Conquest of Britain pt. 2: The Northman Flashcards

1
Q

Therefore, it is visible and evident in all of us that before this we more often transgressed than we made amends, and therefore much is attacking this nation. It has not prospered now for a long time, neither within nor without: but [there] was the viking army and hunger, burning and bloodshed on every end often and frequent. And stealing and killing, pestilence and disease, slander and hate and plundering of robbers very severely harmed us

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

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2
Q

Here were dreadful forewarnings come over the land of Northumbria, and woefully terrified the people: those were amazing sheets of lightning and whirlwinds, and fiery dragons were seen flying in the sky. Great famine soon followed these signs, and shortly after that, [in] the same year …

A

Anglo Saxon Chronicle (8th century), anonymous

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3
Q

When I was with you your loving friendship gave me great joy. Now that I am away your tragic sufferings daily bring me sorrow, since the pagans have desecrated God’s sanctuary, shed the blood of saints around the altar, laid waste the house of our hope and trampled the bodies of the saints like dung in the street. I can only cry from my heart before Christ’s altar: “O Lord, spare thy people and do not give the Gentiles thine inheritance, lest the heathen say, ‘Where is the God of the Christians?’”

A

Alcuin, Letter to Highbald

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4
Q

You who survive, stand like men, fight bravely and defend the camp of God. Remember how Judas Maccabaeus cleansed the Temple and freed the people from a foreign yoke. If anything needs correction in your way of gentleness, correct it quickly. Recall your patrons who left you for a season. It was not that they lacked influence with God, but they were silent, we know not why.

A

Alcuin, Letter to Highbald

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5
Q

Do not glory in the vanity of dress; that is cause for shame, not boasting, in priests and servants of God. Do not blur the words of your prayers by drunkenness. Do not go out after the indulgences of the flesh and the greed of the world, but stand firm in the service of God and the discipline of the monastic life, that the holy fathers whose sons you are may not cease to protect you. May you remain safe through their prayers, as you walk in their footsteps. Do not be degenerate sons, having such fathers. They will not cease protecting you, if they see you following their example.

A

Alcuin, Letter to Highbald

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6
Q

Do not be dismayed by this disaster. God chastises every son whom he accepts, so perhaps he has chastised you more because he loves you more. Jerusalem, a city loved by God was destroyed, with the Temple of God, in Babylonian flames. Rome, surrounded by its company of holy apostles and countless martyrs, was devastated by the heathen, but quickly recovered through the goodness of God. Almost the whole of Europe has been denuded with fire and sword by Goths and Huns, but now by God’s mercy is as bright with churches as the sky with stars and in them the offices of the Christian religion grow and flourish. Encourage each other, saying, “Let us return to the Lord our God, for he is very forgiving and never deserts those who hope in him.”

A

Alcuin, Letter to Highbald

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7
Q

Let your dinners be sober, not drunken. Let your clothes befit your station. Do not copy the men of the world in vanity, for vain dress and useless adornment are a reproach to you before men and a sin before God. It is better to dress your immortal soul in good ways than to deck with fine clothes the body that soon rots in dust. Clothe and feed Christ in the poor, that so doing you may reign with Christ. Redemption is a man’s true riches. If we loved gold we should send it to heaven to be kept there for us. We have what we love: let us love the eternal which will not perish. Let us love the true, not the transitory, riches. Let us win praise with God, not man. Let us do as the! saints whom we praise. Let us follow in their footsteps on earth, to be worthy to share their glory in heaven.

A

Alcuin, Letter to Highbald

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8
Q

This year died Pope Adrian; and also Offa, King of Mercia, on the fourth day before the ides of August, after he had reigned forty winters. Ethelred, king of the Northumbrians, was slain by his own people, on the thirteenth day before the calends of May; in consequence of which, Bishops Ceolwulf and Eadbald retired from the land. Everth took to the government of Mercia, and died the same year. Eadbert, whose other name was Pryn, obtained the kingdom of Kent; and Alderman Ethelherd died on the calends of August. In the meantime, the heathen armies spread devastation among the Northumbrians, and plundered the monastery of King Everth at the mouth of the Wear. There, however, some of their leaders were slain; and some of their ships also were shattered to pieces by the violence of the weather; many of the crew were drowned; and some, who escaped alive to the shore, were soon dispatched at the mouth of the river.

