Title: Introduction to Beowulf
1Introduction to Beowulf
- Story isnt about the Englishits about the
Danes and the Geats. So whats it doing in
England? - Romans controlled England (up to Hadrians Wall)
until the 5th century - Waves of post-Roman invasions by Angles, Saxons,
Jutes, Danes, and Irish - Native Britons couldnt hold them off
2Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms
Map from C. Warren Hollister, The Making of
England, p. 64
3I. Historical background
- 400-600 A.D. -- Angles, Saxons, and Jutes invade
(Beowulf set) - 410 A.D. Rome renounces control of Britain
- 521 A.D. Hygelac invades the Netherlands
- 597 A.D. St. Augustine
- 625 A.D. Sutton Hoo
- 700-950 A.D. -- Christian poet composed the poem,
setting it in the past
4The Danelaw
- Viking raids in late 8th century along East coast
of England, Ireland, northern France - In 850, Danish Vikings began to settle in Kent
- In 865, a large Danish army invaded and took
control of nearly all of England except Wessex - In 870, Danes attacked Wessex
5The Danelaw
- 871 Alfred the Great becomes king of Wessex
- Warrior, diplomat, administrator, scholar,
Christian Greatest Anglo-Saxon king - 872 Alfred had to bribe the Danes to stop the
fighting - Built a navy of 60-oared ships, bigger and faster
than the Danes ships
6The Danelaw
- After almost losing his kingdom in 872, Alfreds
military reforms allowed him to begin retaking
land - By 886, Alfred had retaken London and made a
treaty with the Danes establishing their area of
authority in Englandthe Danelaw - By Alfreds death in 899, the Danish threat was
over, and subsequent kings reconquered the Danelaw
7Sutton Hoo
- Ship burial of a 7th-century Anglo-Saxon king,
possibly Raedwald (d. 624/625) - Found in 1939 at Sutton Hoo in eastern England,
formerly the Danelaw - Ship was nearly 80 feet long, laden with
treasures and everyday equipment (even if it is
everyday equipment made of gold) - Window into the early Anglo-Saxon world
8Sutton Hoo
Photos from British Museum
9Sutton Hoo
10Sutton Hoo
11Introduction to Beowulf
- Oral vs. written text
- Many ancient works were memorized and recitedand
were not written down until centuries later
(Odyssey, Iliad, Beowulf) - Only surviving Beowulf manuscript dates from late
10th century - Probably composed mid-8th century
12Introduction to Beowulf
- The scop Anglo-Saxon equivalent of a singing
poet or bard - Oral techniques used in the epic poem
alliteration, repetition, variation, kennings,
half-lines, metonymy (one thing substituted for
another), synecdoche (part for the whole)
13Beowulf Manuscript(Note the burn marks on the
top and sidesthe ms. was severely damaged in a
fire while housed in a museum in London)
14Poetics
Hwaet! We Gar-Dena in geardagum þeodcyninga þr
ym gefrunon, hu ða æþelingas ellen
fremedon. Oft Scyld Scefing sceaþena
þreatum monegum mægþum meodosetla
ofteah, egsode eorlas syððan ærest
wearð feasceaft funden. He þæs frofre
gebad, weox under wolcnum, weorðmundum þah oð
þæt him æghwylc þara ymbsittendra ofer
hronrade hyran scolde, gomban gyldan. Þæt wæs
god cyning!
15Kennings
- A metaphorical expression used in place of a noun
- Sea whale-road or swans way
- Joints, ligaments bone-locks
- Sun sky-candle
- Icicles water-ropes
16Metonymy and Synecdoche
- Metonymy Name of one thing is substituted for
the name of something else that most people would
associate with the first thing - Iron for Sword
- Crown for king or monarchy
- Synecdoche Substitute a part for the whole
- keel for ship
- All hands on deck
- Heads of cattle
17Anglo-Saxon Society
- Tribal society with kinship bonds and a heroic
code of behavior - bravery
- loyalty to one's lord (thane), one's warband
(comitatus), and one's kin based on mutual trust
and respect - willingness to avenge one's warband or lord at
all costs death preferable to exile. - generosity of lord to thanes and of hero to
warband and lord--gift-giving
18Anglo-Saxon Society Contd.
- heroism (i.e., great deeds) brings honor, eternal
fame, and political power - Good king is referred to as the ring-giver, the
helmet, or the shield of his people
19Key Vocabulary
- Wergild man price if kinsman is slain, a man
had a moral obligation to kill the slayer or
exact a payment to compensate for the loss of
life the payment itself was less important than
doing what they considered right
20Beowulf Vocabulary Contd.
- Comitatus Germanic warrior band (Tacitus)
- Scop poet in oral culture (shaper) bard
- Preserves history
- Entertains court
- Spreads heros fame
- Thane (thegn) warrior retainer/lord
- Wyrd fate (to the POET Gods will)
21Anglo-Saxon values
- Loyalty
- Fighting for ones king
- Avenging ones kinsmen (wergild man price)
- Keeping ones word
- Generosity -- gifts symbolize bonds
- Brotherly love -- not romantic love
- Heroism
- Physical strength
- Skill and resourcefulness in battle
- Courage
- Public reputation (boasting), not private
conscience
22What about the women?
- Women make peace, bearing children who create
blood ties - Women pass the cup at the mead-hall, cementing
social bonds - Women lament loss, dont avenge
23Religion in Anglo Saxon Times
- Mix of pagan and Christian values--often in
conflict. - Pagan (secular (non-religious) lineage vs.
Christian lineage) - Eternal earthly fame through deeds vs. afterlife
in hell or heaven - honor gift-giving vs. sin of pride (hubris)
- revenge vs pacifist view (forgiveness)
- Wyrd (Anglo-Saxon "Fate") vs God's will, etc.
24Characteristics of an Epic
- most epics share certain
- conventions, which reflect the larger thanlife
- events that a hero might experience.
- The setting is vast in scope, often involving
- more than one nation.
- The plot is complicated by supernatural
- beings or events and may involve a long and
- dangerous journey through foreign lands.
25Characteristics Contd.
- Dialogue often includes long, formal
- speeches delivered by the major characters.
- The theme reflects timeless values, such as
- courage and honor, and encompasses
- universal ideas, such as good and evil or life
and - death.
- The style includes formal diction (the writers
- choice of words and sentence structure) and a
- serious tone (the expression of the writers
- attitude toward the subject).
26Epic hero traits
- Is significant and glorified
- Is on a quest/journey
- Has superior or superhuman strength,
intelligence, and/or courage - Is ethical
- Risks death for glory or for the greater good of
society - Is a strong and responsible leader
- Performs brave deeds
- Reflects ideals of a particular society
27Is Beowulf a hero?
- Does Beowulf act for selfish motives glory?
treasure? - Does Beowulf act for selfless motives
preserving the community? - Does Beowulf ever make a raid or start a feud?
- Does B stand for violence or civilization?
- Is Beowulf successful as a warrior? As a king?