The Germanic Period in British history (Anglo-Saxon)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Vikings AD. “In this year Beothric [King of Wessex] took to wife Edburgh, daughter of King Offa. And in his days came first three ships of.
Advertisements

Old English External History Pre-English Era I. Neolithic Era (c BCE) Evidence of non-Indo European speaking groups. Construction on Stonehenge.
The Anglo-Saxon Period Conquest of England Oldest known inhabitants were Iberians from modern-day Spain and Portugal – They brought Stone.
The influence of the invasion by the Germanic tribes on the English language. Anglo-Saxon dialects.
Anglo-Saxon History and Old English Language and Literature
The Vikings in Britain. Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms Vikings Also called Norsemen The word „Viking“ means „Pirate raid“ Great seafarers Skillful craftsmen Their.
Irish and the Anglo- Saxons Abby, Molly, and Teddy Main Idea: Focuses on what Irish life was like after the Anglo-Saxons drove most of the Celts from Britain.
2 SECTION 1Celtic Ireland SECTION 2Christianity 3 Saint Columba Pope Gregory I Ethelbert Bede Alfred the Great People to Know shires sheriff king’s peace.
The Vikings. The Vikings When did the Vikings arrive? The Vikings arrived in England about 1,200 years ago They stayed for 300 years.
The Origin of the English Language
Unit 1 The Anglo-Saxons British Literature Unit 1 The Anglo-Saxons
AND. The British Isles consisted of Great Britain, Ireland and many smaller islands. Julius Caesar invaded Britain and Rome ruled it for almost 400.
English around the world
The Iberians The Celts GaelsBrythons The Danes The Celts GaelsBrythons The Romans Julius Caesar Emperor Claudius The Anglo-Saxons.
The Germanic Period in British history (Anglo-Saxon)
The Anglo-Saxon Period ( )
The Formation of the English Language
The Anglo-Saxon Period English 10 Academic.
The Anglo-Saxon Period 449 – I. Historical Context A. Centuries of Invasion 1. Early Britain a. 55 B.C. – Rome tries to conquer Britain b. Rome.
Introductory Guide to Beowulf
Introduction to the Anglo Saxon Period and Beowulf Be sure to follow along and take notes.
THE MIDDLE AGES
Chapter 7 Supplement. Anglo-Saxon England Around 450, Germanic tribes begin to invade Britain. The two most important tribes settled and became powerful:
The Vikings & Anglo-Saxons
Anglo-Saxon Notes Mrs. Kinney’s Senior English. Conquering “Heroes” Britons and Celts were the first to settle Britain Celts were farmers and hunters.
THE ANGLO-SAXON PERIOD 55 BC – ROME tries to conquer Britain – Julius Caesar invades.
Characteristics of Old English. Periods of English Old English 449—1066 Middle English 1100—1500 Modern English 1500 forward.
HISTORY OF UK 2. The Anglo-Saxon Period Gymnázium Pavla Jozefa Šafárika Kód ITMS projektu: Názov projektu: Kvalitou vzdelávania otvárame brány.
Chapter 19 – The Irish (Celts) & the Anglo-Saxons.
Liza Langa  Part of the European land mass until the end of the last Ice Age  3000BC – inhabited by Iberians  Stonehenge - prehistoric megalithic.
Anglo-Saxon Period (5th century – 1066) Martina Šprincová.
Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms WALT: Understand the locations of the Saxon Kingdoms and settlements.
The Anglo-Saxon Period Ancient Britain Originally inhabited by the Britons & Gaels Celtic people, still evident in Irish, Welsh, Gaelic and Breton Celts.
The linguistic geography of Europe Language Groups Celtic languages Spread over much of southern and western Europe, including France, northern Italy.
BRITISH HISTORY.
Introduction and Background
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Vikings, Danelaw and Cnut
DARK AGES After the fall of Rome, Western Europe _______. struggled
Anglo-Saxon England Period from the end of Roman occupation in the 5th century until the Norman conquest of England in 1066 by William the Conqueror. The.
Origins of the English Language
The birth of the Nation The PEOPLES that invaded Britain
The birth of the Nation The PEOPLES that invaded Britain
Two confusing pairs of Three Tribes 让人迷糊的两组三个原始部落
Pre-Anglo-Saxon Period (55 B.C. – 410 A.D.)
ANGLO-SAXON BRITAIN Merlin, Madli, Siiri.
Anglo-Saxon England.
The anglo-saxons.
THE ANGLO-SAXON PERIOD
Anglo-Saxon Period
THE ANGLO-SAXONS settlers: arrival
Who Were The Anglo Saxons?
The Anglo-Norman Invasions
THE BRITISH ISLES.
Northern Europe.
The birth of the Nation The PEOPLES that invaded Britain
Pre- History Era.
THE ANGLO-SAXONS settlers: arrival
THE RISE OF THE NORMANS [THE WAR FOR ENGLAND].
LO: Understand the locations of the Saxon Kingdoms and settlements.
Help! The Vikings are Coming…… AD
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Languages in contact Outline the issues involved in the historical description of a language like English. The period covered is from the earliest records.
Unit 1 Historical Perspectives
Interactions.
Alfred the Great and Beowulf Gifted
Alfred the Great Academic
LO: To understand the locations of the Saxon Kingdoms and settlements.
Presentation transcript:

