ANGLO-SAXON PERIOD
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The "Cernunnos" figure with animals and plants.
The torgue in the figure's right hand is similar
to the torque that the Dying Gaul wears around his neck.
(from How the Irish Save Civilization)
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Dr.
Marguerite Connor |
Early History of England
The island was originally inhabited by Celtic tribes from Central
Asia prior to the invasion by the Romans c. 50-100CE. Some of the
Celts, a brave, fierce, and what we would call barbaric people, fled west
over the mountains to what is now Wales and further over to Ireland.
The rest stayed and intermarried with the invading Romans. The Romans
brought architecture, art, "civilization," Christianity and most important,
literacy. They stayed in the land, founding the cities that are today London
(then Londinium) and Wincester, but during the fall of the Roman Empire
c. 450-500 CE, the Roman soldiers left, leaving the now-softened Celtic
people.
This left the natives open to attacks from the neighboring Picts
(from what is today Scotland) and Jutes (a Germanic tribe).
The Celts called for help from the Angles and Saxons, tribes from
the area that is the modern Germany - Denmark area. The Angles
and Saxons saved the Celts, but then turned against them and settled
in England, becoming the Anglo-Saxons who lived in Angle-Land (-- England).
These Anglo-Saxons were brave, rude, reckless, adventurous and barbaric.
They did not have much of a written culture, but they brought with them
a rich folk-lore tradition, with long epics recited by scops, the poets
of the clan. These recitations, the earliest English Literature,
was finally written down by Christian monks in the 10th and 11th centuries.
Religion:
While the Romans brought Christianity to the land, it was not until
around 650 CE that England was fully Christianized. The native religions
were dominated by the earth-based religion Druidism, but there were a number
of smaller traditions being practiced. These were not destroyed,
but pushed underground in greatly diminished numbers, only to be resurfacing
in the later part of this century. Pieces of these older religions
can be found thoughout English literature.
Right: Ardagh Chalice
The acme of Irish Christian metallurgy, 7th-8th century,
(from How the Irish Save Civilization)
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Anglo-Saxon Poetry
There were a number of qualities found in Anglo-Saxon poetry:
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Heroic behavior is praised
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Almost no romantic love
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An overall effect to formalize and elevate language, often through the
use of literary devices. For instance:
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Synecdoche: a part used to express the whole, or vice versa.
Ex: 50 sails=50 boats
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Metonymy: the naming of a person, institution, or human characteristic
by some object or attribute with which is closely associated. Ex: Crown,
Majesty= Ruler
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kenning: a compound of two words in place of another. Ex:
whale-road=sea, loaf-giver = king, life-house = body
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litotes: ironic understatement; an emphatic expression through
an ironic understatement. Ex: “he's no beauty."
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A very common theme is "ubi sunt" "where have they gone?" This
was a rough, hard time of life. The average age for men was 45, for
women, 36. It was not totally unusual to lose one's entire family
to war, famine or some other calamity.
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