Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T02:19:11.229Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

10 - The earliest Anglo-Saxon kingdoms

from PART I - THE SIXTH CENTURY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Paul Fouracre
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
Get access

Summary

introduction

By the time Bede began to write the Historia Ecclesiastica, the origins of the earliest Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were believed to lie in the ethnic pedigrees of Germanic invaders, primarily the three tribes named in the HE, the Angles, Saxons and Jutes, groups who gave their names to many of the earliest kingdoms. Indeed, the traditional view of kingdom formation takes as its point of departure the accounts of the invasions in the HE and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and sees the distribution of Anglo-Saxon cemeteries and settlements as marking out a process of military conquest and political takeover, in the course of which new kingdoms were carved out. An admirable example of this school of thought is Beck’s chapter on ‘The Teutonic conquest of Britain’, in the first volume of The Cambridge Medieval History published in 1911. Modern scholarship has at its disposal a range of data, especially in the form of archaeological remains, unimagined in Beck’s day, and the ‘conquest model’, a central tenet of English history, has crumbled since the 1970s as the origins of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms have come under renewed scrutiny.

A new understanding, if not exactly a consensus, has emerged which is more complex, though less satisfyingly comprehensive, than Beck‘s vision. This view of England in the sixth century stems from an ongoing re-evaluation of four related issues: the scale and nature of Germanic immigration and, conversely, of British survival; the formation of ‘Anglo-Saxon’ social identities; the construction of power; and the formation of new economic structures as reflected in strategies of production and exchange.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Addyman, P. (1972), ‘The Anglo-Saxon house: a new review’, ASE 1Google Scholar
Arnold, C. (1984), Roman Britain to Anglo-Saxon England: An Archaeological Study, London
Ausenda, G. (ed.) (1995), After Empire: Towards an Ethnology of Europe’s Barbarians, San Marino, CA
Axboe, M. (1995), ‘Danish kings and dendrochronology: archaeological insights into the early history of the Danish state’, in Ausenda, (1995)
Balkwill, C. (1993), ‘Old English wic and the origins of the hundred’, Landscape History 15Google Scholar
Barnwell, P. (1996), ‘Hlafaeta, ceorl, hid and scir: Celtic, Roman or Germanic?’, Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 9Google Scholar
Bassett, S. (1989a), ‘In search of the origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms’, in Bassett, (1989c)
Bassett, S. (1989b), ‘Churches in Worcester before and after the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons’, Antiquity 69Google Scholar
Bassett, S. (ed.) (1989c), The Origins of Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms, London and New York
Beck, F. (1911), ‘The Teutonic conquest of Britain’, in Gwatlein, H. and Whitney, J. (eds.), The Cambridge Medieval History, iGoogle Scholar
Biddle, M. (1989), ‘London: a city in transition: ad 400–800’, in Lobel, M. (ed.), The City of London: The British Atlas of Historic Towns, iii, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Blair, W. J. (1994), Anglo-Saxon Oxfordshire, Stroud
Boddington, A. (1990), ‘Models of burial, settlement and worship: the final phase reviewed’, in Southworth, E. (ed.), Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries: A Reappraisal, StroudGoogle Scholar
Boyle, A., Dodd, A., Miles, D. and Mudd, A. (1995), Two Oxfordshire Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries: Berinsfield and Didcot, Oxford
Boyle, A., Jennings, D., Miles, D. and Palmer, S. (1998), The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Butler’s Field, Lechlade, Gloc., i, Oxford
Bradley, R. (1987), ‘Time regained: the creation of continuity’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association 140Google Scholar
Carver, M. (ed.) (1992), The Age of Sutton Hoo, Woodbridge
Chambers, R. (1988), ‘The late- and sub-Roman cemetery at Queenford Farm, Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxon., Oxoniensia 52Google Scholar
Chapman, J. and Hamerow, H. (eds.) (1997), Migrations and Invasions in Archaeological Explanation, Oxford
