Canterbury Christ Church University s repository of research outputs.

Similar documents
The Living Tradition. of Saints. in the British Isles. 2 Roman Britain

Conversion of France. The Conversion of the Celts (Irish) 12/11/ St. Gregory of Tours wrote History of the Franks.

THE EARLY BRITISH CHURCH

A Brief History of the Church of England

Church History I Age of Unification

LOS ÚLTIMOS ROMANOS DE BRITANIA

Companion Guide to accompany the program. Memorable Leaders in Christian History AIDAN. Prepared by Ann T. Snyder

Companion Guide to accompany the program. Memorable Leaders in Christian History LINDISFARNE GOSPELS. Prepared by Ann T. Snyder

A Convert s Heritage Western Saints

Penny of King Offa of Mercia (c AD). HI 2101/ HI 2606 (VS): Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and their impact on Britain and Ireland, c AD.

From Ancient Britain to the Age of Normans

LANGUAGE ARTS 1205 CONTENTS I. EARLY ENGLAND Early History of England Early Literature of England... 7 II. MEDIEVAL ENGLAND...

CHAPTER 7: THE CHURCH IN THE FIFTH CENTURY

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE. Tarsus. Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT

NAME DATE CLASS. Black Sea. Constantinople ASIA MINOR GREECE Tarsus Sicily. Antioch Aegean Sea. Mediterranean Sea. Jerusalem. Alexandria JUDAEA EGYPT

Name Class Date. Vocabulary Builder. 1. Constantinople was at the center of the Eastern Roman Empire for more than a thousand years.

Middle Ages The Anglo-Saxon Period The Medieval Period

Medieval Italy After the fall of Rome, Italy and France became a series of kingdoms ruled by different German tribes mixed with the native Italian and

Worcester Cathedral Cloister stained windows

To recognise that people have been moving between areas for a long. To recognise that people have been moving between different areas

PATRICK APOSTLE TO IRELAND TEACHER S MANUAL. J. Parnell McCarter

Romans in Britain HOCPP 1092 Published: May, 2007 Original Copyright July, 2006

Chapter 8: The Byzantine Empire & Emerging Europe, A.D Lesson 4: The Age of Charlemagne

Our days of the week still recall these gods: Tuesday (Tiw), Wednesday (Woden), Thursday (Thor) and Friday (Frige).

13.1 Charlemagne Unites Germanic Kingdoms. Many Germanic kingdoms that succeeded the Roman Empire are reunited under Charlemagne s empire.

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

7/8 World History. Week 21. The Dark Ages

Burial Christians, Muslims, and Jews usually bury their dead in a specially designated area called a cemetery. After Christianity became legal,

I AM PATRICK : The Life and Historical Context of Patrick

This barbarous, fierce and unbelieving nation.

The Adoption of Christianity by the Irish and Anglo-Saxons: The Creation of Two Different Christian Societies

The Early. Middle Ages. The Rise of Christianity Charlemagne Feudalism The Vikings

Saints, Snakes & Pirates W.M. Akers

Session #1. Church History II Survey The Medieval Church The Church in the Middle Ages AD. 2010, Ed Sherwood, Berachah Bible Institute

2010, Ed Sherwood, Berachah Bible Institute. Church History II Survey Session #4 Bede and the Lindisfarne Gospels The Church in the Middle Ages

The Roman Empire. The Apostolic Church. Vocabulary

Church History #3: Anno Domini The Church, the Empire, & the Barbarians

408 - With both Roman legions withdrawn, Britain endures devastating attacks by the Picts, Scots and Saxons.

List of figures Preface List of abbreviations. 1 Introduction: situating the problem 1

Answer three questions, which must be chosen from at least two sections of the paper.

Part I. The Arthur of History COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL

DEVIANT CHRISTIANITIES IN FOURTH TO SEVENTH- CENTURY BRITAIN

THE HINTON ST. MARY AND FRAMPTON MOSAICS: PROBLEMATIC IDENTIFICATIONS OF CHRISTIAN-PAGAN HYBRID IMAGERY. Shelby Colling

European Middle Ages,

Chapter 11. The Roman Empire and the Rise of Christianity in the West, 31 B.C.E. 800 C.E.

St. Patrick: Bishop, Missionary, Monk or All of the Above?

