England and the English
Definitions of Englishness
Origins of Ethnic English
A study on Wodenism in England and Northern Europe
Anglo-Saxon History
Summary Timeline 410 AD to 1066 AD – Anglo Saxon England.
Where do the words Anglo-Saxon, English and England come from?
Adventus Saxonum 449 AD 'The Coming of the Englisc'
Regia Anglorum - The 7 Kingdoms of the Englisc 600 – 800 AD
The Viking Invasions of England - 793 AD to 900 AD
Alfred The Great – The first English King 871 AD to 924 AD
The last years of Anglo-Saxon England 924 AD to 1066 AD
Article on Old English Anglo-Saxon History by the author CA Calladine
The Battle of Hastings
The Dogs of War are let loose
English Defeat to the Norwegians: The Battle of Fulford Gate
English Victory over the Vikings: The battle of Stamford Bridge
The Norman Invasion
Harold hears of the Norman Landing
The Battle of Hastings 1066
The Battle Begins
The crisis point in the battle
The fighting begins again
The english shield wall still holds
The final Normal assault
Harold the English King is killed
The fighting ends in Norman victory
The fight at the Mal Fosse
The aftermath
An English victory?
Anglo-Norman History
Great English Battles
The Battle of Brunanburgh 937 AD
The Battle of Hastings 1066 AD
The Battle of Crécy 1346 AD
The Battle of Agincourt 1415 AD
Steadfast (Stedefæst)
English Language Timeline
St George
St Edmund
 
English National Dress
English National Dress - Male
English National Dress - Female
English National Dress Accessories
Cutting Patterns
English White Dragon
White Horse Stone
Fighting Man Standard
The 9 English Values
English Martial Arts
Great English People
Great English Quotations
Traditional English Foods
History of English Ale
The Counties of England
The Art of England....
Early English or Anglo-Saxon Art
Beginnings of Medieval English art
The New World
The Jacobean period
The English Civil War
18th Century - The Age Of Reason
19th Century, Consolidation of Empire
20th century - Age Of Wars
The 21st century - A New Chapter in an Old book
Sources and further reading
English Folk Music
 
English Social History
Anglo-Saxon England 449 to 1066 AD
Chaucer's England 1340 to 1400 AD
Caxtons England 1400 TO 1485 AD
Tudor England 1485 TO 1556 AD
Shakespeare's Elizibethan England 1564 to 1616 AD
Cromwellian England 1603 to 1658 AD
Restoration England 1660 AD
Defoes England 1702 to 1740 AD
Dr Johnson's England 1740 to 1780 AD
 
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The Art of England

The English Civil War

Once again the country was thrown into turmoil as it sought to destroy itself in the terrible way only a civil war can, with father against son and brother against brother. The artists of the time also divided themselves, some painting scenes exalting Cromwell others hoping for favours at court created images of the King- God’s anointed.



1649 AD: Robert Walker: Portrait of the English Parliamentarian General Oliver Cromwell – without warts!!



This century was marked by a cataclysm which changed the country almost as deeply as the reformation. The war between the parliamentarian roundheads and the royalist cavaliers closed the theatres, killed the poetic drama and removed court patronage of painting and sculpture. Musicians suffered too, for many relied totally on royal patronage.



Many beautiful mediaeval stained glass windows, painted rood screens, sculptures and other ‘popish’ objects of art were destroyed in an orgy of hatred against idolatry. Even the church organ was removed from many chapels on the orders of Cromwell.



Folk art and traditions marking Christmas were frowned upon and fairs and open air entertainments such as mummers plays were banned. In addition, the whole of the City caught fire in 1665 AD destroying most of the mediaeval architecture including St. Paul’s church.



Two great English architects Sir Christopher Wren and Nicholas Hawksmoor stepped forward with plans to resurrect the charred city. The poetry of Marvell, Dryden and writings of Milton, vivid descriptions of 17th century life by Samuel Pepys the diarist and John Bunyan’s allegories as well the birth of opera as a new art form allowed this birthplace of the age of ‘enlightenment’ to see out the century in a blaze of glory.



James Thornhill: Ceiling of the painted Hall, Greenwich Naval Hospital



During the Commonwealth and after the Restoration, the influence of foreign artists working in England continued. First among them was Peter Lely from Holland, and later Godfrey Kneller, who came from Germany in 1674. Those few English painters of the period to put beside Lely are John Riley (1646–91) whose fine paintings would have secured him the post of King’s court had he not been an English artist.



17th Century George Ravenscroft. English Lead crystal – a new invention. Glassware design was refined and imports from Venice ceased.





1685 AD. John Riley. A nonagenarian Housemaid Bridget Holmes.



James Thornhill (1676–1734), who worked at Greenwich and Blenheim Palace, and Robert Streater (1624–80), whose mural paintings were notable in an age of portraiture. and monuments, and Grinling Gibbons, a sculptor whose parents were English but whose youth had been spent in Holland, decorated many interiors with woodcarvings, such as panels for St Paul's Cathedral and ornamental pieces at Hampton Court His work on the St Paul's choir stalls is outstanding, including as it does the Bishop's two thrones, and the seat of the Lord Mayor.



c1674 AD. Grinling Gibbons.: Detail from seat of The Lord Mayor of London



1675-1695 AD. In music the last years of the 17th century were graced by the music of John Blow, organist composer and the exquisite Henry Purcell who was his successor at the Chapel Royal. Purcell’s melancholy strains mark the closing chapter to an age of wars both civil and against the Irish and Dutch, the great fire of London 1665, savage winters with great Thames ice fairs (the little ice age) and plague which killed one in three of London’s population.