History of Great Britain (Part 1)
History of Great Britain (Part 1)
History of Great Britain (Part 1)
Lecture Plan.
1. Prehistory.
2. The Roman period.
3. The Germanic invasions
4. Battle of Hastings
Prehistory
Two thousand years ago there was an Iron Age Celtic culture throughout the
British Isles. It seems that the Celts, who had been arriving from Europe from
the eighth century BC onwards, intermingled with the peoples who were
already there. We know that religious sites that had been built long before
the arrival of the Celts continued to be used in the Celtic period.
For people in Britain today, the chief significance of the prehistoric period
(for which no written records exist) is its sense of mystery. This sense finds its
focus most easily in the astonishing monumental architecture of this period,
the remains of which exist throughout the country. Wiltshire, in south
western England, has two spectacular examples: Silbury Hill, the largest
burial mound in Europe, and Stonehenge. Such places have a special
importance for anyone interested in the cultural and religious practices of
prehistoric Britain. We know very little about these practices, but there are
some organizations today (for example, the Order of Bards, Ovates and
Druids — a small group of eccentric intellectuals and mystics) who base their
beliefs on them.
Prehistory: Stonehenge
Stonehenge was built on Salisbury Plain some time between 3050 and 2300 BC. It is one
of the most famous and mysterious archaeological sites in the world. One of its
mysteries is how it was ever built at all with the technology of the time (the stones come
from over 200 miles away in Wales). Another is its purpose. It appears to function as a
kind of astronomical clock and we know it was used by the Druids for ceremonies
marking the passing of the seasons.
It has always exerted a
fascination on the British
imagination, and appears in a
number of novels, such as
Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the
D’Urbevilles.
This division of the Celts into those who experienced direct Roman rule
(the Britons in England and Wales) and those who did not (the Gaels in
Ireland and Scotland) may help to explain the development of two distinct
branches of the Celtic group of languages.
The Roman Period (43—410)
The remarkable thing about the Romans is that, despite their long occupation of
Britain, they left very little behind. To many other parts of Europe they
bequeathed a system of law and administration which forms the basis of the
modern system and a language which developed into the modern Romance
family of languages. In Britain, they left neither. Moreover, most of their villas,
baths and temples, their impressive network of roads, and the cities they
founded, including Londinium (London), were soon destroyed or fell into
disrepair. Almost the only lasting reminder of their presence are placenames like
Chester, Lancaster and Gloucester, which include variants of the Roman word
castra (a military camp).
Hadrian’s Wall was built by the
Romans in the second century
across the northern border of
their province of Britannia
(along nearly the same line as
the present English Scottish
border) in order to protect their
territory from attacks by the Hadrian’s Wall
Scots and the Piets.
The Roman Period: Important Dates
• 55 BC The Roman general Julius Caesar lands in Britain with an
expeditionary force wins a battle and leaves. The first ‘date’ in
popular British history.
The Roman occupation had been a matter of colonial control rather than
largescale settlement. But, during the fifth century, a number of tribes from
the northwestern European mainland invaded and set e in large numbers.
Two of these tribes were the Angles and the Saxons. These AngloSaxons
soon had the southeast of the country in their grasp. In the west of the
country their advance was temporarily halted by an army of (Celtic) Britons
under the command of the legendary King Arthur. Nevertheless, by the end
of the sixth century, they and their way of life predominated in nearly all of
England and in parts of southern Scotland. The Celtic Britons were either
Saxonized or driven westwards, where their culture and language survived
in southwest Scotland, Wales and Cornwall.
The Germanic invasions: King Arthur
King Arthur provides a
wonderful example of the
distortions of popular history. In
folklore and myth he is a great
English hero, and he and his
knights of the round table are
regarded as the perfect
example of medieval nobility
and chivalry.
In fact, he lived long before
medieval times and was a
Romanized Celt trying to hold
back the advances of the Anglo
Saxons — the very people who
became ‘the English’!
The Germanic invasions (410—1066)
The AngloSaxons had little use for towns and cities. But they had a great
effect on the countryside, where they introduced new farming methods and
founded the thousands of selfsufficient villages which formed the basis of
English society for the next thousand or so years.
The AngloSaxons were pagan when they came to Britain. Christianity
spread throughout Britain from two different directions during the sixth and
seventh centuries. It came directly from Rome when St Augustine arrived in
597 and established his headquarters at Canterbury in the southeast of
England. It had already been introduced into Scotland and northern England
from Ireland, which had become Christian more than 150 years earlier.
Although Roman Christianity eventually took over the whole of the British
Isles, the Celtic model persisted in Scotland and Ireland for several hundred
years. It was less centrally organized, and had less need for a strong
monarchy to support it. This partly explains why both secular and religious
power in these two countries continued to be both more locally based and
less secure than it was elsewhere in Britain throughout the medieval period.
The Germanic invasions (410—1066)
Britain experienced another wave of Germanic invasions in the eighth century.
These invaders, known as Vikings, Norsemen or Danes, came from Scandinavia.
In the ninth century they conquered and settled the extreme north and west of
Scotland, and also some coastal regions of Ireland. Their conquest of England
was halted when they were defeated by King Alfred of the Saxon kingdom of
Wessex . This resulted in an agreement which divided England between Wessex,
in the south and west, and the “Danelaw” in the north and east.
The battle was close and extremely bloody. At the end of it, most of
the best warriors in England were dead, including their leader, King
Harold. As a result of this single battle, the Norman leader, Duke
William of Normandy, became king of the whole of England. He is
known in popular history as ‘William the Conqueror’.
The date is remembered for being the last time that England was
successfully invaded.
The Germanic invasions : Important Dates
• 432 St Patrick converts Ireland to Christianity
• 597 St Augustine arrives in England
• 793 The great monastery on the island of Lindisfarne in
northeast England is destroyed by Vikings and its monks killed.
• 878 The Peace of Edington partitions England between the
Saxons, led by King Alfred, and the Danes.
• 973 Edgar, grandson of Alfred, becomes king of all England.
• 1014 Brian Boru’s Irish army defeats the Vikings at Clontarf (near
modern Dublin). As a result, Viking settlement in Ireland remains
limited and Ireland retains its Celtic identity, never becoming part
of the Scandinavian empire.
• 1066 The Battle of Hastings