Everything about Anglo-saxons totally explained
Anglo-Saxon is the term usually used to describe the peoples living in the south and east of
Great Britain from the early
5th century AD to the
Norman conquest of 1066. Benedictine monk
Bede identified them as the descendants of three
Germanic tribes: the
Angles,
Jutes and the
Saxons, who originated from the
Jutland peninsula and
Niedersachsen (
Lower Saxony). The Angles may have come from
Angeln, and Bede wrote their nation came to Britain, leaving their land empty. They spoke
closely related Germanic dialects. The Anglo-Saxons knew themselves as the "Englisc", from which the word "English" derives.
Place names seem to show that smaller numbers of some other German peoples came over:
Frisians at
Fresham,
Freston, and
Friston;
Flemings at
Flempton and
Flimby;
Swabians at
Swaffham; perhaps
Franks at
Frankton and
Frankley.
It was perhaps under
Offa of Mercia (reigned 755-759), or under
Alfred the Great (reigned 871–899) and his successors, that the several kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxons existed. Under the reign of
Athelstan (reigned 924–937) the Anglo-Saxon kingdom took shape into
England.
Etymology
The term "Anglo-Saxon" is from
Latin writings going back to the time of King Alfred the Great, who seems to have frequently used the title
rex Anglorum Saxonum or
rex Angul-Saxonum.
The Old English terms
ænglisc and
Angelcynn ("Angle-kin",
gens Anglorum) when they're first attested had already lost their original sense of referring to the Angles to the exclusion of the Saxons, and in their earliest recorded sense refers collectively to the Germanic peoples who settled
England in and after the 5th century.
Bede, writing in the early 8th century in his
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, (I.15) suggests that:
- The people of the contrasts with the other kingdoms. West Saxon their own nation as a part of the Angelcyn and of their language as Englisc, and the West Saxon royal family claimed to be of the same stock as the royal family of Bernicia in the north; but Bede may have based this distinction solely on names such as Essex (East Saxons) and East Anglia (East Angles). That Bede could envisage one English people (gentis Anglorum and Anglorum populi) at least demonstrates that the Anglo-Saxons could be thought of in such terms in the 8th century.
The term
Angli Saxones seems to have first been used in continental writing nearly a century before Alfred's time by
Paul the Deacon, historian of the
Lombards, probably to distinguish the
English Saxons from the
continental Saxons.
There is a theory that the name of the Angles came from the Germanic and
Indo-European root ang- = "narrow", for example "the people who live by the Narrow Water (for example the
Schlei inlet)".
Anglo-Saxon history
The history of Anglo-Saxon England broadly covers early medieval England from the end of Roman rule and the establishment of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in the 5th century until the Conquest by the
Normans in
1066.
Origins (AD 400–600)
Migration of
Germanic peoples to Britain from what is now northern Germany and southern
Scandinavia is attested from the 5th century (for example
Undley bracteate). Based on Bede's
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, the intruding population is traditionally divided into Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, but their composition was likely less clear-cut and may also have included
Frisians and
Franks.
The Parker Library
holds the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle which contains text that may be the first recorded indications of the movement of these
Germanic Tribes to Britain. The Angles and Saxons and Jutes were noted to be a
confederation in the Greek
Geographia written by
Ptolemy in around AD 150.
Heptarchy (600–800)
Christianization of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom began around 600 and was essentially complete in the mid 8th century. Throughout the 7th and 8th centuries, power fluctuated between the larger kingdoms. Bede records
Aethelbert of Kent as being dominant at the close of the 6th century, but power seems to have shifted northwards to the kingdom of Northumbria. The so-called 'Mercian Supremacy' dominated the 8th century, though again it wasn't constant. Aethelbald and
Offa, the two most powerful kings, achieved high status. This period has been described as the
Heptarchy, though this term has now fallen out of academic use. The word arose on the basis that the seven kingdoms of
Northumbria,
Mercia,
Kent,
East Anglia,
Essex,
Sussex and
Wessex were the main polities of south Britain. More recent scholarship has shown that several other kingdoms were politically important across this period:
Hwicce,
Magonsaete,
Lindsey and Middle Anglia.
Viking Age (800–1066)
In the 9th century, the
Viking challenge grew to serious proportions. Alfred the Great's victory at
Edington in 878 brought intermittent peace, but the Norsemen with the foundation of
Jorvik gained a permanent foothold in Britain.
An important development of the 9th century was the rise of the Kingdom of
Wessex, and by the end of his reign Alfred was recognized as overlord by several southern kingdoms.
Æthelstan was the first king to achieve direct rulership of what is considered "England."
Near the end of the 10th century, there was renewed Scandinavian interest in England, with the conquests of
Sweyn of Denmark and his son
Canute. After various fluctuations, by 1066, there were several people with a claim to the English throne, resulting in two invasions and the battles of
Stamford Bridge and
Hastings, giving rise to the High Medieval
Anglo-Norman rule of Britain
Culture
Architecture
Early Anglo-Saxon buildings in Britain were generally simple, constructed mainly using timber with thatch for roofing. Generally preferring not to settle in the old Roman cities, the Anglo-Saxons built small towns near their centres of agriculture. In each town, a main hall was in the centre.
There are few remains of Anglo-Saxon architecture, with no secular work remaining above ground. At least fifty churches are of Anglo-Saxon origin, with many more claiming to be, although in some cases the Anglo-Saxon part is small and much-altered. All surviving churches, except one timber church, are built of stone or brick and in some cases show evidence of re-used
Roman work.
