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Early British history

Guided Notes. Early British history. What’s Britain or England or the United Kingdom?. Great Britain is an island situated to the north-west of Continental Europe . It’s the ninth largest island in the world and the third most populated.

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Early British history

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  1. Guided Notes Early British history

  2. What’s Britain or England or the United Kingdom? • Great Britain is an island situated to the north-west of Continental Europe. • It’s the ninth largest island in the world and the third most populated. • The island of Ireland lies to its west. Great Britain is surrounded by over 1,000 smaller islands. • Politically, it includes England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales.

  3. Great Britain

  4. Who’s There? • Neolithic builders – from the “New Stone Age” – created burial mounds that were little more than patches of raised, overgrown earth. Eventually, wooden columns were built atop these. • This structure was known as a Woodhenge. • Many possible areas have been identified as the remains of such structures in ancient England. • Eventually, groups of people would build Stonehenge over these structures for astronomical, memorial, and processional reasons. • The Neolithic people were replaced by Celtic tribes.

  5. Stonehenge

  6. Who’s There? • Celts – Considered barbarians to the Romans, the Celts were actually a series of tribes who spread from Central Europe to the British Isles (England, Scotland, Ireland). • Since Rome was considered one of the greatest of the ancient civilizations, much ancient history is written from their perspective. • A barbarian is a negative term applied to a group of people whose language the Romans couldn’t understand (“bar barbarbar” is how the Celts sounded to an unfamiliar ear. Consider our use of “blah blahblah”).

  7. Who’s There? • Romans – Julius Caesar, fresh from successfully defeating barbarian tribes in Gaul, modern day France, was primed to take the British Isles. • The Celts were smart, however, and pretended to pledge allegiance. As a result of this cunning trickery, Caesar had to work much harder to subjugate the native British population. • The Romans influenced Britain’s agriculture, town construction and orientation, architecture, and religion.

  8. Bath City • They also left behind several reminders of their occupation. • In Somerset County, the Romans built a spa around a city called Bath. • The hot water springs would hold mystical and religious significance for generations to come.

  9. Hot Springs - Bath

  10. Who’s There? • Angles, Saxons – Two of the major tribes who invaded the British Isles were the Angles and the Saxons. These people were originally from the area known today as Germany. • Their noblemen ruled England from the end of the Roman reign until William the Conqueror began the Norman Conquest.

  11. The Anglo-Saxons and Beowulf • It was the Anglo-Saxons who brought with them the story of Beowulf, a story existing from the time they were in Scandinavia.

  12. Beowulf and the Mead Hall • The mention of Scandinavia brings up a very important concept to our next major text. • The central setting of Beowulf is the mead hall. • A mead hall gets its name from two items: a large feasting hall for a King, Lord, or Thane with a single room and mead, a fermented honey beverage. • Likely, a mead hall was the safest place in the kingdom.

  13. Mead hall Entertainment • Speaking of safe places, mead halls would regularly host groups of people. Food, beverages, and entertainment would be provided. Entertainment came in the form of recited poetry. • The poetry at this time was not about flowers and feelings, but about epic warfare, heroes, and monsters. Bards / scops were the Anglo-Saxon storytelling musicians.

  14. What language did they speak? • Originally, the Celts spoke Celtic. • The Romans spoke Latin. • The Anglo-Saxons spoke Frisian and Germanic based languages that would solidify into Old English. • Old English is the language in which our first text was originally written.

  15. What did they believe? • Celts – The Celts engaged in polytheistic nature worship, meaning they worshipped many natural gods. • There was no unified pantheon, or set of religious figures across the Celtic tribes. • The stories they told would include superstitious beliefs in local monsters like trolls or demons. • Angles, Saxons – The tribes from Germany and the Continental Europe believed in the Norse gods from Norse mythology. • Some names include Odin, Freya, Thor, and Loki.

  16. Romans – The Romans had their own religion consisting of gods from Roman mythology. • Some names include Jupiter (Zeus in Greek), Juno (Hera), Neptune (Poseidon), and Mars (Ares). • Early Christians – Early Christian missionaries were successful in teaching the theology of God and Jesus Christ within the Roman Empire. • As Christianity spread through Europe, it would reach the British Isles through missionary work. • King Ethelbert I, an Anglo-Saxon king, was successfully converted through St. Augustine of Canterbury’s efforts.

  17. Why is this important? • Our study of Beowulf is based around the pre-existing beliefs from Celts, Angles, and the Saxons as they clashed with Christianity’s influence. • Besides being a powerfully entertaining story, Beowulf has been read as a Christian allegory in which the characters, places, and objects represent Christian concepts.

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