Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries

Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries

Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries

Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries

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Overview

This volume examines the Scandinavian impact on England in the ninth and tenth centuries, with particular reference to Scandinavian settlement and the diverse ways in which the Scandinavians and the native populations responded to each other. Many previous studies have described the settlement as involving a rapid assimilation of the settlers with native society and culture, and a swift process of integration. This volume challenges that view and shows that the processes of assimilation, integration and accommodation were gradual and complex, displaying important regional variations. Where did the Scandinavians come from? What type of society did they eventually settle into? What were the implications of the drawing of different cultures in contact, and how is this portrayed in the surviving material? An important aim of this volume is to open up new interdisciplinary dialogue in Viking Studies, and it analyses documentary, archaeological, artefactual and linguistic evidence. The volume also seeks to develop more theoretically sophisticated accounts of Scandinavian settlement, and brings the study of this subject up-to-date in terms of developments in other branches of history, archaeology and linguistics. Recent discussion in other fields concerning, for example, material culture and language have shown that they did not simply reflect changes in society but were also active, constituent elements in creating and re-creating social and cultural identities. The volume focuses on the creation of local and regional identities and affinities, and moves on from the traditional depiction of the issues in terms of a simple dichotomy of 'Scandinavian' and 'English'. It takes a more rigorously contextual approach than has hitherto been the case in the study of Scandinavian settlement, and seeks to throw new light on the consequences of cultures in contact.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9782503509785
Publisher: Brepols Publishers
Publication date: 12/31/2000
Series: Studies in the Early Middle Ages , #2
Pages: 339
Product dimensions: 6.44(w) x 9.86(h) x 0.98(d)

Table of Contents

Introduction: Interdisciplinary Approaches to the Scandinavian Settlement - Dawn M. Hadley and Julian D. Richards Ethnicity, Migration Theory, and the Historiography of the Scandinavian Settlement of England - Simon Trafford The Alfred-Guthrum Treaty: Scripting Accommodation and Interaction in Viking Age England - Paul Kershaw Danelaw Identities: Ethnicity, Regionalism, and Political Allegiance - Matthew Innes Viking Age England as a Bilingual Society - Matthew Townend 'Hamlet and the Princes of Denmark': Lordship in the Danelaw, c. 860-954 - Dawn M. Hadley Conversion and Assimilation - Lesley Abrams Survival and Mutation: Ecclesiastical Institutions in the Danelaw in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries - Julia Barrow Monuments and Merchants: Irregularities in the Distribution of Stone Sculpture in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire in the Tenth Century - David Stocker Viking Age Stone Monuments and Social Identity in Derbyshire - Phil Sidebottom Anglo-Scandinavian Metalwork from the Danelaw: Exploring Social and Cultural Interaction - Gabor Thomas The Viking Presence in England? The Burial Evidence Reconsidered - Guy Halsall All in the Genes? Evaluating the Biological Evidence of Contact and Migration - Martin Paul Evison Identifying Anglo-Scandinavian Settlements - Julian D. Richards Anglo-Scandinavian Attitudes: Archaeological Ambiguities in Late Ninth- to Mid-Eleventh-Century York - R.A. Hall
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