Chapman, R. (1992), The Celts, London
Charles-Edwards, T. (1972), ‘Kinship, status and the origins of the hide’, Past and Present 56Google Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T. (1995), ‘Language and society among the insular Celts, ad 400–1000’, in Green, M. (ed.), The Celtic World, London and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T. (1997), ‘Anglo-Saxon kinship revisited’, in Hines, (1977)
Cox, P. (1989), ‘A seventh-century inhumation cemetery at Shepherd’s Farm, Ulwell, near Wantage, Dorset’, Proceedings of the Dorset Nature, History and Archaeological Society 110Google Scholar
Crawford, S. (1999), Anglo-Saxon Childhood, Stroud
Dölling, H. (1958), Haus und Hof in westgermanischen Volksrechten, Münster
Davies, W. and Vierck, H. (1974), ‘The contexts of Tribal Hidage: social aggregates and settlement patterns’, FrSt 8Google Scholar
Dickinson, T. (1993), ‘Early Saxon saucer brooches: a preliminary overview’, Anglo- Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 6Google Scholar
Dickinson, T. and Speake, G. (1992), ‘The seventh-century cremation burial in Asthall Barrow, Oxfordshire: a reassessment’, in Carver, (1992)
Dodgson, J. McN. (1966), ‘The significance of the distribution of the English place-name in -ingas, -inga, in south-east England’, Medieval Archaeology 10Google Scholar
Down, A. and Welch, M. (1990), Chichester Excavations 7: Apple Down and the Mardens, Chichester
Dumville, D. (1989), ‘Essex, Middle Anglia and the expansion of Mercia in the southeast Midlands’, in Bassett, (1989)
Dumville, D. (1989), ‘The Tribal Hidage: an introduction to its texts and their history’, in Bassett, (1989)
Esmonde Cleary, S. (1989), The Ending of Roman Britain, London
Faull, M. (1977), ‘British survival in Anglo-Saxon Northumbria’, in Laing, L. (ed.), Studies in Celtic Survival (BAR British Series 37), OxfordGoogle Scholar
Filmer-Sankey, W. (1992), ‘Snape Anglo-Saxon cemetery: the current state of knowledge’, in Carver, (1992)
Geake, H. (1997), The Use of Grave-Goods in Conversion-Period England, c600–c850 AD (BAR British Series 261), Oxford
Green, B., Rogerson, A. and White, S. (1987), Morningthorpe Anglo-Saxon Cemetery, 2 vols. (East Anglian Archaeology 36), Gressenhall
Härke, H. (1992a), ‘Changing symbols in a changing society: the Anglo-Saxon burial rite in the seventh century’, in Carver, (1992)
Härke, H. (1992b), Angelsächsische Waffengräber des 5. bis 7. Jahrhunderts, Cologne
Härke, H. (1997), ‘Early Anglo-Saxon social structure’, in Hines, (1997)
Härke, H. (1998), ‘Briten und Angelsachsen im nachrömischen England: Zum Nachweis der einheimischen Bevölkerung in den angelsächsischen Landnahmegebieten’, in Häßler, H.-J. (ed.), Studien zur Sachsenforschung xiGoogle Scholar
Høilund Nielsen, K. (1997), ‘Animal art and the weapon-burial rite: a political badge?’, in Jensen, C. Kjeld and Høilund Nielsen, K. (eds.), Burial and Society: The Chronological and Social Analysis of Archaeological Burial Data, ÅrhusGoogle Scholar
Høilund Nielsen, K. (1999), ‘Style ii and the Anglo-Saxon elite’, in Dickinson, T. and Griffiths, D. (eds.), The Origins of Kingdoms (Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 10)Google Scholar
Halsall, G. (1995), ‘The Merovingian period in north-east Gaul: transition or change?’, in Bintliff, J. and Hamerow, H. (eds.), Europe between Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Halsall, G. (1996), ‘Female status and power in early Merovingian central Austrasia: the burial evidence’, EME 5.1Google Scholar
Hamerow, H. (1991), ‘Settlement mobility and the “Middle Saxon Shift”: rural settlements and settlement patterns in Anglo-Saxon England’, ASE 20Google Scholar
Hamerow, H. (1992), ‘Settlement on the gravels in the Anglo-Saxon period’, in Fulford, M. and Nichols, L. (eds.), Developing Landscapes of Lowland Britain: The Archaeology of the British Gravels, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hamerow, H. (1993), Excavations at Mucking, ii: The Anglo-Saxon Settlement, London
Hamerow, H. (1999), ‘Anglo-Saxon timber buildings: the continental connection’, in Sarfatij, H., Verwers, W. and Woltering, P. (eds.), In Discussion with the Past: Archaeological Studies Presented to W. A. van Es, ZwolleGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S. C. (1982), ‘Finglesham: a cemetery in East Kent’, in Campbell, J. (ed.), The Anglo-Saxons, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, S. C. and Meaney, A. (1970), Two Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries at Winnall, Winchester, Hants., London
