Overview of Periodsof Early
English History
Pre-History—1066 A. D.
1. Pre-Roman/Pre-Historical up to 55 B. C.
2. Roman Occupation 55 B. C. – 410 A. D.
3. Anglo-Saxon Period 410 – 787 A. D.
4. Viking Invasions 787 – 1066 A. D.
5. Norman Conquest begins in 1066
Pre-Historical / Pre-Roman
The island we know as England was occupied by
a race of people called the Celts. One of the tribes
was called they Brythons or Britons (where we
get the term Britain)
The Celts were Pagans and their religion was
know as “animism” a Latin word for “spirit.”
Celts saw spirits everywhere
Druids were their priests; their role was to go
between the gods and the people
Important Events DuringRoman Occupation
Julius Caesar begins invasion/occupation in 55 B.C.
Occupation completed by Claudius in 1st
cent. A.D.
Hadrian’s Wall built about 122 A.D.
Romans “leave” in 410 A.D. because Visigoths
attack Rome
St. Augustine (the “other” St. Augustine!) lands in
Kent in 597 and converts King Aethelbert (king of
Kent, the oldest Saxon settlement) to Christianity;
becomes first Archbishop of Canterbury
7.
Important Cultural andHistorical Results of
the Roman Occupation
Military—strong armed forces (“legions”)
Pushed Celts into Wales and Ireland
Prevented Vikings from raiding for several hundred years:
C. Warren Hollister writes, “Rome’s greatest gift to Britain
was peace” (15).
Infrastructure
Government (fell apart when they left)
Walls, villas, public baths (some remains still exist)
Language and Writing
Latin was official language
Practice of recording history led to earliest English
“literature” being documentary
Religion
Christianity beginning to take hold, especially after St.
Augustine converts King Aethelbert
8.
The Most ImportantResults
of the Roman Occupation
Latin heavily influenced the English language
Relative Peace
Christianity begins to take hold in England (but
does not fully displace Paganism for several
hundred years)
Important Events inthe (First) Anglo-Saxon
Period
410- 450 Angles and Saxons invade from Baltic
shores of Germany, and the Jutes invade from
the Jutland peninsula in Denmark
The Geats are a tribe from Jutland
Nine Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms eventually became
the Anglo-Saxon heptarchy (England not
unified), or “Seven Sovereign Kingdoms”
11.
Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy
Heptarchy= Seven
Kingdoms
1. Kent
2. Essex (East Saxon)
3. Sussex (South
Saxon)
4. East Anglia
5. Northumbria
6. Mercia
7. Wessex (West
Saxon)
Vikings
By definition,Vikings were sea-faring (explorers,
traders, and warriors) Scandinavians during the
8th
through 11th
centuries.
Oddly enough, the Anglo-Saxon (and Jute)
heritage was not much different from the
Vikings’: they, too, were Scandinavian invaders.
In fact, some Vikings were also called
“Northmen” which is related to yet another
culture (this one French) which made conquest
of England—the Normans, and William the
Conqueror in 1066.
However, when the Viking raids began around
787, the Anglo-Saxons were different culturally
from the Viking invaders
14.
Except for theCelts* and the Romans,
all of the cultures who successfully
invaded England in the first
millennium were from Northern
Europe at one time or another. The
Angles, Saxons, Frisians, and Jutes
were from the Baltic region, and the
Normans (1066) were primarily from
Normandy and had originally been
from Norway
*the Celts were indigenous at the time of the Roman
conquest, and are therefore considered England’s
“natives”
15.
Important Results ofthe Viking Invasions
Politically and Culturally
Continued political instability and conflict (i.e., tribal war): there was no central
government or church*
The Anglo-Saxon code (more on this when we read Beowulf)
Linguistically (The English Language at its Earliest)
The English language is “born” during the first millennium and is known as Old English
(OE). Anglo-Saxon is the term for the culture.
Old English is mainly Germanic** in grammar (syntax and morphology) and lexicon
(words) the core of our modern English is vastly influenced by this early linguistic
“DNA” (but even Germanic languages derived from a theoretical Proto-Indo-European
language, the grandparent of classical languages such as Greek, Sanskrit, Latin, and
German (**Remember: Vikings were Germanic people)
LOTS of dialects of Old-English, as one might imagine. This is because there were
several separate Kingdoms many founded by essentially five or six different cultures:
Angles, Saxons, Frisians, Jutes, Danes, and Swedes
*Alfred the Great (ruled from approx. 871-899 A.D.) was one of the first Anglo-Saxon kings
to push Vikings back; in fact, he was one of the first kings to begin consolidating power,
unifying several of the separate Anglo-Saxon kingdoms
16.
Huh?
(we better boilthose important results down!)
Lots of ongoing tribal feuds and wars led to . . .
Lots of intermingling of similar but different
Germanic languages . . . interrupted by . . .
MORE Viking invasions, which gave way to . . .
Some political unification (Alfred) . . .
. . . Which led to . . .
OLD ENGLISH, the earliest form of our
language!!
17.
Early England Createdby Three Invasions
1. Roman Occupation 55 B.C.-410 A.D. 2. Anglo-Saxon
and Viking
Invasions 410 –
1066 A.D.
3. The Norman Invasion
(The Battle of Hastings) in 1066 A.D.
LATIN
LATIN
GERMAN(IC)
GERMAN(IC)
FRENCH
FRENCH
18.