Unit V: The Middle Ages and the Formation of Western Europe ( ) Chapter 13&14

Gales settled primarily on the smaller island (now Ireland)

The Anglo Saxon Period AD. Aug 16 2:43 PM. The Celtic Heroes: A Magical World

The Worlds of European Christendom. Chapter 9

The Early Middle Ages (500C1050 CE)

The Anglo-Saxon Period Stonehenge (c BC)

The Church. The Church

Chapter 11 Saints in our History The First 1000 Years

Lesson 1: Barbarians and the Fall of Rome

The Ecclesiastical History Of The English People; The Greater Chronicle; Bede's Letter To Egbert (Oxford World's Classics) By Judith McClure, Bede

One thousand years ago the nations and peoples of Europe,

Western Civilization Chapter 13

Chapter 8: The Byzantine Empire & Emerging Europe, A.D Lesson 3: The Early Christian Church

EUROPE'S BARBARIANS AD BY EDWARD JAMES

Celtic Saints PATRICK A CELEBRATION

The Early Middle Ages

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND FROM AGRICOLAS INVASION TO THE REVOLUTION OF 1688 VOLUME 7 PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

King Anna of East Anglia

Please read these instructions carefully, but do not open the question paper until you are told that you may do so. This paper is Section 2 of 2.

Pastor Charles R. Biggs

Medieval Architecture February The North, Early Medieval and Carolingian Architecture

Middle Ages: Feudalism

HTST : The History of Europe (Medieval Europe)

William the Conqueror

The Anglo- Saxons

Throughout the Middle Ages, France experienced the slow deterioration of law, order,

Augustine was startled from his prayers by shouts of a

The Anglo-Saxon Period and The Middle Ages Theme: The Heroic and the Humble

Society, Religion and Arts

British Pasts. Ruled Britannia The Roman Conquest Romano Britain

WATCHMAN S TEACHING LETTER

Beginning of the Dark Ages SAHS

World Book Online: The trusted, student-friendly online reference tool. Name: Date:

Table of Contents. Illustrations Abbreviations Introduction PART 1: JEWS AND CHRISTIANS

EASTERN ORTHODOXY AND THE ANGLICANS by the Rev. Fr. Frederick Watson Introduction

A. Remember (Things we have already learned)

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

Celtic Spirituality: Just what does it mean?

IV) THE ROMAN EMPIRE

Chapter Three Assessment. Name Date. Multiple Choice

EUROPEAN MIDDLE AGES 476 AD 1500 AD

Version 1.0: abc. General Certificate of Education. History Specification. Unit HIS2B. Report on the Examination

Early Christian Rome: Art and History

TruthQuest History Middle Ages Maps, Timeline & Report Package

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND ETC PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Unit 9: Early Middle Ages

WORLD HISTORY CHAPTER 9 GERMANIC KINGDOMS

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND THE SIXTEENTH EDITION WITH ALTERATIONS AND ADDITIONS VOL II PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

Texts which you are required to buy: Williston Walker, et. al., A History of the Christian Church, fourth edition.

British Pasts. Saxons and Scandinavians

Chronicle Of The Roman Emperors The Reign By Reign Record Of The Rulers Of Imperial Rome

Howard Williams BSc MA PhD FSA

Do Now. 1. Try and define the term religion. 2. How is the cultural landscape marked by religion? Think of obvious and subtle ways.

Contents London History by Juliette London Monuments by Sébastien England by Adeline and Pauline British Sports by Louen British Music by Corentin Wal

Transcription:

Canterbury Christ Church University s repository of research outputs http://create.canterbury.ac.uk Please cite this publication as follows: Seaman, A. (2016) Religion in Britannia in the Fifth and Sixth centuries AD. Desperta Ferro Ancient and Medieval History, 36. ISSN 2171-9276. Link to official URL (if available): This version is made available in accordance with publishers policies. All material made available by CReaTE is protected by intellectual property law, including copyright law. Any use made of the contents should comply with the relevant law. Contact: create.library@canterbury.ac.uk

