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Lesnotities Geschiedenis en Cultuur van de Angelsaksische Landen

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LET OP: les 9 is niet volledig!! De tweede helft van het hoorcollege ontbreekt lesnotities van hoorcolleges met beperkte aanvulling van boek 'Anglo-American Cultural Studies'

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  • June 7, 2022
  • 83
  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
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Lecture 1
Date @February 17, 2022

Checked notes?

Notes isles up to 1066

intro british history

debates on british history

is british history unique?

separate to eu? → geographical determinism

no, not unique just distinct

natural barrier, but easy to pass → pre-industrial water
transportation is easiest, cheapest and fastest

connected through migration, trade and war (invasions from eu)

distinctness: industrial revolution, oldest state

increasing military independence in 19th and 20th c via British navy
→ no succesful invasions onward

no maps on exam

introduction class

newsflash: English is important

recent development: German also important before 2nd WW

humanities not as much as in science

more important to know WHY things happen

dates and names in ppt important

syllabus and ppts

no maps on exam

Celtic and Roman era: 10.000 BCE - 400 CE

british isles as part of pan-eu pattern




Lecture 1 1

, permanently settled from 10.000 BCE

first hunter-settlers, nomadic, hunting

neolithic revolution (4.000 BCE)

= transformation to agricultural society

agriculture in hamlets (small settlements)

social inequality, slavery, patriarchy

recent archealogical evidence for sexism and patriarchy:
polygamy with one man and several wives

technological developments, ex. tools from metal and stone, bronze

advanced societies

stonehenge: technically complex, stones transported from long
distance (also in eu)

emergence of celtic societies

from 6th c BCE

used by white supremacists: be skeptic!

linguistic and cultural coherence

polytheistic, close to nature

politically fragmented

written evidence is from biased sources, like Caesar

birth of roman britain

= roman colony Brittania

from 43 CE to 410 CE; via invasion

only part of isles (ca. England and Wales)

Hadrian’s wall

start of urban society due to Roman impact

roads between military camps, still used today

like Roman towns in Italy, villas, baths

other Roman impacts



Lecture 1 2

, Latin as elite language

economic development throug trade → riches for colony

introduction of christianity (only in England)

fall of roman britain

first erosion and collapse of Roman economy and urban
infrastructure

ca. 350 - 420

attacks from Ireland and Scotland → fiscal pressure → raise taxes
→ economy collapses

artisans leave cities → gradual transformation to rural society

politically abandoned by Rome and invaded by Anglo-Saxon settlers
(5th c)

agrarian orientation

end of chrisitianity and Latin

intro of Germanic languages and practices

resurgence of celtic languages and practices

“dark ages”: 5th and 6th c

cultural reset

no written sources → difficult to assess

improved living standard: taller and better fed

formation of linguistic-cultural spheres

germanic society, birth of English (Old-English)

still Celtic languages in Scottish, Irish and Welsh societies

early middle ages: 7th - 11th c

NOT Anglo-Saxon era

term used by white supremacists

(re)christianization of british isles

first in Ireland




Lecture 1 3

, 5th c CE, St Patrick (Scottish Celt, introduces christ. from Gaul)

independent from papacy up to 12th c

different from Roman catholicism

later in Scottish, Welsh, English world

7th c CE

missionaries sent to British Isles, first convert elite (top-down)

Anglo-saxon church has closer ties with papacy

Synod of Whitby

Archbishop in Canterbury

only surviving religion in British isles

religious elite have monopoly on literacy → biased texts

rise of the state (!!)

rise of the English state (9th c)

state = institution with great power and resources that governs
people

first the Heptarchy

seven rival kingdoms, each with thanes (warlord) with most
powerful the “king”

invasions from vikings (Norway and Denmark) in 9th c

influence the language in N-England

first raids but later camps on coast → promise not to attack for
tributes

Danegeld = tributes paid to vikings

king of Wessex Alfred the Great wants to stop Danegeld by
attracting mercenaries → becomes first English king

powerful: fiscal control, taxes to pay arms → birth of
bureaucracy and state

hereditary system, personality is irrelevant

counties or shires: districts with sherifs (royal official)



Lecture 1 4

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