anglo-saxon poetry

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Where it all began… Anglo-Saxon poetry

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Anglo-Saxon poetry. Where it all began…. Anglo-Saxon word play. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Where it all began…

Anglo-Saxon poetry

Page 2: Anglo-Saxon poetry

During the 5th century, Germanic tribes people known as Angles, Saxons and Jutes began to settle in the British Isles. The Anglo-Saxon period lasted for 600 years and, in that time, the language, culture and politics of the British Isles were completely transformed.

Anglo Saxon dialect words form the basis of the language we now call Old English, and approximately one third of Anglo-Saxon vocabulary still survives into modern English.

Anglo-Saxon word play

Page 3: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Describe some characteristics of rap music. What makes it “rap?”

Think of some of the things you had to learn as a small child. How did your parents and/or teachers help you remember those things?

Since written word and literate people were very rare in the Anglo-Saxon times, travelling poets called scops or bards would entertain townspeople with epic poems. The poems were very rhythmical and rhymed so they would be easy to remember and recite.

Scops and Bards – The Oral Tradition

Page 4: Anglo-Saxon poetry

About 400 Anglo Saxon texts live on from this era, including many beautiful poems. Many of these tell of wild battles and heroic journeys. The famous poem Beowulf tells the story of a bloodthirsty monster called Grendel. Beowulf is much admired for the richness of its poetry - for the beautiful sounds of the words and the imaginative quality of the description.

Beowulf

Page 5: Anglo-Saxon poetry

http://youtu.be/TGlSAtb-SDwhttp://youtu.be/uMN6rRS2qhs

Beowulf Trailer

Page 6: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Hie dygellond        land   warigeath, wulfhleoþu,   windige næssas,  wolf ... windy    

frecnefen-gelad,     ðær fyrgen-stream  fen (marsh) ... stream    

under næssa genipu     niþer gewiteð,  under

flod under foldan.    Nis þæt feor heonon  flood under ... that    

mil-gemearces,    þæt se mere standeð    miles ... lake ... stands    

ofer þæm hongiað    hrinde bearwas,  over ... hangs    wudu wyrtum fæst   wæter oferhelmað. wood ... water

þær mæg nihta gehwæm    nið-wundor seon,  may (at) night ...wonder    

fyr on flode.    No þæs frod leofað  fire on flood    gumena bearna    þæt þone grund wite 

bairn (child), ground (bottom of lake)

ðeah þe hæð-stapa   hundum geswenced,  hounds 

heorot hornum trum    holtwudu sece,  horn wood    

feorran geflymed,    ær he feorh seleð,   

aldor on ofre,    ær he in wille  will hafelan (hydan).    Nis þæt heoru stow:  hide ... place    

þonon yð-geblond    up astigeð  up  won to wolcnum,    þonne wind styreþ  wind stirs (stireth)    

lað gewidru,    oð þæt lyft drysmaþ,   roderas reotað.   Nu is se ræd gelang  Now 

eft æt þe anum.    Eard git ne const,  yet  frecne stowe,   ðær þu findan miht    stow = place, there thou might find 

Page 8: Anglo-Saxon poetry

About a third of the words in Beowulf are words known as kennings. Kennings are words that are in themselves metaphorical descriptions, and were a typical feature of Anglo Saxon poetry.

Kennings combine two words to create an evocative and imaginative alternative word. By linking words in this way, the poets were able to play and experiment with the rhythm, sounds and imagery of the poetry. Beowulf contains over a thousand kennings.

Kennings

Page 9: Anglo-Saxon poetry

In off the moors, down through the mist-bands God-cursed Grendel came greedily loping. The bane of the race of men roamed forth, hunting for a prey in the high hall. Under the cloud-murk he moved towards it until it shone above him, a sheer keep of fortified gold. Nor was that the first time he had scouted the grounds of Hrothgar's dwelling - although never in his life, before or since, did he find harder fortune or hall-defenders. Spurned and joyless, he journeyed on ahead and arrived at the bawn. The iron-braced door turned on its hinge when his hands touched it.

From Seamus Heaney’s translation of ‘Beowulf’

Page 10: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Some well-known Anglo-Saxon kennings include:bone-house (banhus ) - the human bodybattle-light (beadoleoma) - swordwave-floater (wægflota) – ship

Descriptions of the sea included:whale road (hronrad) fish home (fiscesethel)seal bath (seolbæp)

Kennings

Page 11: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Try to create some kennings. See if you can describe yourself or your home or school using this technique.

Consider: How do the kennings help you describe what

you're trying to say? Do they affect the rhythm and the sound of the

language? Do you find this technique easier/ more

creative/ harder/ more confusing or more powerful than using everyday words?

Create your own

Page 12: Anglo-Saxon poetry
Page 13: Anglo-Saxon poetry

Write your own kenning style poem, selecting an animal, insect, fish, bird, or a creature of your own imagination and write a poem about it in the style of ‘Whalesong’.

Homework