Religion in Britannia in the Fifth and Sixth centuries AD Dr Andy Seaman, School of Humanities, Canterbury Christ Church University The fifth and sixth centuries AD were a period of profound religious change. Christianity arrived in Britain during the late-roman period, and had become firmly established amongst the Celtic peoples of post-roman Britain by the end of the sixth century. Nevertheless, Romano-Celtic paganism persisted throughout the period, and Christianity was not widely adopted by the Germanic Anglo-Saxon groups who migrated into southern and eastern England during the fifth century. Germanic paganism was central to Anglo-Saxon society, and although Christianity was re-introduced towards the end of the sixth century the conversion process continued into the second half of the seventh century. Few historical sources survive from fifth and sixth century Britain, but two important eighth century texts the Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum by Bede and the Vita Columbae by Adomnán, and earlier writings attributed to Patrick, Gildas, and Prosper of Aquitaine provide key evidence. In addition place-names and an expanding corpus of archaeological evidence, including inscriptions on stone memorials and burials, provide important evidence. The Romano-British Background Christianity may have reached Britain during the third century, but it is not until after the Edict of Milan in AD 313 that we have firm evidence for Romano-British Christianity. There were bishops from Britain at the Council of Arles in 314, and although fourth century inscriptions are rare Christian symbols have been identified on a range of objects from Roman Britain, including the mosaics at Hinton St Mary and Frampton (both Dorset) and personal items such as finger rings. Fourth century churches are elusive, but a probable house-church has been identified at the villa at Lullingstone (Kent), and the impressive latefourth century hoard from Water Newton (Cambridgeshire) has been interpreted as a set of liturgical plate used by an ecclesiastical community in the small town of Durobrivae. Christianity was one religion amongst many in late-roman Britain however, and the evidence suggests that it was largely restricted to higher status social groups in the south of the province. Nevertheless, a curse tablet found in the sacred spring of the temple at Bath (Somerset) that attempts to identify a thief through the invocation someone, whether Christian or pagan implies that Christians were numerous enough amongst the local in Bath population to have been suspected of petty theft. In the highland zone of western and northern Britain, where the influence of Rome was muted, the evidence for Christianity is much thinner, and there is no evidence that Christianity was established amongst the groups north of Hadrian s Wall at this time. Whilst a lack of evidence does not necessarily mean that Christianity was absent area, it appears to have had limited impact outside of lowland southern Britain by the time that Roman control ended in the first decades of the fifth century. The Pelagian Heresy 1

Pelagius was probably born in Britain in the late-fourth century, but he spent most of his life in Rome as a Christian ascetic. His ideas on God s grace and free will were condemned as heretical and his followers were exiled by the emperor Honorius in 418. Since Britain was no longer a part of the Empire at this time it is possible that Pelagianism was introduced by exiles seeking refuge in the country of Pelagius birth. Prosper of Aquitaine attributed the growth of the heresy in Britain to an individual named Agricola and stated that in the year 429 at the urging of Palladius, the deacon, Pope Celestine sends Germanus of Auxerre as his representative and overthrows the heretics and directs the British away from them towards to the Catholic faith. An account of Germanus visit to British is given in the Life of St Germanus written by Constantius of Lyon around 475-480. The Life recounts Germanus confrontation with the heretics, a visit to the shrine of St Alban, and a battle against a pagan army. The historical basis of these events is dubious, but it is possible that Pelagianism would have been attractive to Christians in a declining province like early-fifth century which was only partially Christianized. Christianity in Post-Roman Celtic Britain There has been considerable debate as to what happened to Christianity in Britain after the collapse of the Roman administration in the early-fifth century. Some scholars argue that it was too weakly established to have survived the upheavals that followed the end of Roman control and that there was a period of re-conversion by missionaries from Gaul and the Mediterranean in the later-fifth century. Others, however, favour direct continuity from the fourth century. Christianity was largely, although not completely, wiped out in the parts of southern and eastern England that was subject to Anglo-Saxon settlement in the fifth century. There is no evidence to doubt continuity further west however, where a glimpse of a functioning fifth century ecclesiastical organization can be seen in Confessio written Patrick who was a British Christian born in the first half of the fifth century near to the unlocated vicus of Bannavem Taburniae. Whilst there were Christians in Britain in the fourth century it was during the fifth and sixth centuries that Christianity became firmly established, both within the parts of southern Britain that lay outside of Germanic influence and north Hadrian s Wall where Christianity had limited impact in the fourth century. Important evidence for southern Britain is provided by the De Excidio Britanniae composed by Gildas a British cleric around 530/540. The De Excidio was written within a firmly Christian milieu, and accusations of paganism are noticeably absent from Gildas famous tirade against the contemporary rulers of his day. The picture from the De Excidio is support by archaeological evidence. Around 250 inscribed stones have been found across south-west England, south and north Wales, and southern Scotland. The stones date from the fifth to seventh centuries, and appear to have functioned primarily as funerary monuments, although they were also associated with the range of secondary functions including the marking of territorial boundaries. The stones carry inscriptions in Latin and/or the Irish ogham script. Many of the inscriptions are religiously ambiguous, but over a third include Christian formulae, such as hic iacet (here 2