The Germanic Period in British history (Anglo-Saxon) 1) 1st Germanic invasion 2) 2nd Germanic invasion

Germanic Period AD 410 – AD 1066 REASONS FOR THE INVASION: - the wealth of Britain the result of its mild climate centuries of peace

The fifth century (1st Invasion) the Germanic tribes from the north –western Europe invaded in large numbers: (the Angles and the Saxons); they were warlike and illiterate; they invaded the south-east of the country; in the west their advance was temporally stopped by an army of Britons.

The local population Celtic Britons: either Saxonized driven westwards (to Wales, Cornwall, south-west Scotland)

The life of the Saxons in Britain The Anglo-Saxons were pagan at first The Anglo-Saxons became Christian in Britain

Christianity spread throughout Britain from two different directions: It came directly from Rome when St Augustine arrived in 597 and established headquarters at Canterbury. It had already been introduced into Scotland and northern England from Ireland which had become Christian more than 150 years ago.

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 1)Days of the week were named after Germanic gods: Tig (Tuesday), Wodin (Wednesday), Thor (Thursday), Frei (Friday)

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 2) New place-names appeared on the map . The earliest Saxon villages were family villages The ending -ing meant family (Reading –family of Rada), The ending -ham meant farm (Birmingham), The ending -ton meant settlement (Kingston).

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 3) The Anglo-Saxons established a number of kingdoms, some of which still exist in county or regional names till this day: Essex (East Saxons), Sussex, Wessex, Middlessex. - Northumbria, Mercia and Wessex were the most powerful

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 4) The Saxons created the King’s Council, called the Witan, a group of senior warriors and churchmen to whom kings turned for advice and support

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 5) The Saxons divided the land into new administrative areas, based on shires. Over each shire was appointed a shire reeve , the king’s local administrator. In time his name became shortened to “sheriff”.

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 6) Anglo-Saxon technology changed the shape of English agriculture. The fields were divided into the parts. One part would be used for planting spring crops, and another for autumn crops. The third area would be left to rest for a year.

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 7) The Saxons settled previously unfarmed areas. They cut down many forested areas drained the wet land and built in each district a “manor” or a large house. (a simple building where the villagers came to pay taxes and where men met together to join the Anglo-Saxon army the fyrd. )

The influence of the 1st Germanic Invasion 8) The Anglo-Saxon migrations gave the larger part of Britain its new name, England, “ the land of the Angles”.

2nd Germanic Invasion The eighth century the Germanic tribes (the Vikings, (a word which probably means either “pirates” or “the people of the sea”), Norsemen and Danes came from Norway and Denmark In 865 the Vikings invaded and settled the extreme north and west of Scotland and also some coastal regions of Ireland

2nd Germanic Invasion King Alfred of the Saxon Kingdom of Wessex defeated the Vikings in 878. The victory resulted in a treaty with the Vikings, which divided England into two parts: - the Viking rule was recognized in the east and north of England. It was called the Danelaw. - In the rest of the country Alfred was recognized as king.

The Anglo-Saxons and the Danes (the Vikings) the cultural differences were comparatively small, they led roughly the same way of life, they spoke two varieties of the same Germanic tongue, the Danes became Christian AS A RESULT

by the 10th century England was one kingdom with a Germanic culture throughout.

The 10th century Soon after AD 950 the Danish Vikings started raiding westwards. The Saxon king decided to pay the Vikings to stay away. He set a tax on all people, called Danegeld or Danish money (the beginning of a regular tax system )