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2 - Exiles and Emperors: Gaelic-Northumbrian Political Relations in the Golden Age

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2020

Fiona Edmonds
Affiliation:
Dr FIONA EDMONDS is Reader in History and Director of the Regional Heritage Centre at Lancaster University.
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Summary

Movements of people along ancient pathways and seaways often take on a timeless air, yet cultural influence occurred against a backdrop of rapid political change. Marriage alliances, court intrigues and great battles played their parts in determining the strength of ties between different parts of the Insular world. In this chapter I examine the political dimension of Gaelic influence in the Northumbrian kingdom, and provide a chronological framework for the thematic studies that I tackle elsewhere in this book.

The main sources of information about political vicissitudes are texts, especially chronicles, but there are limitations to what they reveal about Northumbrian–Gaelic contact. The ecclesiastical context of chronicling affected the type of information recorded; battles tended to be interpreted through the lens of biblical parallels or as signs of the coming apocalypse. By the late seventh century, churchmen were cultivating skills for interpreting scripture and dating Easter, including computus. Easter tables might be annotated with references to events and reigns, and such records arguably underpinned annals, along with other material such as late-Roman chronicles. Bede is a striking example of a scholar whose expertise in computus influenced his chronicling activity, and he incorporated chronicles into his computistical treatises De temporibus (703) and De temporum ratione (725). Bede also appended a series of annals to Historia ecclesiastica, and his example was followed by a later copyist (most likely based in York), whose continuations to 766 appear in a select group of continental manuscripts. These ‘northern annals’ were continued further, to at least 802, and they have been attributed to the circle of the great scholar Alcuin of York on the basis of Latin style and points of detail. The annals were incorporated into a late-tenth-century historical miscellany, twelfth-century northern texts and the northern recension of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which most probably emerged in York in the early eleventh century. There is something of a lacuna in Northumbria’s history in the early ninth century, until a later set of northern annals (888–957) becomes available. This text was incorporated the compendious twelfth-century work Historia regum, which was most likely written by Symeon of Durham. These annals also informed the ‘northern recension’ of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

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Gaelic Influence in the Northumbrian Kingdom
The Golden Age and the Viking Age
, pp. 23 - 44
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2020

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