oldest English poem, Cædmon’s Hymn, was composed in the
Northumbrian dialect of English. The old epic poem Beowulf is written in Old English.
4.2.
Houses and Daily Activities
The Anglo-Saxons were
farmers and did not like the stone houses and streets left by the Romans, so
they built their villages. They looked for land with lots of natural resources
like food, water, and wood to build and heat their homes and practice
agriculture, and Britain’s forests had everything they needed. They surrounded
each village with a high fence to protect cattle from wild animals like foxes
and wolves, and to keep out their enemies, too. The Anglo-Saxon attacked the
villages and the monasteries and took all their properties. They disliked
everything related to the Romans.
4.3.
Food
They grew wheat,
barley, and oats (cereals) for making bread and porridge, grew fruit and
vegetables like carrots and apples, and kept pigs, sheep, and cattle for meat,
wool, and milk.
4.4.
Cloths
Anglo-Saxons made their
clothes out of natural materials. The men wore long-sleeved tunics (coats) made
of wool or linen, often decorated with a pattern. Their trousers were woollen
and held up by a leather belt from which they could hang their tools such as
knives and pouches (bags). Shoes were usually made out of leather and fastened
with laces.
The women would wear an
under-dress of linen or wool and an outer dress like a pinafore called a
“peplos” held onto the underlayer by two brooches on the shoulders. Anglo-Saxon
women loved beaded necklaces, bracelets, and rings.
4.5.
Beliefs
Many of today’s Christian traditions came from the
Anglo-Saxons, but they were not always Christians. When they first came over
from Europe they were Pagans, worshipping lots of different gods who they
believed looked different parts of their life, such as family, crop
growing, weather, and even war. The Anglo-Saxons would pray to the Pagan gods
to give them good health, a plentiful harvest, or success in battle.
When the Pope of Rome sent over a missionary, led by a monk
called Augustine,
to England in 597AD, the Anglo-Saxons became Christians. Augustine convinced
the Anglo-Saxon King Ethelbert of Kent to
convert to Christianity and slowly the rest of the country followed him. Pagan
temples were turned into churches and
more churches (built of wood) started popping up all over Britain.
Lecture
four: The Viking invasion of Britain (793-1066)
1.
Historical Facts on the Viking
The Viking Age in
Britain began about 1,200 years ago in the 9th Century AD and lasted for just
over 200 years. The Vikings first invaded Britain in AD 793 and lasted until
1066 when William the Conqueror became King of England after the Battle of Hastings.
These bands of fierce
raiders began to attack the British coasts. They were also called the Danes
although they did not just come from Denmark. The Vikings came
from the three countries in Scandinavia (in Northern Europe) Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Vikings were also known as the
Norsemen. Norsemen means 'people from the North'. They were great travellers
and sailed to other parts of Europe, where they traded, raided, and often
settled.
The Vikings came across
the North Sea, just as the Anglo-Saxons had done 400 years earlier. They drove
the Saxons out of part of the country and took it for themselves. King Alfred,
Saxon king of Wessex, fought them in a great battle, but he could not drive
them right away and had to let them have part of the country after signing a peace
treaty; the area they settled in is called Danelaw.
The first place the
Vikings raided in Britain was the monastery at Lindisfarne, a small holy
island located off the northeast coast of England. This raid on Lindisfarne marks the start of the Viking migration from
Scandinavia in 793. Some of the monks were drowned in the sea, others
killed or taken away as slaves along with many treasures of the church.
In the years that
followed, villages near the sea, monasteries, and even cities found themselves
dominated by these sea-based foreign intruders. Soon no region of the British
Isles (Britain and nearby islands) was safe from the Vikings. They attacked
villages and towns in Wales, Scotland, Ireland, the Isle of Man, and England.
By 866, the Vikings had arrived in York. They made York (or Jorvik as they called
it) the second biggest city in the country after London.
