Search Site using Google
Search through our vast archive of material on England and English history:
 

Anglo-Saxon England

England AD 449 to AD 1066 and through Norman times

 

449 AD:  The Coming of the English and the beginning of English social history

The English have one thing above all that separates them from the Brythonic peoples that preceded them on the Island that is England. They had the 19 volumes of Anglo-Saxon chronicles. It records their history and has caused much jealousy, as others did not record their own history. The English are a Germanic set of peoples – so the way they lived was reflected in the ‘Old Saxony’ in what is now Germany, and thus much of the religion, dress, and attitudes are known.   

The English are formed of the original Saxon Confederation of Germanic Sea Tribes. The Eote or Yeten (Jutes) Friese (Friesians) Seaxe (Saxons) and the people of the God of the Sword  - Ing – the Ing or the Engles. Sea Wolves – and pagans. Of no fixed abode. Nerthus (mother earth,) worshipping Wodenists. Attacking all down to the Iberian coast and beyond. Known collectively to this day as Saxons – The Sons of the Sword – a literal translation. Later called the English by Alfred the Great, their saviour and greatest King. This article will call them Saxon – English – Anglo-Saxon.

 

 

Early_English_Warrior Early_English_Warrior_Axe

Sea wolves: Early Saxons were raiding seaborne warriors, akin to the later Vikings.They hated all things Roman. They were worshippers of the war god Woden.

 

 

 

The English tribes began arriving in earnest in 449 AD and brought with them Germanic dialects and culture. It was like an explosion. 90,000 warriors used to fighting Romans and Hunnic tribes of massive numbers. Theirs was the war of total destruction. The idea of the hero and the heroic death. Of fighting for your war chief. Of comradeship found sailing their Kuyls (keel boats,) their ‘wave riders’ as they called them. Found also in fighting with their shoulder companions on the English Shieldwall. After 400 years of subjugation by and war with the Roman Empire, they hated all things Roman. They burnt the Roman palace at Fishbourne at Chichester in Sussex, destroyed Winchester and Londinium.They levelled the great Roman City of Eagles in Chester, one of the largest outside of Rome itself.  Swept across Wales to the Isle of Anglesey. Carved White Horses into the hillsides and the hill forts they conquered. A warrior society that put swords and shields before fancy artefacts. Helmets before gold. Death before dishonour.

 

 

English_Warriors_Around_Fire

On guard by an open fire. Saxon men sit contemplating the runes they have carved in trees near their burgh or defended community. The centre of the burgh a Long House or Lang Hus sits in the mid ground.  The Old English inscription reads ‘Strong and True’. That saying aptly described Anglo-Saxons. Artist: Mark Taylor.

 

 

 

What was early English or Anglo-Saxon literacy and language like?

 

The English were a society that could create jewellery so sophisticated that it can only be recreated with modern kilns. The recently found Staffordshire Hoard of nearly 2000 items is a good example of this. They could write in runes, and spoke a Germanic tongue called Old English. It is said that a person speaking in Old English can walk into a shop in parts of Engeln in modern Denmark and order a loaf of bread. But, generally they relied upon poetry and song, mostly of battle. They were a warrior race more akin to Spartans. Thus tales of heroism grew and so did the fame of their storytellers or scopes. Yet they also wrote famous texts such as the Exeter Gnomic Verses and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. They wrote poems of Battle such as Maldon and Brunanburgh. Their early English langauge was flowing and dynamic. It was audibly haunting. If you get the chance to listen to a recital of Old English - do not miss the opportunity.  See Timeline of the English language. Some English heavy metal bands such as Forefather are now singing in Old English. See www.forefather.net.

 

 

What was early English or Saxon morality?  What are or were Anglo-Saxon English values?

 

It is difficult to translate to describe early Anglo-Saxon morality as the whole of their society – like the Spartans – was geared to waging and winning war. They drowned lawbreakers or those outside the law (outlaws),  in bogs. Many bodies have been found having met this fate in Denmark and Germany. They lived a life where men and women would live in separate Lang Hus. But, women had much power. See below. But they had a moral code; known as the 9 English values, which, they would have been learned by rote since they were children. 

 

1.  Courage and selflessness

2.  Truth

3.  Honour

4.  Fidelity

5.  Discipline and Duty

6.  Hospitality

7.  Industriousness

8.  Self-reliance

9.  Perseverance

 

See the 9 English Values.

 

What dress did the Anglo-Saxons wear?

 

The Saxon dress conformed to their social rank. Duller colours displayed lower rank. Light Blue and Purples denoted high rank, such as Thanes and Eorls. Both male and female.

 

 

 

AS Female Dress

Re-enactors wear female Saxon dress. Saxon men and women would have looked very similar. Important for recognition at night and at distance. Important also to demonstrate values and belonging to the community and Anglo-Saxon society was founded upon community based nationhood. Is this true ethnic English national dress?

