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Anglo-Saxon Period

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Anglo-Saxon Period. 449 - 1066. Invasion of Britian AD 449. Anglo-Saxon Invasion of Britian. Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and other Germanic tribes Seafaring warriors. Vengeance and Bloodshed. Anglo-Saxon Settlement of Britian. Characteristics of Invaders. Ancestral Tribes of Clans. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Anglo-Saxon Period
Page 2: Anglo-Saxon Period

Invasion of Britian AD 449

Page 3: Anglo-Saxon Period

Anglo-Saxon Invasion of Britian Angles, Saxons, Jutes,

and other Germanic tribes

Seafaring warriors

Page 4: Anglo-Saxon Period

Vengeance and Bloodshed

Page 5: Anglo-Saxon Period

Anglo-Saxon Settlement

of

Britian

Page 6: Anglo-Saxon Period

Characteristics of Invaders

\

Ancestral Tribes of Clans

Page 7: Anglo-Saxon Period

Living Quarters—Mead Halls

A reconstructed Anglo-Saxon home located in West Stow in Sussex, England

Mead Hall • center of life• sleeping quarters• dining area• meeting place

Page 8: Anglo-Saxon Period

• Located in Woodbridge, Suffolk, England

• Discovered in 1939• Burial ship of an Anglo-Saxon king• Burial site contained 41 items of

solid gold and 37 gold coins

Sutton Hoo

Page 9: Anglo-Saxon Period

7th century helmet Reconstructed from

hundreds of corroded iron fragments

Page 10: Anglo-Saxon Period

Anglo-Saxon pendant probably made in the 7th century AD

found in garden soil at Sacriston, County Durham.

made of solid gold with a goldwire or filigree decoration.

Anglo-Saxon Brooch

Page 11: Anglo-Saxon Period

Additional Anglo-Saxon Artifacts

Page 12: Anglo-Saxon Period

King Offa’s Dyke

approximately 170 miles long running north and south

• continuous wall except for river crossings

• built in the late 8th century

Page 13: Anglo-Saxon Period

Earth Embankment No fancy stonework No garrisoned posts 12 foot wide ditch on

Welsh side Height ranges from 10

to 60 feet

Construction

Page 14: Anglo-Saxon Period

Monument to Power Perhaps this dyke was

a defense against raiders from Wales.

Perhaps it served as a permanent boundary between Mercia and Wales.

Perhaps it was a boundary monument to remind the Welsh of King Offa’s power and control.

Page 15: Anglo-Saxon Period

Anglo-Saxon Cross Shaft Location: St. Peter Advincula

Church, Glebe Street, Stoke Re-erected on its modern

base in 1935, the fragment of 10th Century Anglo-Saxon stone cross shaft had been used as a door lintel in the church until its discovery by a gravedigger in 1876.

The square sectioned top of the cylindrical shaft has a different decorative motif on each face. However part of the side key pattern has been cut away, probably to allow its use as the church's door lintel.S

Page 16: Anglo-Saxon Period

Acknowledgements Anglo-Saxon England. 27 June 2004

<http://www.gettysburg.edu/academics/english/britain/anglo-saxon/anglo_home.html>. Regia-Angloplum. “Arms and Armour-Part 8-Shields.” 27 June 2004

http://regia.org/shields.html. Map of Gradual Takeover of England by Anglo-Saxons. 27 June 2004

http://www.cla.calpoly.edu/~jrubba/395/HELUnit2web/OE%20images/asconquer.jpg. Durnham County Council. 27 June 2004.

http://www.durham.gov.uk/durhamcc/usp.nsf/pws/archaeology2001+-+archaeology+Time+Line+Mediaeval+Period.

The British Museum: Education Department. 27 June 2004. http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/education/anglosaxons/weblinks.html

King Arthur and the Anglo-Saxon Wars. 27 June 2004. http://www.murphsplace.com/owen/arthur/wars.html.

The Arador Library. 28 June 2004. http://www.arador.com/gallery/et.html. The Potteries Museum: Art Gallery. 27 June 2004

http://www2002.stoke.gov.uk/museums/pmag/Nof_website1/local_history_static_exhibitions/sites_to_visit/pages/st_peters.htm.

Pfordresher, John, Gladys V. Veidemanis, and Helen McDonnell, eds. England in Literature. Glenview: Scott, Foresman, 1989.