Higham, N. (1992), Rome, Britain and the Anglo-Saxons, London
Hills, C. (1998), ‘Did the people from Spong Hill come from Schleswig-Holstein?’, in Häßler, H.-J. (ed.), Studien zur Sachsenforschung xiGoogle Scholar
Hills, C. (1999), ‘Spong Hill and the Adventus Saxonum’, in Karkov, C., Crowley, K. Wickham and Young, B. (eds.), Spaces of the Living and the Dead, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hills, C., Penn, K. and Rickett, R. (1984), Spong Hill, iii: Catalogue of Inhumations (East Anglian Archaeology 21), Gressenhall
Hines, J. (1995), ‘Cultural change and social organisation in early Anglo-Saxon England’, in Ausenda, G. (ed.), After Empire: Towards an Ethnology of Europe’s Barbarians, WoodbridgeGoogle Scholar
Hines, J. (1984), The Scandinavian Character of Anglian England in the Pre Viking Period (BAR British Series 124), Oxford
Hines, J. (1995), ‘Cultural change and social organisation in early Anglo-Saxon England’, in Ausenda, (1995)
Hines, J. (ed.) (1997), The Anglo-Saxons from the Migration Period to the Eighth Century, Woodbridge
Hines, J. (1998), A New Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Great Square-Headed Brooches, Woodbridge
Hodges, R. (1989), The Anglo-Saxon Achievement, London
Hope-Taylor, B. (1977), Yeavering: An Anglo-British Centre of Early Northumbria, London
Huggett, J. (1988), ‘Imported grave goods and the early Anglo-Saxon economy’, Medieval Archaeology 32Google Scholar
Keynes, S. (1995), ‘England, 700–900’, in The New Cambridge Medieval History, Cambridge, iiGoogle Scholar
Kinsley, G. (2002), Catholme: An Anglo-Saxon Settlement on the Trent Gravels in Staffordshire, Nottingham
Leech, R. (1986), ‘The excavation of a Romano-Celtic temple and a later cemetery on Lamyett Beacon, Somerset’, Britannia 17Google Scholar
Leeds, E. T. (1912), ‘The distribution of the Anglo-Saxon saucer brooch in relation to the battle of Bedford AD. 571’, Archaeologica, series 2, 13Google Scholar
Losco-Bradley, S. and Wheeler, H. (1984), ‘Anglo-Saxon settlement in the Trent Valley: some aspects’, in Faull, M. (ed.), Studies in Late Anglo-Saxon Settlement, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Loseby, S. (2000), ‘Power and towns in late Roman Britain and early Anglo-Saxon England’, in Gurt, J. and Ripoll, G. (eds.), Sedes regiae (Ann. 400–800), BarcelonaGoogle Scholar
Müller-Wille, M., Meier, D., Kroll, D. and Kroll, H. (1988), ‘The transformation of rural society, economy and landscape during the first millennium ad: archaeological and palaeobotanical contributions from northern Germany and southern Scandinavia’, Geografiska Annaler 70.b.1Google Scholar
MacKreth, D. (1996), Orton Hall Farm: A Roman and Early Anglo-Saxon Farmstead, Manchester
Marshall, A. and Marshall, G. (1994), ‘Differentiation, change and continuity in Anglo- Saxon buildings’, The Archaeological Journal 150Google Scholar
McKinley, J. (1994), The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, N. Elmham, viii: The Cremations (East Anglian Archaeology 69), Gressenhall
Meaney, A. (1964), A Gazetteer of Early Anglo-Saxon Burial Sites, London
Miles, D. (1986), Archaeology at Barton Court Farm, Abingdon, Oxon., Oxford
Millett, M. (1990), The Romanization of Britain, Cambridge
Millett, M. with James, S. (1984), ‘Excavations at Cowdery’s Down, Basingstoke, Hants. 1978–81’, The Archaeological Journal 140Google Scholar
Murphy, P. (1994), ‘The Anglo-Saxon landscape and rural economy: some results from sites in East Anglia and Essex’, in Rackham, J. (ed.), Environment and Economy in Anglo-Saxon England (CBA Research Report 89), YorkGoogle Scholar
Myres, J. N. L. (1954), ‘Two Saxon urns from Ickwell Bury, Beds. and the Saxon penetration of the East Midlands’, Antiquaries Journal 34Google Scholar
Myres, J. N. L. (1977), A Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Pottery, 2 vols., Cambridge
Myres, J. N. L. and Green, B. (1973), The Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries of Caistor-by-Norwich and Markshall, London
O’Brien, C. and Miket, R. (1991), ‘The early medieval settlements of Thirlings, Northumberland’, Durham Archaeological Journal 7Google Scholar
Pader, E.-J. (1982), Symbolism, Social Relations and the Interpretation of Mortuary Remains (BAR International Series 130), Oxford
Pohl, W. (1997), ‘Ethnic names and identities in the British Isles: a comparative perspective’, in Hines, (1997)
Powlesland, D. (1997), ‘Early Anglo-Saxon settlements, structures, form and layout’, in Hines, (1997)
Powlesland, D., Haughton, C. and Hanson, J. (1986), ‘Excavations at Heslerton, North Yorkshire, 1978–1982’, The Archaeological Journal 143Google Scholar