lies) and in pace (in peace), and some are also associated with Chi-Rho symbols or crosses. Whilst many of the memorials are likely to have been set-up within isolated family cemeteries, some were associated with churches or monasteries. A stone from Aberdaron (Caernarvonshire), for example, commemorates a Senacus the priest with a multitude of the brethren. Monasteries, such as those at Whithorn (Galloway) and Llantwit Major (Glamorganshire), were the nodes around which Christianity came be to be organized in Britain, and were central to the processes of conversion and Christianization during the fifth and sixth centuries. Few post-roman monasteries have been subject to thorough archaeological excavation however. Christianity started to spread beyond its heartland in southern Britain to Ireland and Scotland during the fifth century. The king Coroticus denounced in Patrick s Letter to the Soldiers of Coroticus was most probably a fifth century Christian king of Strathclyde in southern Scotland, and Prosper of Aquitaine records that there were a sufficient number of Christians in Ireland by 431 to warrant Pope Celestine sending them Palladius as their bishop. The Christian community that Palladius administered to was probably restricted to the east coast where archaeological evidence suggests there had been sustained contact with Britain during the Roman period. It was Patrick s mission a generation later that led to the conversion of the far west of Ireland. It is possible that Christianity was first introduced to the Irish and Pictish speaking groups in what is now Scotland by their northern British neighbours in the fifth century, but it was Christian monks from Ireland in the sixth century who played the leading role in the conversion of Dal Riata and Pictland. The Irish of Dal Riata appear to have been converted before 563, when the island monastery on Iona, from which Columba directed his mission to the Picts in the 560s and 70s, was established. Whilst it is clear that there were strong connections between Christian communities throughout western Britain and Ireland, the idea that there existed a Celtic Christianity common to all Celtic speaking groups and distinct from a Roman church cannot be supported. Christianity in Early Anglo-Saxon England In his Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum Bede attributed the introduction of Christianity to the Anglo-Saxons kingdoms to Augustine s mission that arrived in Kent in 597. British Christians have not, therefore, been seen as contributing to the conversion of the Anglo- Saxons. There is now a growing awareness that Bede provided only a partial picture however. Anglo-Saxons must have come into contact with British Christians in lowland Britain, particularly as the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms expanded west in the later-sixth and seventh centuries. We also know that the Romano-British population was not exterminated in the south and east of England, and the survival of the cult of St Alban at St Albans, and that of an unknown martyr called Sixtus in either Kent or Essex attests to the existence of Christian enclaves in pagan Anglo-Saxon England. Indeed, it has been suggested that placenames incorporating the element Eccles (from the Latin ecclesia meaning a church), of which there are examples in Kent and Norfolk, indicate places where British churches were incorporated by the Anglo-Saxons. Radiocarbon dates recently obtained from an Anglo- 3

Saxon princely burial at Prettlewell (Essex) which contained two gold foil crosses also suggests that the Anglo-Saxon elite had come in contact with Christianity before the arrival of Augustine s mission. It appears, therefore, that not only did Christianity survive amongst the native British population in eastern England after the fourth century, but that some Anglo-Saxons adopted their religion during the succeeding centuries. Paganism in fifth and sixth century Britain It is important to remind ourselves that what we describe as paganism and Christianity were not strictly defined or comparable concepts during the post-roman period, and the bipolar opposition that we perceive between them is a product of over a thousand years of hindsight. Whilst Christianity was an organised religion with a well-defined hierarchy and highly regulated codes of conduct and belief, the majority of Christians were not theologians and for many the division between paganism and Christianity was fuzzy. Thus we can expect that there to have been periods of overlap during conversion. Bede, for example, tells us that Rædwald, an early-seventh century of East Anglia, had in the same temple an altar for the holy Sacrifice of Christ side by side with a small altar for [offering sacrificial] victims to demons. Whereas the late-seventh or eighth century First Life of St Samson of Dol describes how, whilst travelling through sixth century Cornwall, Samson came across a group of men worshipping a certain idol by means of a play in honour of an image. When Samson admonished the group not to forsake the one God who created all things they defended themselves saying that it was not wrong to celebrate the mysteries of their ancestors in a play. Clearly then they did not think that their actions were incompatible with Christianity. Paganism and Christianity were not therefore impermeable to influences from one another. The Christian plaques from the Water Newton hoard, for example, have strong parallels with votive plaques with overt Romano-Celtic pagan imagery found elsewhere in Britain. Whereas the inscription on the curse tablet from Bath must imply that in the fourth century Christians could be found in pagan temples. The influence was not all one-sided however, and it has also been suggested that the appearance of structural shrines or temples in latesixth century Anglo-Saxon England reflected influences from Christianity. Whilst the development of the Pictish symbol stones in north-east Scotland in the fifth and sixth centuries may have been a reaction against the emergence of Christianity and a reassertion of a pagan identity. As we have seen we can be confident that there were Christians within the pagan Anglo- Saxon kingdoms, but were there pagans in the Christian kingdoms of the north and west? The evidence for this is less obvious, but there is no reason to assume that Romano-Celtic paganism did not persist throughout the period, as indeed it did in Gaul. Pagan activity at Romano-Celtic temples is generally assumed to have come to an end in the early-fifth century, but firm evidence is lacking and continuity beyond this date is possible. It has been argued that, since burial at temple sites appears to have been prohibited during the fourth century, cemeteries at temples such as Henley Wood and Lamyatt Beacon (both in Somerset) may reflect their Christianisation during the fifth and sixth centuries. Indeed, 4