Norman Invasion
In1066 at the Battle of Hastings, the Normans
(powerful Northern Frenchmen) defeated the
English and started a centuries-long conquest of
England
Two Most Important Effects:
French becomes official language of politics and
power and exerts enormous influence on Old
English
England begins unifying under a French political
system, much of which is still with us (even in the
U.S.) today
19.
The Anglo-Saxon Periodin Review
Pre-Anglo-Saxon (really “pre” historical)
Celtic Peoples (approx 1700/400 B.C. – 55 B.C.)
Roman Occupation (55 B.C.-410 A.D.)
Anglo-Saxon/Viking
Angles, Saxons, Frisian, and Jutes (410-787
Viking Raids/Invasions begin 8th
c. and end
10th
c.
Norman Invasion/Occupation (really in the Middle Ages)
Battle of Hastings in 1066, then about four centuries of French rule
20.
—or—
“How English gotto be so hard to study, but is
still so beautiful to hear and read”
21.
Quick History ofEnglish Language
Old English (OE) dates from approximately* 400
A.D. to 1066
Middle English (ME) dates from approximately
1066-1485
They are quite different to the eye and ear. Old
English is nearly impossible to read or
understand without studying it much like and
English speaker today would study French, Latin,
or Chinese
*The dating of the beginnings of OE is difficult; scholars only have written texts in OE
beginning in around 700 A.D., but peoples in England must have been speaking a version
of OE prior to works being written in the vernacular (as opposed to Latin)
22.
Another Way ofLooking at the History of English
Old English
Old English 400-1066
400-1066 Beowulf
Beowulf
(from
(from
Beowulf
Beowulf!)
!)
“
“Gaæþ a wyrd swa hio scel” (OE)
Gaæþ a wyrd swa hio scel” (OE)
=
=
“
“Fate goes ever as it must” (MnE)
Fate goes ever as it must” (MnE)
Middle English
Middle English 1066-1485
1066-1485 Chaucer
Chaucer
(from
(from CT
CT)
)
“
“Whan that Aprille with his shoures
Whan that Aprille with his shoures
soote . . . ” (ME) =
soote . . . ” (ME) =
“
“When that April with its sweet
When that April with its sweet
showers . . .” (MnE)
showers . . .” (MnE)
Early Modern
Early Modern
English
English
1485-1800
1485-1800 Shakespeare
Shakespeare
(from
(from KL
KL)
)
“
“Sir, I loue you more than words
Sir, I loue you more than words
can weild ye matter” (EMnE) =
can weild ye matter” (EMnE) =
“
“Sir, I love you more than word
Sir, I love you more than word
can wield the matter” (MnE)
can wield the matter” (MnE)
Modern
Modern
English
English
1800-
1800-
present
present
Austen
Austen
(from
(from P&P
P&P)
)
It is a truth universally acknowledged,
It is a truth universally acknowledged,
that a single man in possession of a
that a single man in possession of a
good fortune must be in want of a wife.
good fortune must be in want of a wife.
OE=Old English ME=Middle English EMnE=Early Modern English MnE=Modern English
23.
English = ?
Celtic (from 1700 or 400 B.C. to 55 B.C.) +
Latin (from 55 B. C. to 410 A. D.) +
German (from 410 A.D. to 1066 A.D.) +
French (from 1066 A.D. to 1485 A.D.) =
OLD ENGLISH and MIDDLE ENGLISH
VERY DIFFICULT LANGUAGE, BUT ONE PERFECT
FOR LIMITLESS AND BEAUTIFUL EXPRESSION
24.
English is aMelting Pot of Indo-European
Languages
Celtic Latin German French
25.
Transition to Beowulf
The major text we will read from this period is the
epic Beowulf. It is the story of a Scandinavian (Geat)
“thane” (warrior or knight) who comes to help a
neighboring tribe, the Danes, who are being attacked
by a monster.
We study English history to understand the context of
Beowulf, and we study Beowulf to understand the
world which was Old England.
According to Venerable Bede (an early English
historian who lived in the eighth century), the Britons
called the Romans for help when the Picts and Scots
were attacking them (B.C.). Hundreds of years later,
the Britons called the Saxons to help them when the
Romans couldn’t. The Saxons came “from parts
beyond the sea” (qtd. in Pyles and Algeo 96).
This journey of Germanic peoples to England “from
parts beyond the sea” is the prototypical story for the
first millennium of England’s history. It formulates
much of their cultural mindset and clearly influences
their stories. Be sure to consider how it plays a role in
Beowulf.
26.
Bibliography
Abrams, M.H., and Stephen Greenblatt, Eds. Introduction. The
Norton Anthology of English Literature, seventh ed., vol. 1. New
York: W.W. Norton, 2000. 1-22, 29-32.
Anderson, Robert, et al. Eds. Elements of Literature, Sixth Course,
Literature of Britain. Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1993. 2-42.
Burrow, J. A. “Old and Middle English Literature, c. 700-1485.” The
Oxford Illustrated History of English Literature. Ed. Pat Rogers.
Oxford: Oxford UP, 1987.
Grant, Neil. Kings and Queens. Glasgow: Harper Collins, 1999.
Hollister, C. Warren. The Making of England, 55 B.C. to 1399. 6th
ed.
Lexington, Mass.: D.C. Heath, 1988
Pyles, Thomas and John Algeo. The Origins and Development of the
English Language. 4th
Ed. Fort Worth: Harcourt, 1993.
Wikipedia (articles on “Norman Invasion,” “Roman Occupation of
Britain,” “King Alfred,” “King Aethelbert,” “Vikings,” and “Battle of
Hastings”). Dates of access: August 10-20, 2006.