 

 

The early English wore leather shoes, and belt often with a pouch and a seax knife (for men and women,) and possibly a little tin containing a clothing repair kit with bone needles, and another with a bone comb and toiletries. Multi layers of well spun and well made and warm cloth would have been worn. The seax knife worm on the front or sometimes as a backdraw by women indicated a free English man or woman.

 

What sort of houses did Anglo-Saxons live in?

 

The early English lived in Burghs. Fortified wooden stockades, which protected the long houses (Lang Hus) and people and live stock. The people generally lived in Grubenhausen.  These were wooden structures built around a pit so as to give wind proofing. The word Burgh gave the world the world Bourgeoisie – people of urban wealth – but in fact the people of early England shunned the old Roman cities such was the hatred of the Romano way of lufe that had been pushed on them for 400 years on continental Europe. Prior to The Coming of the English in 449 AD Roman Britannia was covered in villas and Roman Temples and towns. From the Isle of Wight to the Antonine Wall in what is called Scotland. The hatred of Romans and what the Roman Legions had done to their forebears in Germania led the Anglo-Saxons to bring the wrath of Woden onto the arguably weak (certainly militarily) Romano-Brythonic peoples of Britannia.

 

 They destroyed all. Notable victims were the Roman palace at Fishbourne in Sussex and the great 'City of Eagles' of Chester, complete with Colosseum - all were levelled. Instead they preferred a rural life. Think heavily armed hippy looking people and non-Christian at this point. Forest and forest clearings were their home. A good test is this. If you have a love of music, song, dogs, horses, fishing, woods and green fields. If you can stand in a forest without fear. If you value your trusty Leatherman or pocketknife more than your car. If you love the sea or living by water. You are reaching into your Anglo-Saxons roots. Your Anglo-Saxon ethnicity.

 

 

 

Early English Grubenhausen
An early Saxon Grubenhausen.

 

 

 

Anglo-Saxon House
An early Anglo-Saxon house (Grubenhausen) under construction.

 

 

Anglo-Saxon Fortifications

 

 

Anglo-Saxon Burgh Fort

Early English Langhus sits within a burgh which is uner construction.

Anglo-Saxons would have built these structures quickly and with ease.

 

 

 

What religion and Gods did the Anglo-Saxons believe in?

 

Initially the Anglo-Saxon English were pagans. They believed in Germanic Gods, which were reflected in the runes they wrote in. The runes had meaning, which could mean written meaning, but also a religious meaning. Thus the up arrow of the God Tiw or Tyr– is the sign of the Sky Father. The friend of the Saxons. It is thus a favoured early English or Saxon skin tattoo. It is the first God in Heaven. 

 

Tiw represents war, courage, glory, daring, confidence, heroic, but also values such as order, justice, community, customs, law, honour, peace, freedom. Gods / runes / runic symbols / entwining values were all thus linked into strong meaning. But, the main God of the Anglo-Saxons in England was Woden. A real man born in Odense in the 2nd Century. A was the supreme poet and warrior God of the Germanic tribes. Known as Odin in Scandinavia, Wotan (pr. Voetan,) in Germania, and Woden in England. 

 

 

Woden God of the English

The one eyed God. Woden - God of the Dead. God of battle. A poet, shaman and healer. Woden flies through the sacred grove held aloft by Black Ravens. A Saxon warrior fresh from battle wonders if he is to join him or live. On dark stormy nights he flies with Valkyries- Daughters of the Night.  Artist: Mark Taylor.

 

 

See Woden and the runes

 

Later, Christian missionaries began to arrive beginning with Augustine’s mission in Kent in 597 AD. Converting the Anglo-Saxons as they went. Often lead by courageous Irish Monks and others from the continent, it must have been like converting North American Indians to new ways. With King Penda of Mercia (Middle Angles,) being the last pagan English King to convert. It is through this adoption of Christianity that the English people began to properly flower through manuscript, church, jewellery making and psalm.

 

What were the Anglo-Saxon days of the week?

 

Note how the letters 'a' and 'e'  are conjoined to pronounce the modern letter 'a'.  

 

Anglo-Saxon days of the week           

                                          

                                                             
Modern English Old English Meaning
Monday Monandæg Day of the Moon
Tuesday Tiwesdæg Day of Tiw (war-god)
Wednesday Wednesdæg Day of Woden (god of magic and death)
Thursday Þunresdæg (pr. Thun..) Day of Thor (thunder-god)
Friday Frigedæg Day of Frige (love-goddess)
Saturday Saturnesdæg Day of Saturn
Sunday Sunnandæg Day of the Sun

 

 

 

How did the Anglo-Saxons write? What poetry and literature did the Anglo-Saxons write?

 

Contrary to myth the Anglo-Saxons wrote thousands of texts. They mastered poetry and innuendo. They used the lettering below. Examples of Anglo-Saxon lettering from Anglo-Saxon manuscripts are below.