Pretty, K. (1989), ‘Defining the Magonsaete’, in Bassett, (1989)
Richards, J. (1987), The Significance of Form and Decoration of Anglo-Saxon Cremation Urns (BAR International Series 166), Oxford
Richards, J. (1992), ‘Anglo-Saxon symbolism’, in Carver, (1992)
Richards, J. (1995), ‘An archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England’, in Ausenda, (1995)
Rodwell, W. and Rodwell, K. (1985), Rivenhall: Investigations of a Villa, Church and Village 1950–1977 (CBA Research Report 55), London
Scull, C. (1990), ‘Scales and weights in early Anglo-Saxon England’, The Archaeological Journal 147Google Scholar
Scull, C. (1992), ‘Before Sutton Hoo: structures of power and society in early East Anglia’, in Carver, (1992)
Scull, C. (1993), ‘Archaeology, early Anglo-Saxon society and the origins of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms’, Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 6Google Scholar
Scull, C. (1997), ‘Urban centres in Pre-Viking England?’, in Hines, (1997)
Shepherd, J. (1979), ‘The social identity of the individual in isolated barrows and barrow cemeteries in Anglo-Saxon England’, in Burnham, B. and Kingsbury, J. (eds.), Space, Hierarchy and Society (BAR International Series 59), OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sherlock, S. and Welch, M. (1992), An Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Norton, Cleveland (CBA Research Report 82), London
Speake, G. (1980), Anglo-Saxon Animal Art and Its Germanic Background, Oxford
Speake, G. (1989), A Saxon Bed Burial on Swallowcliffe Down, London
Steedman, K. (1995), ‘Excavation of a Saxon site at Riby Cross Roads, Lincolnshire’, Archaeological Journal 151Google Scholar
Stoodley, N. (1998), ‘Post-migration age structures and age related grave goods in Anglo- Saxon cemeteries in England’, in Häßler, H.-J. (ed.), Studien zur Sachsenforschung xiGoogle Scholar
Stoodley, N. (1999), The Spindle and- the Spear: A Critical Enquiry into the Construction of Gender in the Early Anglo-Saxon Burial Rite (BAR British Series 288), Oxford
Struth, P. and Eagles, B. (1999), ‘An Anglo-Saxon barrow cemetery in Greenwich Park’, in Pattison, P., Field, D. and Ainsworth, S. (eds.), Patterns of the Past: Essays in Landscape Archaeology for Christopher Taylor, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Timby, J. (1994), ‘Sancton I Anglo-Saxon cemetery: excavations carried out between 1976 and 1980’, The Archaeological Journal 150Google Scholar
Tyers, I., Hillam, J. and Groves, C. (1994), ‘Trees and woodland in the Saxon period: the dendrochronological evidence’, in Rackham, J. (ed.), Environment and Economy in Anglo-Saxon England (CBA Research Report 89), YorkGoogle Scholar
Van de Noort, R. (1993), ‘The context of early medieval barrows in western Europe’, Antiquity 67Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, B. (2000), ‘Why did the Anglo-Saxons not become British?’, HER 115Google Scholar
Watts, L. and Leech, P. (1996), Henley Wood, Temples and Cemetery, London
Welch, M. (1992), Anglo-Saxon England, London
West, S. (1986), West Stow: The Anglo-Saxon Village, 2 vols. (East Anglian Archaeology 14), Gressenhall
Williams, D. and Vince, A. (1998), ‘The characterization and interpretation of Early to Middle Saxon granite-tempered pottery in England’, Medieval Archaeology 4, 1Google Scholar
Williams, R. J. (1993), Pennyland and Hartigans: Two Iron Age and Saxon Sites in Milton Keynes (Buckinghamshire Archaeological Society Monograph 4), Aylesbury
Wise, P. (1991), ‘Wasperton’, Current Archaeology 126Google Scholar
Wood, I. N. (1990), ‘Ethnicity and the ethnogenesis of the Burgundians’, in Wolfram, H. and Pohl, W. (eds.), Typen der Ethnogenese unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Bayern, ViennaGoogle Scholar
Wood, I. (1997), ‘Before and after the migration to Britain’, in Hines, (1997)
Wormald, P. (1990), Review of Bassett, (ed.) 1989, Oxoniensia 54
Yorke, B. (1990), Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England, London
Yorke, B. (1990), Kings and Kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, Guildford
Yorke, B. (1993), ‘Fact or fiction? The written evidence for the fifth and sixth centuries AD’, Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 6Google Scholar
Zimmermann, W. H. (1988), ‘Regelhafte Innengliederung prähistorischer Langhäuser in den Nordseeanrainerstatten: Ein Zeugnis enger, langandauender kultureller Kontakte’, Germania 66.2Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×