anglo-saxon england old english literature beowulf

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Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

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Page 1: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon England

Old English LiteratureBeowulf

Page 2: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon History

• 449-1066• 50 BCE: Julius Caesar arrived in Britain– Romans pushed native Celts to outskirts – Celts who remained became “Romanized”

• 407 CE: Rome pulled troops from Britain – Troops needed to defend Rome against Germanic

tribes– No more protection or centralized government

Page 3: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• 449: Germanic tribes (Angles, Saxons, and Jutes) arrived from what is now Denmark, Northern Germany, and northern Holland

Page 4: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• 597-664: Conversion of England• 789-878: Viking invasions• 871-899: reign of King Alfred the Great– defended Wessex against Vikings– reorganized military– augmented navy– created law code– had Latin works translated into (Old) English

Page 5: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• 1042-1066: Edward the Confessor– Remember this name!– nicknamed “the Confessor” because of his piety– unclear plan for succession• Earl Harold Godwinson?• King Harald Hardrada of Norway?• Duke William of Normandy?

Page 6: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• 1066: Norman Invasion and Conquest– January 5: Edward dies– January 6: Harold Godwinson crowned– September: Harald Hardrada arrives – September 25: Harald Hardrada killed– September: William of Normandy arrives– October 14: Harold Godwinson killed– December 25: William of Normandy crowned

Page 7: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon Culture

• Buildings– Houses • Small• Wood• Danger of fires

– Churches: stone– Large “mead hall” (“feasting hall”)• Mead is honey wine.• The hall provided warmth, safety, and companionship.

Page 8: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon House(recreation)

Page 9: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon Church

Page 10: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Anglo-Saxon Mead Hall(recreation)

Page 11: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• Political structure (early Anglo-Saxon Age)– Tribal– King—chosen by “witan” (group of advisors)– Warriors– Comitatus• Relationship between king and warriors• Warriors gave king protection.• King gave warriors gold.

Page 12: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• Religion– Paganism• Analogous to Norse beliefs• Týr (Tuesday), Woden (Wednesday), Thor (Thursday),

Frigg (Friday)

– Christianity• Full-scale conversion began in 597• Augustine—sent by Pope Gregory• Conversion did not occur overnight; Paganism and

Christianity lived side-by-side for a while

Page 13: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Paganism• Polytheistic• Focused on this world• Name lives on• Valued pride• Wyrd controls• People read omens• Sacrifices

Christianity• Monotheistic• Focused on the afterlife• Spirit lives on• Valued humility• God controls• People trusted in God• Prayer

Page 14: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• Language: Old EnglishFæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum;Si þin nama gehalgodto becume þin ricegewurþe ðin willaon eorðan swa swa on heofonum.urne gedæghwamlican hlaf syle us todægand forgyf us ure gyltasswa swa we forgyfað urum gyltendumand ne gelæd þu us on costnungeac alys us of yfele soþlice

Page 15: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Old EnglishFæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum;Si þin nama gehalgodto becume þin ricegewurþe ðin willaon eorðan swa swa on heofonum.urne gedæghwamlican hlaf syle us todægand forgyf us ure gyltasswa swa we forgyfað urum gyltendumand ne gelæd þu us on costnungeac alys us of yfele soþlice

Modern EnglishOur Father, Who art in Heaven,Hallowed be Thy name,Thy kingdom come,Thy will be done,On earth as it is in Heaven.Give us this day our daily bread,And forgive us our trespasses,As we forgive those who trespass against us,And lead us not into temptation,But deliver us from evil.

Page 16: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

– “Anglo-Saxon” for people and culture– “Old English” for language– Germanic– Inflected (word form more important than word

order)

Page 17: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

• Literature– Only monks could write• Wrote in scriptoria• Sometimes added commentary

– Poetry • Did not rhyme• Alliteration• Stressed syllables

Page 18: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

Beowulf

• Began in oral tradition• Written down in 8th century• Preserved in one manuscript• Parts damaged by fire• Setting– 6th century– What is now Denmark and Sweden

Page 19: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

The Beowulf Manuscript

Page 20: Anglo-Saxon England Old English Literature Beowulf

To Cite This Source

In the essay:(Bernard-Roth)

On the Works Cited page:Bernard-Roth, Staci. “Anglo-Saxon England.”

Central Gwinnett High School. Teachers/ Instructors: Roth, Staci. 27 June 2013.

Microsoft PowerPoint file. 1 October 2013.