 

 

 

Anglo_Saxon_Letters

 

 

 

Example of Anglo-Saxon Manuscript.

 

 

Anglo_Saxon_Manuscript
An example of Anglo-Saxon manuscript painfully handwritten, as there was no printing. There are thousands of such verses.

 

 

 

Some titles of what the early English wrote are:

 

The Vercelli Manuscript – The Exeter Gnomic Verses – The Beowulf manuscript.

 

Some of the poetry:

 

The Old English Rune Poem – The Battle of Brunanburgh – Battle of Maldon.

 

What were Anglo-Saxon early English families like? What names did the Anglo-Saxons use?

 

The Fæder, Modor, Swoester (sister,) Dohtor, Sunu, existed as a monogamous family group. Ealdafæder or Grandfather, and Steopfæder or stepfather. Today Anglo-Saxon names exist but in modified form. Matilda – ‘battle power’, Gertrude – ‘power of the spear’, Rudolf – ‘wolf of glory’, Roger – ‘spear of glory’. The base of Anglo-Saxon society was the concept of the cynn, or the ‘kindred’ or your kin as we call it today. The family. Hence Anglecynn.

 

What were Anglo-Saxon attitudes towards women?

 

The Old English word mann means ‘adult human’ of either gender. And thus mean and women had equal standing both legally and within the community. Women could own property and were often educated. They could practice professions and run societies. There are even instances of women being buried with weapons, which indicated that they fought. That is certainly known of Queen Athelflæda, dohtor of Ælfred the Great. It was not equality as we strive for. But, it was equality in a society that valued all 'adult humans', whether they were Weapon Men or Wife Men.

 

Women could not be pressed into marriage. It is only the Norman invasion and the Catholic Church’s attitude towards women reinforced by the feudal system that suppressed women for 1000 years, led by appalling devices of female suppression such as the ducking stool. Not until 1978 did women regain the same rights as the enjoyed in free Anglo-Saxon society. Not until the Golden Age of Elizabeth I did England once again see a woman of the strength of Athelflæda. She led the Mercian army against the last vestiges of Vikings in what was the Dane Law in England. The deduction from that is that English women must have been cultured into certain military arts. Some must have worn armour and fought. That indicates an acceptance by Anglo-Saxon men of womanhood as equals and of Anglo-Saxon woman of the discipline and commitment to battle alongside men.  To be foolish enough to think that an enemy could wonder into an early English burgh when there were no men around would have been a mistake. Both the early English women and children were lethal. (A good reference for women in early English society: Kathleen Herbert ‘Peace Weavers and Shield Maidens’). ISBN-10: 1898281114 - ISBN-13: 978-1898281115. Is it through this strength of English females and those who associate with their values that is changinging world politics since World War II? Is it this ancient strength that is producing equality? One would like to think so. Princess Athelflæda, Elizabeth I, and Emmeline (Emily) Pankhurst the English suffragette , (15 July 1858 – 14 June 1928), are females of Global standing.

 

ENGLISH SOCIAL HISTORY UNDER THE NORMANS 1066 AD TO 1087 AD

 

Some key timeline markers in this period:

 

Christmas 1066 AD. The Coronation of William The Bastard.

1069 to 1070 AD. The Harrying of the North.

1085 to 1086 AD. The Doomsday Inquisition.

1097 AD. The Death of William The Conqueror.

 

This article will not concentrate on this period as it does not contribute to English language or culture in any meaningful way. The one feature the Normans brought to English society was a technical military outlook which differs from the time warp that was Anglo-Saxon England. The Saxons fought at Hastings in the same manner they would have fought the Romans some 700 years before. In turn the Norman militarization of England helped stave off future invasion.

 

Norman attitudes to Women.

 

The Normans ('Norse Men') went from ship borne Scandinavian Vikings to Patois Frankish speakers in an amazingly quick period of time. Normans brought a martial attitude towards everything including women. Feudal society did not tolerate any deviation to the social strata. This replaced the community based society of the Anglo-Saxon English. People were not allowed to think themselves above their station in life. This included the position of women in Norman society. The word ‘chattel’ originates from Norman times. Indeed the ducking stool, a cruel contraption to humiliate strong willed women was introduced during this period and used well into the Tudor times. Amusing to some. It could kill. And its purpose was to keep women ‘in their place’. Very different to the concept of Anglo-Saxon community based nationhood, where women were expected to play a role. Only when Anglo-Saxon language and genes began to win though some hundreds of years later when English women once again appreciated.

 

ENGLISH SOCIAL HISTORY 1087 AD TO 1165 AD

 

1215 AD. The`Magna Carta

 

‘We will dismiss from the Kingdom all foreign born knights, crossbowmen, sergeants, and mercenary soldiers who have come with horses and arms to the nuisance of’. Magna Carta 1215 AD.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




Home  |  Site Map  |  Links

Website Statistics by WebVisitor.Info

Copyright 2007 - EnglandAndEnglishHistory.com