1 / 13

Beowulf

Beowulf . BEOWULF. Anglo-Saxon timeline . 600 BC: Celts arrive in Britain and form tribes, establish farms and villages and are often in conflict. 43 AD : Romans invade Britain Romans encounter Celts Build roads, large buildings, sanitation system Introduce Christianity

aletha
Download Presentation

Beowulf

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Beowulf BEOWULF

  2. Anglo-Saxon timeline • 600 BC: Celts arrive in Britain and form tribes, establish farms and villages and are often in conflict. • 43 AD : Romans invade Britain • Romans encounter Celts • Build roads, large buildings, sanitation system • Introduce Christianity • Romans rule for approx. 400 years. • 300 AD : Irish ,Scottish and Germans invaded for plunder and slaves • 410 AD : Romans leave Britain

  3. Anglo Saxon timeline (cont) • 450 AD: Jutes from Denmark and Angles and Saxons from Northern Germany invade Britain • Germanic tribes push out Celts • 597 AD Anglo Saxons become Christian • Anglo-Saxons dominate England for 600 years . Though this period is marked by strife and confusion, they provide a language, began its literature , establish laws, government and religion. They were the first English people.

  4. Anglo- Saxon culture • Lived in tribal groups • Strongest ties were to kin and Lord • Kings emerged • Spoke old English • Newly Christian but still valued pagan ideals • Valued: Family, lineage, reputation, virtue, and a good story. • Desired: wealth, power

  5. Heroic code • Derived from Anglo-Saxon Germanic roots • Called for strength, courage and loyalty of warriors • Called for generosity, loyalty, hospitality and political acumen of Kings

  6. Anglo Saxon literature • Oral tradition- passed down through generations by storyteller s (called scops) • Poems had strong beat, alliterative verse and no rhyme • Caesura (a cutting) used in Old English to depict a half line. We use a comma for a modern effect. Da com of more from mistheleopum “Out of the marsh, from the foot of the hills.” • Kenning: a compound metaphor that functions as a name. Examples: Whale- road ; sky- candle; sea-steed

  7. Beowulf: The Epic Poem • Epic poem: a long narrative poem that describes a significant event and typically features a hero. • Modern Examples of Epics: Star Wars; Lord of the Rings

  8. Beowulf: The Poem • Beowulf is the oldest surviving English poem. • Poem written in Old English (Anglo-Saxon) • Some characters in the poem actually existed. • Only copy of manuscript written sometime around the 11th century A.D. (1000’s),

  9. Setting: • Set in what is now Sweden, home of the Geats. • Set as early as 400 or 500 A.D. Time of Beowulf Europe today

  10. Some terms you’ll want to know comitatus • Literally, this means “escort” or “comrade” • lords mutually pledging loyalty to one another

  11. Terms Continued… Mead Hall: The large hall where the lord and his warriors slept, ate, held ceremonies, etc. Thane: a warrior Wyrd Fate. In conflict with Christian references to God’s will .

  12. Themes Good vs. Evil Religion: Christian and Pagan influences The importance of wealth and treasure The importance of the sea and sailing The sanctity of the home Fate Loyalty and allegiance Heroism and heroic deeds

More Related