small structures at these sites have been interpreted as possible churches. The dating evidence from the cemeteries does not preclude a gap of several centuries between the final use of the temples and the commencement of burial however. Moreover, burial was not unknown at pagan temples during the Romano-British period. Romano-Celtic temples are not found throughout most of northern and western Britain however, and in these areas pagan religious practices remained largely un-monumentalised, non-epigraphic and aniconic throughout the Romano-British period. The absence of evidence for paganism in the fifth and sixth centuries does not therefore have to imply widespread Christianisation. Indeed, place-names which incorporate the element neved (meaning sacred place, scared grove ), such as Lanivet, Carnevas, and Trewarnevas (all Cornwall) Nympsfield (Gloucestershire) and Gwernyfed (Powys), have been interpreted as evidence of post-roman pagan cult sites. The process of conversion and Christianization was slow and drawn out, and whilst Christianity had been established in Britain since the fourth century there were still important pagan foci in the landscapes of the fifth and sixth centuries. It is possible, for example, that post-roman power centres, such as the royal centres at Dunadd (Argyll and Bute) and Rhynie (Aberdeenshire), were associated with pagan kingship rituals. Conclusions We can be confident that both Christians and pagans could be found in most parts of Britain during the fifth and sixth centuries. Amongst the British, Irish and Picts Christianity was in the ascendancy by the middle of the sixth century and probably much earlier in the more Romanised areas. By the time that Gildas was writing kingship was closed off to all but Christians, and we can suggest that paganism persisted longest amongst lower status rural communities who did not enjoy regular contact with a church or monastery. In Anglo-Saxon areas, however, the socio-political elite were aligned with Germanic paganism, and it was only towards the end of the sixth century that the tide turned in favour of Christianity. Why the Anglo-Saxons did not widely adopt Christianity when they settled in Britain is a matter of debate, but it has been suggested that they may not have wanted to have associated themselves with the religion of their British enemies. Bibliography Blair, J. 2005: The Church and Anglo-Saxon Society, Oxford. Dark, K. 2000: Britain and the End of the Roman Empire, Stroud. Lambert, M. 2010: Christians and Pagans: The Conversion of Britain from Alban to Bede, Yale. Petts, D. 2003: Christianity in Roman Britain, Stroud. Seaman, A. P. 2014: Tempora Christiana? Conversion and Christianization in Western Britain AD 300-700, Church Archaeology, 16, 1-22. Yorke, B. 2006: The Conversion of Britain, London. 5

Extended Bibliography Brown, P. 2013: The Rise of Western Christendom: Triumph and Diversity, AD 200-1000, 3 rd edition, Oxford. Carver, M. (ed.) 2003: The Cross Goes North - Processes of Conversion in Northern Europe A.D. 300-1300, York. Charles-Edwards, T. 2003: After Rome, Oxford. Charles-Edwards, T. 2013: Wales and the Britons, 350-1064, Oxford. Dumville, D. (ed.) 1993: Saint Patrick: AD 493-1993, Woodbridge. Edwards, N. (ed.) 2009: The Archaeology of the Early Medieval Celtic Churches, London. Edwards, N. 2001: Early-Medieval Inscribed Stones and Stone Sculpture in Wales: Context and Function, Medieval Archaeology 45, 15-39. Edwards, N. and Lane, A. (eds.) 1992: The Early Church in Wales and the West, Oxford. Fletcher, R. A. 1997: The Conversion of Europe: From Paganism to Christianity, 371-1386 AD, London. Karkov, C. E. and Howe, N. (eds.) 2006: Conversion and Colonization in Anglo-Saxon England, Tempe. Lapidge, M. and Dumville, D. (eds.) 1984: Gildas: New Approaches, Woodbridge. Petts, D. 2011: Pagan and Christian: Religious Change in Early Medieval Europe, London. Stancliffe, C. 2005: Christianity amongst the Britons, Dalriadan Irish and Picts, in (ed.), P Fouracre, The New Cambridge Medieval History, volume I c500 - c700, Cambridge, 426-461. Thomas, C, 1981: Christianity in Roman Britain to AD 500, London. 6