A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons

BOOK: A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons
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GEOFFREY HINDLEY,
educated at University College, Oxford is a lecturer and writer. He was three times an invited participant at the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo, and has regularly lectured in Europe and America on Medieval social history, European culture and the history of music. From 1994 to 2000 he taught English civilization at the University of Le Havre. He is also President of the Society for the History of Medieval Technology and Science of Oxford and London. His many books include
The Shaping of Europe, Saladin: A Biography, England in the Age of Caxton, The Book of Magna Carta
and
A Brief History of the Crusades.
He lives in Peterborough, England.

 

Praise for Geoffrey Hindley’s
A Brief History of the Crusades

 

‘We are clearly entering a new phase of an old war. Hindley’s book fills in the historical background to it and should be widely read.’

Paul Johnson,
Mail on Sunday

 

‘Hindley’s accomplished book is informative, never descending into the sensational – but not avoiding the horrors either.’

Good Book Guide

 

‘Hindley’s book magnificently explores the motives of knights and peasants . . . and presents an heroic tapestry of Europe on the move.’

Oxford Times

 

 

 

 

 

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A BRIEF HISTORY OF

 

THE ANGLO-SAXONS

 

GEOFFREY HINDLEY

 

ROBINSON
London

Constable & Robinson Ltd
55–56 Russell Square
London WC1B 4HP
www.constablerobinson.com

 

This edition published by Robinson,
an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2006

 

Copyright © Geoffrey Hindley 2006

 

The right of Geoffrey Hindley to be identified as the author of this
work has been asserted by him in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

 

All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

 

A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in
Publication data is available from the British Library

 

ISBN-13: 978-1-84529-161-7
ISBN-10: 1-84529-161-1
eISBN: 978-1-47210-759-6

 

Printed and bound in the EU

 

1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

 

 

 

 

To Diana

CONTENTS

 

Acknowledgements

A Note on Names and Measurements

List of Illustrations

Maps

Chronology

Selective Genealogy of the Royal House of Cerdic/Wessex/England

Introduction: An Idea of Early England

 

1   Invaders and Settlers: Beginnings to the Early 600s

2   Southern Kingdoms,
AD
600–800

3   Northumbria: The Star in the North

4   The Mercian Sphere

5   Apostles of Germany

6   Alcuin of York and the Continuing Anglo-Saxon Presence on the Continent

7   Viking Raiders, Danelaw, ‘Kings’ of York

8   The Wessex of Alfred the Great

9   Literature, Learning, Language and Law in Anglo-Saxon England

10   The Hegemony of Wessex: The English Kingdom and Church Reforms

11   Danish Invasions and Kings: Æthelred ‘Unraed’, Cnut the Great and Others

12   Edward the Confessor, the Conquest and the Aftermath

Appendix 1: The Bayeux Tapestry

Appendix 2: The Death of Harold and His Afterlife?

Appendix 3: Royal Writing Office or Chancery?

 

Notes

Select Bibliography

Index

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

Since the publication of the second edition of Peter Hunter Blair’s
An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England
in 1977 (reprinted in 2003 with a new introduction and updated bibliography), there has been a wide range of books, articles and journals on all aspects of Anglo-Saxon history and culture. This
Brief History
has drawn on this wealth of publications as well as the classic work of scholars such as Frank Stenton and Dorothy Whitelock to present a rounded and, to the best of my ability, up-to-date account of the history, language and literature of what was undoubtedly one of the most formative cultures in Britain and Europe. Of the many distinguished scholars to whose work I am particularly indebted, I would like to mention here: James Campbell, Simon Keynes, the late Patrick Wormald, Michael Lapidge, John Blair, Pauline Stafford, Rosamond McKiterrick, Timothy Reuter, David Rollason and David Hill. Many others are acknowledged in the notes and bibliography.

More personal thanks go to my editors at Constable and Robinson, Becky Hardie and Claudia Dyer; to the specialist reader; and to David Rose who copy-edited the entire text with great thoroughness; to Christopher Shaw for reading the page proofs and Helen Peters, to whom I am indebted for the index. For those errors that remain, I am of course to blame.

A number of the pictures used are thanks to the generous help of my friends Gordon Monaghan and Rex Winsbury, who made many special journeys in pursuit of photographs of crosses and eagles, statues and churches. For some of the artwork that enriches the plates, I am gratefully in the debt of Mr Monaghan, a celebrated draughtsman in the world of stained glass design, who works in partnership with his wife Yvonne.

Finally I would like to say thank you to the staff of Cambridge University Library; the staff of Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery; the Peterborough Central Library; and the staff at Yaxley Library, in Cambridgeshire, for their expertise and assistance.

A NOTE ON NAMES AND MEASUREMENTS

 

Spellings and place names

 

The territory we now call France covered, during the Anglo-Saxon period, various regions with different names, for example Gaul, Neustria, West Francia or Frankia. Like other writers in this field, I have done my best to tread a rational path through the minefield of usage. In the last case both spellings are found in recent literature. On the assumption that the usage derives from a Latin formation and that Latin at the time still used the letter ‘C’ for the consonantal ‘K’, and having no other letter, I have adopted the spelling ‘Francia’, though the word would no doubt have sounded like Frankia.

 

Personal Names

 

When it comes to the spelling of Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian personal names and transliterations from Old English, Old Norse or Danish usage, one finds a rich diversity of modern variants. From Æthelred/Ethelred, Eiric/Erik, Sweyn/Swein, to Cnud/Cnut (even the somewhat old fashioned Canute) and so forth. Alfred/Ælfred is the classic example. One of the recent biographies of the king refers to him throughout as ‘Alfred’ while the book jacket features a manuscript in Old English where the name is clearly shown as ‘Ælfred’. It seems to me that ‘Alfred’ is the inevitable choice here. In other cases I have endeavoured to follow what one might call ‘best practice’ in the knowledge that common usage may change by the end of this decade. Within the last decade, two major books have been published on the leading dynasty of Wessex nobility: the title of one concerns the ‘Godwins’, the other, the Godwines. I have adopted ‘Weland the Smith’ in place of the ‘Wayland’ for the name of the figure of pagan legend. A note about Egbert or Ecgberht: it is now increasingly common to find the spelling Ecgberht, not only because it is more true to the original but also because in Anglo-Saxon ‘ecg’ sounds like ‘edge’ not ‘egg’.

The Scandinavian raiders appear as ‘Vikings’ even though it is likely that ‘viking’ may have originated as a generic term for a young raider or pirate. Technically, the lower case spelling might seem preferable. In fact, I have followed the predominant convention and capitalized it.

 

Measurements

 

In the interests of my American readers I give dimensions in the common usage of the world’s largest trading nation, namely the old English mile, yard, foot and inch, with the European metric equivalents given in brackets where useful.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

 

Gordon Monaghan took all photographs featured unless otherwise stated.

 

Frankish ship’s figurehead

(
Held at the British Museum and drawn by Gordon Monaghan
)

 

The Castor hanging bowl

(
Courtesy of the Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery
)

 

A reconstruction of the princely burial chamber excavated at Prittlewell, Southend-on-Sea, Essex

(
Drawn by Faith Vardy, Museum of London Archaeology Service
)

 

Disc brooch from the burial site at Alwalton near Peterborough

(
Courtesy of the Peterborough Museum and Art Gallery
)

 

The golden belt buckle from the ship burial at Sutton Hoo

(
Courtesy of the British Museum
)

 

The portrait page of St Mark from the Lindisfarne Gospels

(
Courtesy of the Bridgeman Art Library
)

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