A

ASC, anonymous (8th century)

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9
Q

This year the heathen men (34) for the first time remained over winter in the Isle of Shepey. The same year King Ethelwulf registered a TENTH of his land over all his kingdom for the honour of God and for his own everlasting salvation. The same year also he went to Rome with great pomp, and was resident there a twelvemonth. Then he returned homeward; and Charles, king of the Franks, gave him his daughter, whose name was Judith, to be his queen. After this he came to his people, and they were fain to receive him; but about two years after his residence among the Franks he died; and his body lies at Winchester. He reigned eighteen years and a half. And Ethelwulf was the son of Egbert, Egbert of Ealhmund, Ealhmund of Eafa, Eafa of Eoppa, Eoppa of Ingild; Ingild was the brother of Ina, king of the West-Saxons, who held that kingdom thirty-seven winters, and afterwards went to St. Peter, where he died. And they were the sons of Cenred, Cenred of Ceolwald, Ceolwald of Cutha, Cutha of Cuthwin,

A

ASC, anonymous (9th century)

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10
Q

This year came the army to Reading in Wessex; and in the course of three nights after rode two earls up, who were met by Alderman Ethelwulf at Englefield; where he fought with them, and obtained the victory. There one of them was slain, whose name was Sidrac. About four nights after this, King Ethered and Alfred his brother led their main army to Reading, where they fought with the enemy; and there was much slaughter on either hand, Alderman Ethelwulf being among the skain; but the Danes kept possession of the field. A

A

ASC, Anonymous (9th century)

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11
Q

. And after the Easter of this year died King Ethered. He reigned five years, and his body lies at Winburn-minster. Then Alfred, his brother, the son of Ethelwulf, took to the kingdom of Wessex. And within a month of this, King Alfred fought against all the Army with a small force at Wilton, and long pursued them during the day; but the Danes got possession of the field. This year were nine general battles fought with the army in the kingdom south of the Thames; besides those skirmishes, in which Alfred the king’s brother, and every single alderman, and the thanes of the king, oft rode against them; which were accounted nothing. This year also were slain nine earls, and one king; and the same year the West-Saxons made peace with the army.

A

ASC, Anonymous

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12
Q

This year Rolla penetrated Normandy with his army; and he reigned fifty winters. And this year the army stole into Wareham, a fort of the West-Saxons. The king afterwards made peace with them; and they gave him as hostages those who were worthiest in the army; and swore with oaths on the holy bracelet, which they would not before to any nation, that they would readily go out of his kingdom. Then, under colour of this, their cavalry stole by night into Exeter. The same year Healfden divided the land of the Northumbrians; so that they became afterwards their harrowers and plowers.

((A.D. 876. And in this same year the army of the Danes in England swore oaths to King Alfred upon the holy ring, which before they would not do to any nation; and they delivered to the king hostages from among the most distinguished men of the army, that they would speedily depart from his kingdom; and that by night they broke.))

A

ASC, Anonymous (9th century)

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13
Q

This year King Athelstan and Edmund his brother led a force to Brumby, and there fought against Anlaf; and, Christ helping, had the victory: and they there slew five kings and seven earls.

A

ASC, Anonymous (10th century)

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14
Q

Here Athelstan king, of earls the lord, rewarder of heroes, and his brother eke, Edmund atheling, elder of ancient race, slew in the fight, with the edge of their swords, the foe at Brumby! The sons of Edward their board-walls clove, and hewed their banners, with the wrecks of their hammers. So were they taught by kindred zeal, that they at camp oft ‘gainst any robber their land should defend, their hoards and homes. Pursuing fell the Scottish clans; the men of the fleet in numbers fell; ‘midst the din of the field the warrior swate. Since the sun was up in morning-tide, gigantic light! glad over grounds, God’s candle bright, eternal Lord! – ‘till the noble creature sat in the western main: there lay many of the Northern heroes under a shower of arrows, shot over shields; and Scotland’s boast, a Scythian race, the mighty seed of Mars!

