1 / 11

Anglo-Saxon Life

Anglo-Saxon Life. The Warm Hall, the Cold World. 1939- Suffolk, England Archaeologists discovered a ship that was buried for 1,300 years. It was filled with different treasures that was buried with a king, or noble warrior.

ull
Télécharger la présentation

Anglo-Saxon Life

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Anglo-Saxon Life The Warm Hall, the Cold World

  2. 1939- Suffolk, England • Archaeologists discovered a ship that was buried for 1,300 years. • It was filled with different treasures that was buried with a king, or noble warrior. • They could not find a trace of a king or warrior, although they found his sword among many different treasures.

  3. Some of those treasures included: gold, silver, bronze, his purse, coins, a helmet, a buckle, serving vessels, and a harp. • Finding this grave, it reminded everyone of the huge burial in memory of Beowulf.

  4. Anglo-Saxon Society became linked with Europe via religion • Christianity took over old warrior religion • Monasteries were established to offer learning centers and observable preserved works from the Anglo’s older oral tradition • The English language expanded just from the church and became widely spread throughout language and text

  5. Anglo-Saxon Housing • They tended to live close to their animals in single-family homesteads for protection • The homesteads they lived in were made out of wood and surrounded a communal court or a warm, fire-lit chieftain's hall

  6. Anglo-Saxon Housing • Not only did this arrangement contribute to a sense of security, but it also contributed to the close relationship between leader and follower • It also encouraged participation in community discussions and rule by consensus

  7. Anglo-Saxon Society • Developed from kinship groups that were led by a strong chief • The strongest ties in society were to family and lord • There was no real concept of patriotism or loyalty to a cause • This made a kingdom only as strong as their leader

  8. Anglo-Saxon Society • Since the Anglo-Saxons were so loyal to family, if a family member was murdered, one would have to get vengeance for that person • Led extensive, violent, and bloody feuds

  9. Anglo-Saxon Society • In the countryside, the common thing to do was farm • At first these farms were owned privately, but then they were condensed into a noble’s estate • The common person would work on the nobles land usually in exchange for protection

  10. Anglo-Saxon Society • The Anglo-Saxons were also exceptional metalworkers • Discovery at Sutton Hoo showed level of sophistication higher than imagined

  11. Anglo-Saxon Barbarians? • Anglo-Saxons are most famously depicted as barbarians in today’s society • This is false all though they did not lead lives of luxury either • Their lives were not dominated by learning and the arts • Warfare was the central focus, it helped keep law and order among the Anglo-Saxons

More Related