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Early Britain From Roman Britain to Anglo Saxon Anglelonde Essential Questions • What caused England to enter the Dark Ages? • How was Roman England different from Anglo Saxon England? • What characterizes Anglo Saxon poetry? • How do we know anything about the Anglo Saxons? • From about 50 AD until 420 AD, Rome ruled much of England. The Roman towns were modern and refined. In such a cultured lifestyle, books were plentiful, theater was common, life was good. The ruins of an amphitheater at Verulamium, England hint at the wealthy, advanced culture of Roman Britain. Did you know that. . . Romans had central heating in their homes? The had hot and cold running water? Nearly all citizens could read and write? In the early 400’s, the Romans deserted Britain because barbarians were attacking Rome. All outlying settlements (like Britain) were abandoned. So who was left in Britain? • Native Britons of Celtic origin • Descendants of the Roman citizens • Slaves of various nationalities • A few wealthy Roman citizens And none of them stood a chance against the Angles, the Saxons, or the Jutes. The invaders burned, raped, and pillaged. But eventually, they brought their families and they stayed. The Anglo Saxons were different from the Romans: • They were not Christians • They had no written language • They were not as culturally advanced A Roman villa in Britain A Saxon farm in Britain The Dark Ages The advanced, educated culture of the Romans was replaced with a harsh lifestyle where simply surviving was sometimes the most one could hope for. In other words, the culture was “darkened.” 440-1066 AD Anglo Saxon England The Angles The Saxons The Jutes England during the Dark Ages was really many small kingdoms, each one ruled by a powerful warrior chieftain who set himself up as king. These kings fought each other, trying to conquer bigger chunks of land for their kingdoms. Finally, one king managed to claim the biggest part of England for himself—Alfred. Alfred the Great • • • • • He encouraged education He created walled towns called burghs He defeated the Vikings He established the Danelaw He commissioned the Anglo Saxon Chronicles and insisted it be written in the vernacular— the spoken language of the common people. Anglo Saxon Literature The beginnings of English literature fall into two broad categories: • the poetry of the pagan Anglo-Saxons • prose of their Christianized descendants. Early poetry possessed four characteristics which mark not only Anglo-Saxon literature but also the English literature of subsequent centuries. These characteristics are: • a love of adventure • a sense of the importance of honor • an awe of natural beauty • a delight in word play (puns and riddles) There are four sources from which we have derived all existing Anglo-Saxon literature: 1. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles A year by year account of English history commissioned by Alfred the Great. It is important: • Historically because it gives us some insight into life during the Anglo Saxon era. • Linguistically because Alfred insisted it be written in the vernacular, that is, in English and not Latin which promoted English as the national language. • Literarily because it is one of only four surviving manuscripts from the Anglo Saxon era 449-1154. 2. The Ecclesiastical History of the English People by Bede This is the only one of the sources for which we have an author. Originally written in Latin (the language of the church and the educated) by the Venerable Bede, it covers the religious history of England from the invasion of Julius Caesar through 731. It was translated into Old English in the 890’s at the order of King Alfred. It includes descriptions of the physical nature of England (flora and fauna) as well as stories about various AS kings and their conversion to Christianity. 3. Beowulf Beowulf is the oldest piece of English literature. The only copy is a 10th century manuscript but it is generally dated to the 8th century. The story takes place in 6th century Scandanavia. It is an epic poem. 4. Exeter Book Copied by a scribe from a prior manuscript between 950-990. It was given to Exeter Cathedral by Leofric, the first bishop of Exeter Cathedral, shortly before his death. The book is the largest extant (existing) collection of Anglo-Saxon riddles and poetry. Anglo-Saxon Poetry Terms Alliteration – the repetition of the first consonant sound in a single line of poetry. Generally, the stressed syllables on either side of the caesura used in alliteration. E.g. “thrust//broke through the bone-rings” Caesura – a pause in the middle of a single line of the verse. Each half line of poetry has two stressed syllables and a varying number of unstressed syllables. The pause in the middle gave the singer a chance to “catch a breath.” These are often denoted by a comma or period in the middle of a line. • Epithet - an identifying word or “tag” identifying a person and often used in place of an actual name or title People are seldom mentiond only by name, but usually with an identifying metaphor: Hrothgar is a ringgiver, a gold-friend; Beowulf is Ecgtheow’s son. • Kenning – a “condensed metaphor” or twoword metaphor (often hyphenated, but not always) used to replace a concrete noun. The poet had a “word hoard” of formulaic phrases: whale road, swan road, sail road are all examples of kennings which refer to the sea. Repetition – repeating the same idea in successive lines, expressed in different words, gave the poet time to formulate the next step in the story. A Geatish bowman Relieved one of them of life and waveContending: his hard arrow bit deep Into its heart… It was quickly assailed in the waves With boar-spears sharply barbed Oral Tradition: Anglo Saxon literature was recited—there were no written versions so each new “telling” probably changed the work in some way. Scop: The storyteller, bard. A scop knew many different tales and they were long stories, too. He used the characteristics of AS poetry to help him remember the lines. So, although much of the Anglo Saxon literature was created before Christianity came to England, the written versions often have Christian references. Why would that be? In a time when monks were trying hard to convert the Anglo Saxon people to Christianity, inserting Christian ideas into their stories was a natural strategy. So let’s look at some Anglo Saxon literature. . .