Everything about Scotland In The Early Middle Ages totally explained
The
Early Middle Ages, a period which corresponds in part with
Early Historic Scotland and the
Later Iron Age, is that era of
Scottish pre-history and history which extends over the last three-quarters of the first millennium AD. Peripheral to the
Roman world, much of
Scotland's history in this period has more in common with that of
Ireland or
Scandinavia than with Romanised regions such as southern
Britain or
Gaul.
As the first half of the period is largely
prehistoric,
archaeology plays an important part in studies. Beginning in around 600, written sources are available, but in limited quantity. Other aids to understanding in this period include
onomastics (the study of names) - divided into
toponymy (place-names), showing the movement of languages, and the sequence in which different languages were spoken in an area, and
anthroponymy (personal names), which can offer clues to relationships and origins. As well as studying fossilised remains,
paleobotany addresses land use, forest cover, and environmental change in more recent times.
One key event during the period is the expansion of
Christianity from the margins of Scotland to become the religion of many inhabitants. The appearance in Scotland of the
Anglo-Saxons in the middle of the period, and the
Viking Age towards the end, provoked considerable changes. In the east and north-east, the advance of
Goidelic languages created new identities, beginning the process which created Scotland during the
High Middle Ages.
Nature of science
Context
Geography
The archaeological evidence argues for the division of Scotland into three zones during all phases of the Iron Age. These zones approximate to those identified by toponymic and historical studies. They are also distinguished by their different climates and agricultural potential.
The most distinct zone is the
Atlantic–
Argyll region. Almost the entire region is considered harsh land of low agricultural quality. The area is wet, with the southern parts enjoying a temperate climate. The form of habitations in this zone, exemplified by the
Atlantic roundhouse and its variants, are rarely found elsewhere. The linguistic record of the region is unclear. It is suggested that much of the zone was originally an area where Goidelic languages predominated, but in the later part of this period the
Old Norse language replaced these.
The remaining two zones are less sharply defined.
Scotland and the Roman Empire
Settlement
Society
Warfare
The War-band
At the most basic level, a king's power rested on the existence of his bodyguard or war-band. In the British language, this was called the
teulu, as in
teulu Dewr (the "War-band of Deira"). In Latin the word is either
comitatus or
tutores, or even
familia;
tutores is the most common word in this period, and derives for the Latin verb
tueor, meaning "defend, preserve from danger".
The war-band functioned as an extension of the ruler's legal person, and was the core of the larger armies that were mobilized from time to time for campaigns of significant size. In peace-time, the war-band's activity was centered around the "Great Hall". Here, in both Germanic and Celtic cultures, the feasting, drinking and other forms of male bonding that kept up the war-band's integrity would take place. In Beowulf, the war-band was said to sleep in the Great Hall after the lord had retired to his adjacent bedchamber.
It isn't likely that any war-band in the period exceeded 120-150 men, as no hall structure having a capacity larger than this has been found by archaeologists in northern Britain. Although individual members of any war-band possessed little individual identity or freedom independent of their leader, it wasn't unknown for the war-band to kill their leader, as was the fate of king
Æthelbald of Mercia; it must be emphasized however that this was very rare.
Art
Christianity
Early Christianisation
Leslie Alcock suggested that the most sensible place to trace the roots of Christianity in Scotland is among the soldiers and ordinary Roman citizens in the vicinity of
Hadrian's Wall, where Christianity probably had a long history, competing with other eastern cults such as
Mithraism.
Chi-Rho inscriptions and Christian grave-slabs have been found on the wall from the 4th century, and in the early
300s too, the Mithraic shrines (known as
Mithraea) which existed along Hadrian's Wall were attacked and destroyed, presumably by Christians. In fact, the archaeology of the Roman period indicates that the northern parts of the Roman province of
Britannia were among the most Christianized in the island.
One of the key indicators of Christianisation is long-cist cemeteries. These are associated with Scotland in the period between the end of the Roman era and the
12th century. They indicate Christianity because in general they lie on an East-West orientation, so that the bodies can rise facing
Jerusalem for the time of the
Last Judgment. Many of them lie in the vicinity of a church or possess an early Christian inscription. These burials are concentrated strongly in eastern Scotland south of the Tay, in
Angus,
the Mearns,
Lothian and the
Borders. However, an important warning is that these cemeteries can also pre-date the Christian period, with some dating to the 2nd century.
A second indicator of early Christianity in Scotland is the place-name element
eccles-. It is generally accepted among scholars that this word is a
British word derived for the Latin word
ecclesia and represents evidence of the British church of the Roman and immediate post-Roman period. Since
G. W. S. Barrow first investigated the Scottish examples of
eccles- place-names in 1983, it has been established that, when compounded with a saint's name, many of the
eccles- place-names can be later, the latest one so far containing the name of a saint who died in 679. The
eccles- names uncompounded in this way are much more likely to be early, and these exist all over Britain.
A third standard non-textual indicator of Christianization is inscribed stones. The earliest of these is the so-called
Latinus stone of
Whithorn, dating to c. 450. It is so called because it was a funerary monument set up by a man named "Barrovadus" and dedicated to a man named Latinus and to his daughter. Approximately 50 years later, a similar inscription was set up at
Kirkmadrine in the
Rhinns of Galloway, this time dedicated to two priests called "Viventius" and "Mavorius". Another five or so of these inscribed stones dating 450 × 550 exist, the furthest north at
Catstane in
East Lothian, and the rest in the vicinity of Upper
Tweeddale.
First Viking Age
High Middle Ages
Further Information
Get more info on 'Scotland In The Early Middle Ages'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://scotland_in_the_early_middle_ages.totallyexplained.com">Scotland in the Early Middle Ages Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |