It is the aim of this book to draw together from all types of sources evidence relating to the life and thought of the Anglo-Saxons, from the time when they first took possession of the Romanized province of Britain until their unsuccessful stand for freedom at the Battle of Hastings, It deals with their religion in heathen times, with the ethics on which their society was based, with their institutions, and with their standards of living. It shows how all these things were modified by the acceptance of the Christian faith, and how, under the influence of the wider contacts then established, there resulted in this outpost of the civilized world a remarkable culture. There are also chapters on church organization and on the achievements in literature, Latin or vernacular, and in art. The whole account is obtained by fitting together the actual evidence, and where, as often happens, this is fragmentary, no attempt is made to fill the gaps with a fancy picture which cannot be substantiated.
Author(s): Dorothy Whitelock
Series: The Pelican History of England, 2
Edition: 2
Publisher: Penguin Books
Year: 1986
Language: English
Pages: 256
City: Harmondsworth
PREFACE 7
I. THE HEATHEN ENGLISH II
II. THE BONDS OF SOCIETY 2Q
Loyalty to one’s Lord
Duty to one’s Kin
III. THE KING AND HIS COURT 48
IV. FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION 64
Finance
Royal Officials
V. THE CLASSES OF SOCIETY 83
The Nobleman
The Churl
The Slave
VI. TRADE AND TOWN LIFE II5
Trade
Towns
VII. THE LAW I34
VIII. THE CHURCH I55
IX. EDUCATION AND LATIN SCHOLARSHIP 189
X. VERNACULAR LITERATURE 2O4
XI. ANGLO-SAXON ART 223
XII. CONCLUSION 24I
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 244
INDEX 249