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Introduction to British Literature

Introduction to British Literature. Britain before the Anglo-Saxons. Celts: 2 groups. Britons (settled Britain) and Gaels (settled Ireland) Celts were farmers and hunters. Organized themselves into tightly knit clans with loyalty to chieftain.

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Introduction to British Literature

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  1. Introduction to British Literature

  2. Britain before the Anglo-Saxons • Celts: 2 groups. Britons (settled Britain) and Gaels (settled Ireland) • Celts were farmers and hunters. Organized themselves into tightly knit clans with loyalty to chieftain. • Druids: priests who settled disputes, presided over religious rituals, and told heroic stories that preserved past.

  3. Group of related tribes, linked by language, religion, and culture Emerged as a distinct people in the eighth century Energetic and inventive people Introduced the use of iron to Northern Europe Created Europe’s first major industrial revolution, its first common market, and its first international court of arbitration Celts

  4. “Madly fond of war.” Cut off heads of enemies and attached them to necks of their horses, nailed them upon their houses Embalmed heads of most distinguished enemies and displayed them with pride Feasting times often violent; wrestled, gambled, raced horses, drank too much Women fought along with their men In Ancient Ireland when the king showed signs of aging, he was ritually slain. The Barbaric Celts

  5. Each tribe had its local deities and cults; hundreds of names of gods and goddesses are known to us. Druids exercised great political influence Believed in human sacrifice Celts revered deities in animal form; horses and bulls particularly important Celtic Religion

  6. Women attained a high place in Celtic society Woman continued to control property after she was married and could take them away should the bond unravel. If wife’s property exceeded husband’s, wife controlled the household. Celtic women, like men were vain; they painted their faces with berry juice and herbs and wore silver jewelry Celtic Women

  7. Roman Conquest • Julius Caesar invaded in 55 B.C. • True conquest occurred nearly 100 years later with Claudius • Roman rule lasted for more than 300 years • Last Roman troops left in A.D. 407

  8. Roman Contributions • Well-paved roads • Growth of towns • Introduced Christianity • Introduced more advanced standard of living

  9. Germanic tribes Deep sea fishermen and farmers Came for territory Lived in highly organized tribes ruled by witan Brought their own pagan beliefs Belief in wyrd (fate) to control events of life Gods: Tiu, god of war and the sky; Woden, chief of gods; Fria, Woden’s wife and goddess of the home (Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday come from these names) Angles, Saxons, and Jutes

  10. Forced Britons off of land to edges of island and beyond (Wales, Cornwall, Ireland, Scotland) By end of seventh century more unified civilization emerges because of influence of Christianity Seven kingdoms: Angles, kingdoms of Northumbria and Mercia; Jutes, Kent; Saxons, Essex, Middlesex, Sussex, and Wessex Concept of kingly behavior is chief spiritual force. Called heroic ideal Anglo-Saxon Civilization

  11. Heroic Ideal • Ideal of excellence • Hero/king strove to do better than anyone else • Skill and courage were primary qualities of king • Successful king won complete loyalty • In return, king gave gifts to retainers

  12. Christianity and Culture • Celts became Christians under Romans; when Anglo-Saxon invasion occurred, Christianity was maintained only in remoter regions where Anglo-Saxons failed to penetrate for 150 years.

  13. Christianity • 597 St. Augustine sent to as missionary to King Ethelbert of Kent and about same time missionaries from Ireland began to preach in the North. Within 75 years, island was predominantly Christian. • Christianity influenced written records. • First written specimen of Old English language is a code of laws.

  14. England produced number of distinguished, highly literate churchmen Bede: Ecclesiastical History of English People; completed in 731; called father of English history Greatest impetus on English culture: Alfred the Great, king of West Saxons from 871-899 Book of Kells: Bible manuscripts produced by Celtic priests in Ireland Anglo-Saxon literature

  15. First Danish Invasion • Between ninth and twelfth centuries Norse and Danes invaded. Norse invaded Northumbria, Scotland, Wales and Ireland; Danes targeted eastern and southern England

  16. Alfred the Great • United all kingdoms of southern England and repelled Vikings. • Was an enthusiastic patron of literature; had Bede’s History translated into Old English. • Began Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the first historical record to be kept in English. • Developed diplomatic relationship with neighboring kings and princes • Developed a code of law • Founded first English public schools

  17. Tenth century, Alfred’s long-established peace is broken; Danes attempted to recapture and widen the Danelaw Forced witan to select succession of Danish kings. 1042 line of succession returned to Alfred’s descendents Edward the Confessor developed friendship of William of Normandy Edward’s death in 1066 led to Norman conquest Second Danish Invasion and Norman Conquest

  18. Alliterative form; wrote nothing down until Christianity; yet little poetry survived pre-Christianity Bulk of poetry is Christian, devoted to religious subjects Almost all in heroic ideal Poetry portrays dark world; narrow world with narrow laws. Rarely has romantic love Men don’t seem to relax; always are preparing to test courage against fate Anglo-Saxon Literature

  19. Frequent use of ironic understatement. Use of kenning, highly formalized compound metaphor, often suggests irony. Types of poetry: elegy, epic, lyric, riddle Uses same verse form; verse unit is line; rhyme doesn’t link one line to the next Organizing device is alliteration Uses caesura (pause) Anglo-Saxon Literature

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