A

ASC, Anonymous, 10th century

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15
Q

Five kings lay on the field of battle, in bloom of youth, pierced with swords. So seven eke of the earls of Anlaf; and of the ship’s-crew unnumber’d crowds. There was dispersed the little band of hardy Scots, the dread of northern hordes; urged to the noisy deep by unrelenting fate! The king of the fleet with his slender craft escaped with his life on the felon flood; – and so too Constantine, the valiant chief, returned to the north in hasty flight. The hoary Hildrinc cared not to boast among his kindred. Here was his remnant of relations and friends slain with the sword in the crowded fight. His son too he left on the field of battle, mangled with wounds, young at the fight. The fair-hair’d youth had no reason to boast of the slaughtering strife. Nor old Inwood and Anlaf the more with the wrecks of their army could laugh and say,

A

ASC (10th century), Anonymous

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16
Q

They left behind them raw to devour, the sallow kite, the swarthy raven with horny nib, and the hoarse vultur, with the eagle swift to consume his prey; the greedy gos-hawk, and that grey beast the wolf of the weald. No slaughter yet was greater made e’er in this island, of people slain, before this same, with the edge of the sword; as the books inform us of the old historians; since hither came from the eastern shores the Angles and Saxons, over the broad sea, and Britain sought, – fierce battle-smiths, o’ercame the Welsh, most valiant earls, and gained the land.

A

ASC (10th century), Anonymous

17
Q

This year was Ipswich plundered; and very soon afterwards was Alderman Britnoth (47) slain at Maidon. In this same year it was resolved that tribute should be given, for the first time, to the Danes, for the great terror they occasioned by the sea-coast. That was first 10,000 pounds. The first who advised this measure was Archbishop Siric.

A

ASC, Anonymous (10th century)

18
Q

Then Byrhtnoth began to array the troops

A

The Battle of Maldon, Anonymous

19
Q

Here Aethelstan the King, lord of warriors, bestower of rings, and his brother also, Edmund the prince, won eternal glory with the blade of their swords in battle around Brunanburh. They split the shield-wall, hacked at shields with the hammer’s leavings, Edward’s sons, as suited their descent from royal ancestors, that they often at battle should defend their land against all enemies, their horde and homes.

A

The Battle of Burnanburh, Anonymous

20
Q

There was a historian in the time of the Britons called Gildas, who wrote about their misdeeds: how through their sins they angered God so very excessively that at last he allowed the army of the English to conquer their land and they destroyed the power of the Britons completely. And that happened, so he said, because of robbery by the powerful, and through the coveting of ill-gotten acquisitions, through the unlawfulness of the people, and through unjust judgements, through the idleness of bishops, and through the wicked cowardice of God’s preachers, who kept silent about the truth all too often and mumbled with their jaws where they should have called out.

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

21
Q

What separates Gildas from Wulfstan (Sermo Lupi ad Anglos)? The Battle of Burnanburh from the ASC?

A
  1. Gildas refers to BRITONS being besieged by Anglo Saxons, etc. Wulfstan refers to the ENGLISH beset by Vikings and sailors
  2. Battle of Burnanburh has lots of COMMAS. Will introduce a character (Edward, Constantine) and call him the blank of blank, the fleer of sheep, whatever. ASC is more direct with its sentences AND uses exclamation points a lot
22
Q

And not one of the heathen people dares lessen inside or outside any of the things that are brought to the false gods and are appointed as sacrifices; and we have completely despoiled God’s house inside and out. And God’s servants are deprived of reverence and protection everywhere; and not one of the heathen people dares mistreat the ministers of false gods in any manner, such as one does now to God’s servants too widely where Christians should keep God’s law and protect God’s servants.

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

23
Q

Now very often a kinsman will not protect a kinsman more than he would a stranger, nor a father his son, nor sometimes a son his own father, nor one brother the other.

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

24
Q

Discusses selling of Christian people into slavery and the CUSTOM of doing so on Britain

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

25
Q

Burner of monestaries, sailors, vikings, etc are plundering monestaries, instituting slavery

A

Wulfstan, Sermo Lupi ad Anglos

26
Q

structure of The Wanderer

A

Wyrd intro -> aloneness of the wanderer -> gold giving friend -> meadhalls and people ->friendless man sees the waves -> war carried off some, walled city destroyed, a storm of spears and wyrd

27
Q

structure of The Ruin

A

wyrd has broken a shattered city, giants crumbles -> moss covered, has seen one kingdom after another -> Bright were the buildings, great noise of armies and mead hall -> vermillion roofs, baths

28
Q
A