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Beowulf Background: Geography

Beowulf Background: Geography. Germanic tribes battled for control after causing the downfall of the Western Roman Empire (400s A.D.) Political, economic, cultural repercussions Bloody warfare  many G ermanic tribes in Northern Europe left their homelands

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Beowulf Background: Geography

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  1. Beowulf Background: Geography • Germanic tribes battled for control after causing the downfall of the Western Roman Empire (400s A.D.) • Political, economic, cultural repercussions • Bloody warfare  many Germanic tribes in Northern Europe left their homelands • Anglo-Saxon civilization established on island of Britain • G. tribes: Angles, Saxons, Jutes • Story set on mainland

  2. Beowulf Background: Religion and Culture • Paganism in northern Germanic tribes • Warrior culture • Strength, courage, loyalty – principal values • Mead halls • Center of community, culture & entertainment; offered safety • Large wooden buildings - men • Drank mead (alcoholic beverage) • Storytelling • long epic poems & verse narratives • Scops – poet-singers, chanted from memory, usually played harp too

  3. Beowulf Background: The Epic Poem • Beowulf = Geat warrior • crosses the sea to aid Danes in battle (B’s father helped byHrothgar) • returns to Sweden to succeed his uncle, Hygelac, as king of the Geats • Hygelac was a real historical figure, led a military raid around 525 AD. • Historians believe the action of Beowulf is set shortly after Hygelac’s raid in 525. • Takes place on mainland, not in Britain. • Danes (PD Denmark), Geats (PD Sweden)

  4. Beowulf Background: The Epic Poem • Originally written in Old English, the language spoken in Britain during Anglo-Saxon period • Old English poetry has a strong rhythm with each line divided into two parts by a pause (caesura) –indicated by an extra space. • In translation, commas used to reproduce effect of the caesuras • Old English doesn’t look or sound like modern English • Usually translated and/or heavily noted for modern readers • Text written between 8th and 10th centuries • After Anglo-Saxon conversion to Christianity • Tells story of mostly pagan society (~525 AD) • Most famous early Germanic heroic poem to survive ( oral tradition)

  5. Beowulf Background: The Poet and the Poem Does not follow the plot of the poem so don’t rely on it for any information for this course. • Exact author is unknown, only inferred information • Educated, familiar with ancient epics such as Aeneid by Virgil • Knowledgeable about Christianity and the Bible • Differences in scholarly opinions • Northern England – eighth century AD • Southwestern England – tenth century AD • Only one copy of original manuscript has survived • Dates back to 1000 AD • Preserved by Christian monks who copied manuscripts • Housed in British Library in London (present day) • Damaged by various disasters, including fires • Electronic Beowulf Project • 2007 film - Ray Winstone, Angelina Jolie, Christian Glover

  6. Beowulf:Literary Terms the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words, used to help storytellers memorize poems in oral tradition a pause that divides a line of poetry; (modern translations use commas, not extra space) Adjectives that point out special traits of particular people or things; fits metrically into a line descriptive phrase or compound word that substitutes for simple nouns, common in Germanic poetry; type of metaphor “frost bound the earth and hail would fall, the coldest seeds” (“The Seafarer” lines 31-33)

  7. Kennings: descriptive compound words and phrases that take place of simple nouns

  8. descriptive compound words and phrases that take place of simple nouns Kennings:

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