2. Danelaw areas
The areas the Vikings
settled in were known as Danelaw. It
covered an area roughly east of a line on a map joining London and Chester. The
Saxons lived south of the line, mainly in Wessex, governed by Alfred the Great
The Vikings settled in:
- Islands off the
coast of Scotland - Shetland, Orkney, and The Hebrides
- Around the north
and northwest coast of Scotland
- Parts of Ireland -
Dublin is a Viking city
- The Isle of Man
- Small parts of
Wales
- Northumbria (which
included modern Yorkshire)
- East Anglia
- Leicester,
Nottingham, Derby, Stamford, and Lincoln
3.
Cultural Facts on the Vikings
3.1.
Vikings Religion
Like the type of
religion in ancient Greece or Rome, the Vikings worshipped
many different Gods and Goddesses. Their religion was an important part of
everyday life. The
three most important Viking Gods are:
-
Odin is the leader of the gods. The god of
magic, poetry, and war. His wife was Frigg
-
Thor (Tor in Scandinavian languages) was the
god of thunder.
Thor had iron gloves, a magic belt, and a hammer. He was also the god of
protection. He protected them from cold, hunger, giants, and other dangers.
-
Freyr (or Frej in Swedish) is the god of agriculture
and fertility.
Frey was worshipped regularly all throughout the year for future prosperity. He
was the twin of Freyja (goddess of love and fertility). Freyja wept golden
tears when she was unhappy.
3.2. Norse Myths (Sagas)
The Vikings told many
stories about gods, giants, trolls, and dragons. They were full of magic,
adventure, dishonesty, and trouble. They describe people living in Midgard (Middle Earth) and gods
and goddesses living in a sky world called Asgard. A beautiful rainbow bridge linked Midgard with Asgard.
3.3.
Viking Houses and Food
Vikings lived in a long, narrow
building called a
longhouse. They were built of
wood. The longhouses had curved walls in the plan, forming a ship-like outline.
The walls were lined
with clay or consisted of wooden planks.
The Vikings were also
farmers and people of agriculture. Therefore, they ate fruits, vegetables, and
cereals for bread and kept animals for meat, milk, cheese, and eggs. They had plenty of fish as they were
sea-fairer and hunters. The bread was made using quern stones, stone tools for
hand-grinding grain.
3.4.
Vikings Cloths
Viking clothes were made from wool, linen, and
animal skins. The Vikings were skilful weavers and made their clothes. Women,
with the help of children, made the wool into yarn (thread) and used natural
dyes from plants to give it colour. Men wore tunics and trousers and
women wore a long dress with a pinafore over it
3.5. Vikings
Timeline
The Vikings came to Britain in two waves the
first wave in 793 and the second one in 980.
793
|
The first invasion by the Vikings. They raided monasteries on the coast,
including Lindisfarne,
|
794
|
First raids on Scotland and Ireland.
|
820
|
Viking raids continued around the English coast
|
821
|
Wessex, reigned by Alfred the Great became the Supreme Kingdom
|
865
|
Great Viking Army from Denmark Invaded England
|
866
|
Danes captured York (which the Vikings called Jorvik) and make it their
kingdom (land ruled by a king)
|
871
|
King Ethelred, the West Saxon king, and his brother Alfred defeated the
Viking army at the Battle of Ashdown (in Berkshire).
|
876
|
Vikings from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden settled permanently in England.
|
886
|
King Alfred the Great defeated the Vikings but allows them to settle in
Eastern England (the Kingdoms of York and East Anglia) This area of England
became known as Danelaw and was ruled by the Viking King Guthrum.
|
901-937
|
Eastern England (Danelaw) was conquered by the English
|
950
|
Vikings from Ireland, the Isle of Man, and the Hebrides raided on Wales,
particularly the coastal monasteries.
|
954
|
Eric Bloodaxe, the last Viking King of Jorvik, was thrown out of York.
|
980
|
New Viking Raided on England
|
994
|
Olaf of Norway and Sven 'Forkbeard', son of the Danish king, led an
invading Danish army in an unsuccessful siege of London and subsequently
ravaged the south-east.
|
1014
|
King Canute (Cnut) of Denmark captured the English Crown (became king)
|
1042
|
Edward the Confessor became King (A Saxon King)
|
[1] Heptarch means seven kingdoms. Hepta is seven. Archy is kingdom