Early Medieval Britain and Ireland

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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Bede
Gildas
Historia Brittonum

Commentary

End of Roman rule
Post-Roman Britain
The Saxon Invasion
The Age of Saints
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Evidence
The Picts
Ogham and the Irish in Britain
Scotti and Scots
'Teutonic' England


 

Books

Dark Age
Anglo-Saxon
History
Orkney
Picts
Vikings
Welsh Legend

Bestsellers


The Heirs of King Verica by Martin Henig. A modern reinterpretation of Roman rule and its aftermath. Available from:

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The End of the Western Roman Empire by Ellen Swift. Based on a range of new archaeological research (most of it carried out by the author herself), this book breaks new ground. It examines changes in the Western provinces in the fourth and early fifth centuries, which ultimately resulted in the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. Available from:  

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This project focuses on Britain, Ireland and their offshore islands between 350AD and 850AD. The core of this period has been described as the 'dark ages' because of the relative scarcity of reliable historical information or archaeological evidence. In fact, our knowledge of much of the Roman period is also sparse.

The term 'dark ages' is unpopular with many archaeologists and historians, some preferring 'Sub-Roman'. This term carries its own agenda of implied inferiority and, of course, these islands were never entirely Roman. Martin Henig (British Archaeology, December 2002, p. 11) states that "the so-called 'darkness' of the period between 400 and 600 in southern and eastern Britain is the result partly of archaeological neglect, partly of a long tradition of scholarship looking only for Germanic elements in the culture of the period." Within the European context, this period is 'late antiquity' or 'early medieval' - in many ways a more accurate and meaningful term


The period commences with the last years of Roman occupation - covering perhaps one half of the territory in question - when monetary economy and the organised distribution of manufactured products ended. Some aspects of fourth century agriculture and the crumbling villa system may have survived into the fifth and sixth century. Literary sources are few, Gildas being perhaps the most famous but obscure source of post-Roman Britain, and the Saxon Invasion. Some of the major cultures of the time are barely known, especially the Picts. Other influences such as the Irish in Britain can only be gleaned from Ogham inscriptions. The advance of the Christian religion is equally obscured by later 'Lives' - see St David as an example.

The 'darkness' lifts some three hundred years later with recorded information about the development of early medieval states throughout these islands in the 7th and 8th centuries. Evidenced, for example, by the early Anglo-Saxon pennies seen on this page. But by then some new agendas were in operation, and a pattern of national myth-making and self-justification had been set. In the case of Scotland, the Scotti imposed themselves on the Britons and Picts. Bede is a key example of an author with an agenda. Compare his presentation with some Victorian representations of 'Teutonic' England.

Featured books:

After Rome: C.400-c.800 Thomas Charles-Edwards (Editor). The chapters in this volume, each written by a leading scholar of the period, analyse in turn the different nationalities and kingdoms that existed in the British Isles from the end of the Roman empire to the coming of the Vikings, the process of conversion to Christianity, the development of art and of a written culture, and the interaction between this written culture and the societies of the day. Available from:  

Amazon.co.uk - UK Pounds
Amazon.com - US Dollars
SeekBooks.com.au - Australian Dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros

Britain and the End of the Roman Empire by Ken Dark. One of the most authoritative works on the period. It makes use of the latest archaeological knowledge and takes a sceptical approach to conventional views on the subject. Available from:

Amazon.co.uk - British pounds
Amazon.com - US dollars
SeekBooks.com.au - Australian Dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros

The Isles by Norman Davies. Place the history of the 'Dark Ages' in its historical context. An unusual overview of the history of Britain and Ireland which respects the diverse cultures that have lived there. Available from:

Amazon.co.uk - UK Pounds
Amazon.com - US Dollars
SeekBooks.com.au - Australian Dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros

Games - just for fun


 
 

More fantasy than history, an online game (very) loosely based on the period:

Dark Age of Camelot