Transcript Beowulf

The Anglo-Saxon
Period (450-1100)
Background, Beowulf, and More!!!
From Cave Dwellers to Celts
• Cave dwellers - 250,000 years ago
• Invaders from Iberian peninsula (modern
Spain and Portugal) create a society
sophisticated enough to erect Stonehenge on
Salisbury Plain
• Celtic peoples reach the British Isles around
600 B.C.
• Celtic tribes war with each other while their
priests, called druids, conduct sacrifices in
forest shrines
Invasion of an Island
The Invasions Continue…
• 55 B.C. – Rome first tries to conquer
Britain and Julius Caesar raids the land
to punish the Britons for helping the
Continental Celts in their struggle with
the Romans
• 43 A.D. – Roman emperor Claudius
successfully invades the island and
drives the defeated tribes into the
highlands of Wales and Scotland
Roman Britain Prospers
• Population of 3-4
million people
• Large buildings and
elaborate sanitation
systems
• Straight, well-made
roads
• Primarily a rural
society
The Good Times End
• 410 A.D. – the city of Rome falls to an army
of German barbarians and the emperor
Honorius sends a letter to the Roman Britons
announcing that they must defend themselves
• Britain is weak and divided, standing open to
foreign aggression
• Angles, Saxons, and Jutes – Germanic tribes
spreading throughout eastern, central, and
southern Britain
A Legend Arises
• Celtic inhabitants
flee west into the
highlands of Wales
• Among these people
the legend of King
Arthur and his
Round Table arises
Anglo-Saxon England
• Beowulf – heroic poem that tells of the
Germanic settlers and their first decades in
England
• Tribal society in which warrior kings led a
group of fighting men, called thanes, into
battle
• Defeat and capture meant death so battle
was fierce and unyielding
• Gang warfare – bloodshed was common and
any offense of one thane had to be avenged
Drinks and Entertainment
• Mead-hall – where the king, thanes,
wives, and servants gathered together,
and where the warriors slept
• While the king and his court feasted,
the scop, a singing poet, entertained
• The scop recounted both past history
and present events while also preserving
record of their achievements for future
generations
Kings, Kings, and More Kings
• Country was divided into a number of
petty kingdoms
• More ambitious kings began to assert an
authority over other rulers each
claiming to be a ruling king, or bretwalda
• Aethelbert – first bretwalda who ruled
from 560 to 616 and dreamed of
bringing unity and a measure of peace to
the land
Converting A Nation
• St. Patrick – began converting Celtic Ireland
to Christianity in the 430s, but Anglo-Saxon
Britain remained pagan
• St. Augustine – sent from Rome in 597 to
convert England, established the first
archbishopric at Canterbury
• During the next 40 years missionaries were
able to convert most of the Anglo-Saxon
kings and their people to Christianity
The Terrible Vikings
• Crossed the North Sea
from Denmark and
Norway
• Between 867 and 877
they took over most of
the northeast and
central portions of
England
• Danelaw – a region
where Danish law was in
force
England Fights Back
• Alfred the Great – ruled the one surviving
Anglo-Saxon kingdom, Wessex, and prevented
the Vikings from seizing it the way they had
the Danelaw ( built the first English navy)
• Defeated the Vikings and was able to foster a
second great era of Anglo-Saxon literary
culture
• Struggle for control was halted for good by
another invasion, the last one, by the FrenchNorman, William the Conqueror
The Rest Is History
• Anglo-Saxons dominated the history of
England for 600 years
• Provided its language, began its
literature and established traditions in
law, government, and religion
• First English people
Beowulf
Beowulf
Beowulf
Beowulf
Beowulf
The first page of the
Beowulf manuscript.
Damage by the fire can be
seen in the upper left
hand corner..
Links to Readings in Old English
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP2FyVbymTg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Wl-OZ3breE