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Summary English: Culture & History (UK)

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Summary all English lectures: Culture and History (UK) by prof Line Magnus

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October 24, 2021
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British history (pre-history up to 1066)


Tensions between the CELTIC AND ANGLO-SAXON elements in the British Isles: the result of a long
history of immigrations (before 1066: immigration)
First settlements (500,000BC)
OLD STONE AGE: hunter-gatherers and fishers
NEW STONE AGE: farming, stone and earth monuments (4,000-3,000BC)
+ the builders of STONEHENGE (=one of the only remnants of these civilisations)
BRONZE AGE ART

- there mustve been some political entities/societal
organisation/ leadership on the island bc it requires leadership
and free time

- built between stages mostly in 300-500 BC
- stones came from quite far (25km, some from wales which is abt 200km) so how did ppl move
these stones that weigh around 20 tons
- speculation : track of logs / earthen tracks greased w animal fat kind of sleigh for the stones
- function: unclear
- aligns w sunset on shortest day of yr + sunrise on longest day of the yr  may have had some
astronomical function like a calender / religious ceremonies or burial site (human bones found)

- we see these kind of stones all over the island e.g.: Orkneys: ring o’ Brodgar
- 2500 BC? built more or less around the same time
- shows some kind of cultural cohesion

UFFINGTON WHITE HORSE

- chalky ground, sort of drawing
- abt 100m
- can only be observed from a nearby hill




600 BC: arrival of CELTIC peoples from mainland (Europe)
they brought with them the IRON AGE CIVILIZATION

200 BC: More Celtic/Belgic tribes: BRITONS (still illiterate ppl)

55 BC : first ROMAN invasions

,THE CELTIC FRINGE

à shows where the celtic tribes originated and where
they spread

yellow: where Celtic languages still exist today




CELTIC LANGUAGES
Two groups in the modern-day Insular (= spoken on the island) Celtic languages:
1 Goidelic (Gaelic) group: brought over by earlier Celtic immigrants (2000-1200 BC) (3)
these include: Scottish Gaelic Irish Gaelic Manx

2 Brythonic group: brought over by Celtic immigrants (2)
Welsh Cornish (went extinct but recently revived)


ROMAN BRITAIN
= FIRST INVASION OF CELTIC BRITAIN BY ROMANS
55 BC by JULIUS CAESAR
 only wanted to use the island of Br as a military base to destroy the tribe of the Balkans

Britain occupied 43 AD by CLAUDIUS
 Romans started looking at it as a province for the Roman empire

- 1st capital: COLCHESTER = the oldest recorded town in Britain
- Foundation of Londinium




 it took them abt 60 yrs to conquer Br completely
gradually the province became romanised

à Celtic ppl started adopting Roman traditions willingly while
they thought they were becoming culturalised

à not all of the island was conquered ;



roman COLCHESTER

Scottish rebellions (in the north) resisted and this remained a problem so
EMPEROR HADRIAN ordered a wall to be built to keep out the Scottish tribes
(Wall of Hadrian)

,roman LONDON

à things we can recognise from rome like basilica
and public baths




roman PRESENCE

Modern place-names of Roman origin ending in -
cester/-chester/-caster
Eg Worcester / Manchester
Roman remains e.g. Bath gave the city its name


ANGLO-SAXON SETTLEMENTS

Collapse of Roman Britain : rome was under
attack from the Visigoths so roman troups went back to rome to defend rome)

Germanic tribes : ANGLES, SAXONS & Jutes settle in Britain
= illiterate, so literacy was lost and coinage (use of coins) was gone à civilisation disappeared
so many of the more higher ranking Celtic Br moved to the west


Origin of the Arthurian legends (legends of king arthur and his nights)
• the so-called Heptarchy(Br divided into 7 major kingdoms)

, • 6-9th centuries
Mercians, wessex , essex , sussex , kent , northumbrians , east anglians

à it was mostly England which was colonised by Anglo-Saxons

Cornwall + Wales + West coast of scotland + Ireland remained Celtic

 this is why many of these feel historically + culturally separate from the England

Mercians started taking over the other kingdoms à were the first to call themselves ‘’king of the
English’’



FIRST PERIODS OF CHRISTIANIZATION island of britain became christanised from 2 separate directions
Two Traditions
 One starting from the North From Celtic Ireland
Ireland was christianised before England and they sent missionaries over
 One starting from the South missionaries sent from From Rome

CHRISTIAN MISSIONS FROM THE NORTH
• Irish/Celtic christianization starting from Ulster  Scotland  Wales, Cornwall
mostly on celtic parts

• The legendary St Patrick played a viral role in christanisation of ireland and this is the irish
national holiday

• shamrock : clover plant = symbol of Ireland = represents the Holy Trinity
shows how deeply chr is embedded in irish culture

• The Book of Kells (800) one of the most imp pieces of literature produced at the time :
it shows v well that chr in ireland + scotland wales cornwall was merged v neatly w/ celtic
culture and traditions ; the drawings and patterns are v clearly celtic :
à explains why christianity was introduced so easily into celtic parts of the island bc it did not
seek to replace the culture that was there it simply merged w it


• Celtic Cross = St John's cross at the burial place of St Columba
again v clear celtic patterns on a christian object
__________________________________________________________________________________

CHRISTIAN MISSIONS FROM THE SOUTH
• missionaries sent by Rome by Pope Gregory in the 6-7th centuries

• St Augustine lands in Kent in 597 and builds a church and a monastery in Canterbury
would later become the biggest most important religious centrum of england



à St Augustine's abbey (ruins) Canterbury Cathedral



__________________________________________________________________________________
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