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
Nations
Evidence
The Picts
Ogham and the Irish in Britain
Scotti and Scots
'Teutonic' England



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The Picts

The Picti were first referred to in AD 297 by Eumenius. The meaning of the term is uncertain although many texts interpret it as 'the painted ones'. 

The term describes all the inhabitants north of the Forth-Clyde isthmus. According to Foster (2004) the archaeological evidence from the period supports this view although some commentators place the boundary northwards around the Tay. We saw earlier that classical writers gave names for a number of tribes and kingdoms within the Pictish area. They became more clearly identifiable from archaeological and historical remains in the sixth century. Whoever they were, Foster (2004: 9) states that: 'we can be confident that they were simply the descendants of the native Iron Age tribes of Scotland, most of whom were never part of the Roman empire, or were only affected for short periods of time'.

She also considers that: 'The notion of the Picts having existed in Galloway is now recognized as a myth which arose out of a misunderstanding by medieval writers.' 

The Picts have attracted considerable interest because of their symbols, particularly on sculpted stones. The Picts captured the imagination of eighteenth and nineteenth century writers and travellers to the extent that a wide range of monuments, particularly brochs, were attributed to them. Foster argues that a factual, as opposed to a romantic, understanding of the Picts dates only from the 1950s. Contributors to the Dundee conference in 1952 (published in 1955 as The Problem of the Picts) felt that they were unable to 'point to a single fortress or to a single dwelling or burial and say with certainty that it is Pictish' (quoted in Foster, 2004: 12).


Aberlemno stone

Foster (2004: 13) concludes that the romantic view of the Picts as an enigmatic people can be resolved into six main issues: 

  • Pictish symbols
  • Pictish language
  • Matrilinear succession
  • The 'Foul Hordes Paradigm' (barbarism)
  • The lack of Pictish documents
  • The Picts as a 'lost people'

 

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Books

Dark Age
Anglo-Saxon
History
Orkney
Picts
Vikings
Welsh Legend

Bestsellers


Picts, Gaels and Scots by Sally M. Foster. A fully updated and expanded edition of a classic text on early Scottish history. From the 5th to the 10th century, Scotland was home to a variety of diverse peoples and cultures, all competing for land and supremacy. At the heart of the mystery of how Scotland became a single unified country lies the extraordinary influence of the Picts and their neighbours, the Gaels, originally immigrants from Ireland. Sally Foster uses the latest archaeological discoveries and interpretations as well as developments in historical, art-historical and place-name studies to explain how the Picts and Gaels became Scots and forged a nation. Available from:

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The Tribes of Britain by David Miles. The diverse peoples of Britain and Ireland are revealed not only by physical characteristics but also through structures and settlements, place names and dialects. Using the latest genetic and archaeological research, the author shows how different peoples traded, settled and conquered, establishing the 'tribal' and regional roots still apparent today. Its vast scope considers the impact of prehistoric peoples and Celtic tribes, Romans and Vikings, Saxons and Normans, Jews and Huguenots, as well as the increasing population movements of the last century. Available from:  

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