The architectural character of Anglo-Saxon ecclesiastical buildings range from
Coptic influenced architecture in the early period;
basilica influenced
Romanesque architecture; and in the later Anglo-Saxon period, an architecture characterised by pilaster-strips, blank arcading, baluster shafts and triangular headed openings.
Art
Anglo-Saxon art covers the period from the time of King Alfred (871–899), with the revival of English culture after the end of the Viking raids, to the early 12th century, when
Romanesque art became the new movement. Prior to Alfred there had been the
Hiberno-Saxon culture (the fusion of Anglo-Saxon and Celtic techniques and motifs) which ceased with the Vikings.
Anglo-Saxon art is mainly known today through
illuminated manuscripts. It includes the
Benedictional of St. Æthelwold manuscript, which drew on
Hiberno-Saxon art,
Carolingian art and
Byzantine art for style and
iconography. A "Winchester style" developed that combined both northern ornamental traditions with Mediterranean figural traditions and can be seen in the Leofric Missal (Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Bodl, 579). The Harley Psalter was a knockoff of the
Carolingian Utrecht Psalter —all of which underscore the larger trend of an Anglo-Saxon culture coming into increasing contact with, and under the influence of, a wider Latin Mediæval Europe.
Manuscripts were not the only Anglo-Saxon art form, although they're the most well known to have survived. Perhaps the best known piece of Anglo-Saxon art is the
Bayeux Tapestry which was commissioned by a Norman patron from English artists working in the traditional Anglo-Saxon style. The most common example of Anglo-Saxon art is coins, with thousands of examples extant. Anglo-Saxon artists also worked in
fresco,
ivory, stone carving,
metalwork (see
Fuller brooch for example) and
enamel, but few of these pieces have survived.
Language
Old English, sometimes called Anglo-Saxon, was the language spoken under Alfred the Great and continued to be the common language of
England (non-
Danelaw) until after the Norman Conquest of 1066 when, under the influence of the
Anglo-Norman language spoken by the Norman ruling class, it changed into
Middle English roughly between 1150–1500.
Old English is far closer to early
Germanic than Middle English. It is less Latinized and retains many morphological features (nominal and verbal inflection) that were lost during the 12th to 14th centuries. The languages today which are closest to Old English are the
Frisian languages, which are spoken by a few hundred thousand people in the northern part of the Netherlands and Germany.
Before literacy in the vernacular Old English or Latin became widespread, the
Runic alphabet, called the
futhorc (also known as
futhark) was used for inscriptions. When literacy became more prevalent, a form of Latin script was used with a few letters derived from the futhork: '
Eth,' '
Wynn,' and '
Thorn.'
The letters regularly used in printed and edited texts of Old English are the following:
a æ b c d ð e f g h i l m n o p r s t þ u w x y
with only rare occurrences of j, k, q, v, and z.
Law
Very few law codes exist from the Anglo-Saxon period, giving insight into legal culture beyond the influence of Roman law. How this legal culture developed over the course of time. The Anglo-Saxon period is important for the understanding of contemporary developments, except how law developed following the Norman Conquest.
Literature
Old English literary works include genres such as epic poetry, hagiography, sermons, Bible translations, legal works, chronicles, riddles, and others. In all there are about 400 surviving manuscripts from the period, a significant corpus of both popular interest and specialist research.
The most famous works from this period include the poem Beowulf, which has achieved national epic status in Britain. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of important early English history. Cædmon's Hymn from the 7th century is the earliest attested literary text in English.
Religion
The indigenous pre-Christian belief system of the Anglo-Saxons was a form of Germanic paganism and therefore closely related to the Old Norse religion, as well as other Germanic pre-Christian cultures.
Christianity (particularly the Roman Catholic Church) gradually replaced the indigenous religion of the Saxons in England around the 7th and 8th centuries. Christianity was introduced into Northumbria and Mercia by monks from Ireland, but the Synod of Whitby settled the choice for Roman Christianity. As the new clerics became the chroniclers, the old religion was partially lost before it was recorded, and today historians' knowledge of it's largely based on surviving customs and lore, texts, etymological links and archaeological finds.
One of the few recorded references is that a Kentish King would only meet the missionary St. Augustine in the open air, where he'd be under the protection of the sky god, Woden. Written Christian prohibitions on acts of paganism are one of historians' main sources of information on pre-Christian beliefs.
Despite these prohibitions, numerous elements of the pre-Christian culture of the Anglo-Saxon people survived the Christianisation process. Examples include the English language names for days of the week:
Tiw, the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of Tyr: Tuesday
Woden, the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of Odin: Wednesday
Þunor, the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of Thor: Thursday
*Fríge, the Anglo-Saxon equivalent of Frigg: Friday
Contemporary meanings
"Anglo-Saxon" is still used as a term for the original West Germanic component of the English language, which was later expanded and developed through the influence of the concept of Old Norse and Norman French, though linguists now more often refer to it as Old English. In the 19th century the term "Anglo-Saxon" was broadly used in philology, and sometimes used at present.
In popular usage in Canada and the United States, the term "Anglo-Saxon" (as in "White Anglo-Saxon Protestant" or "WASP") has evolved into a politicised term with little connection to its academic definition. Until about 1960 it described a person of European origin fitting a certain socio-economic and/or ethnic profile.
For over a hundred years, the French have used "Anglo-Saxon" to refer to the Anglophone societies of Britain and the United States, and sometimes (rarely) including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. It is a wide-ranging term, taking in the English-speaking world's language, culture, technology, wealth, influence, markets and economy.
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