Land or Gold
Land or Gold
Land or Gold
Introduction
The Anglo-Saxon period witnessed some major
changes in the structure of the English
landscape. Many boundaries that still exist in
the landscape today can be traced back to at
least the late Anglo-Saxon period. Place-name
evidence can provide a historical context for
the emergence of individual settlements, which
in many cases can also be traced back to the
late Anglo-Saxon period. This article argues
that such developments in the structure of the
English landscape were inherently related to
changing perceptions of land and landscape,
which, in turn, were related to contemporary
political conflict. After a brief outline of the
main political events that occurred in
Lincolnshire between the ninth and early
eleventh centuries, a working definition of the
terms landscape and land will be provided.
The main body of the paper will be divided
into four sections. The first section will discuss
the evidence for the development of towns in
Lincolnshire, whilst the second section will
take a closer look at the process of rural
settlement development. The production of
metal dress-accessories will form the topic of
another section, which will consider the
transition from a gift-exchange based society
to one whose social organisation was grounded
in the control of territory. A brief
consideration of the production and use of
funerary sculpture in the tenth and early
eleventh centuries will close this paper.
The period between the ninth and early
eleventh centuries is often referred to as the
Viking Age. In popular imagination, this term
conjures images of ruthless pagan pirates who
employed hit-and-run tactics to steal portable
wealth from monasteries and towns, and those
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site.
The late Anglo-Saxon period also witnessed
the development of new rural settlements. One
example is Waterton on the Isle of Axeholme,
whose pottery profile suggests an eleventhcentury origin (Foreman 1996: 23)12. The Isle
of Axeholme, as well as the lower-lying regions
of Holland, remained largely unoccupied until
the eleventh century in general, and it has
been suggested that their re-occupation may
be the direct result of the second wave of
Scandinavian colonisation following Englands
political conquest in the 1010s (Fenwick et al.
1998: 168; Head et al. 1998: 277; Young et al.
2001: 3).
Whereas West Halton and Barton-uponHumber showed little sign of decline in the
later Anglo-Saxon period, other Lincolnshire
villages that found their origins in the early to
middle Anglo-Saxon period were abandoned in
the late Anglo-Saxon period, demonstrating
that not only village origins, but also village
decline occurred throughout the entire AngloSaxon period. The 2001 developer-funded
excavations at Belton revealed a few sunkenfeatured buildings and, interestingly, one of
the few assemblages of production evidence of
Maxey-type ware in the form of wasters
from Lincolnshire (Young 2001). The absence
of late Anglo-Saxon pottery from Belton,
however, suggests that the site was abandoned
in the early ninth century (Young 2001).
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In an article on the use of gold in late AngloSaxon England, Blackburn (2007) has drawn
attention to the fact that the use of gold in this
period was increasingly restricted to the
Church and to kings. The monopoly of the
Church on gold may partially be related to the
act that gold was one of the three gifts that the
three kings from the east presented to the baby
Jesus as he lay in his crib, together with
incense and myrrh, whose use was also largely
restricted to the Church. The continued
prerogative of kings to wear and use gold may
be related to their position as Gods anointed.
At the same time, the increased monopoly of
the Church on the use of gold may be seen as a
shift in existing power relations, with the
Church replacing the kings secular retainers
as his most important ally.
The changing role of metal dress-accessories
during the middle and late Anglo-Saxon
periods was also reflected in the changing role
of the smith within Anglo-Saxon society. The
ninth and tenth centuries saw an increasing
monopoly of the emerging urban centres, in
particular Lincoln, Norwich and York, on the
production of non-ferrous metalwork. In
Lincoln, the metalworking workshops were
centrally organised, and situated in the heart
of the settlement in the Lower City. The
circumstances of metalwork production in
Lincoln contrast sharply with the organisation
of the trade in the preceding, middle AngloSaxon period. The discovery of a seventh- or
eighth-century smiths grave in Tattershall
Thorpe in Lincolnshire has provided an
important
insight
into
the
different
organisation of metalwork production prior to
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Conclusions
All translations from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
follow Swanton 2000. Where possible this article
only uses the A-version, also known as the
Winchester-manuscript, because this is the oldest of
the surviving manuscripts, which was copied from
the now-lost original at some point in the late ninth
century, and continued until the eleventh century
(Swanton 2000: xxi-xxii).
2 This passage does not occur in the Winchestermanuscript, which had a strong southern focus.
Manuscripts D-F were three closely related versions
of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle that were all copied
from the same example, which is known as the nowlost Northern Version. Manuscript D, also known
as the Worcester-manuscript, was started in the
middle of the eleventh century, probably at
Worcester, whose diocese was closely connected to
York during the period 972-1016 (Swanton 2000:
xxv-xxvi). Manuscript E, also known as the
Peterborough-manuscript, is the latest of the
surviving Chronicle manuscripts, and was copied
from a Kentish original in the early twelfth century
(Swanton 2000: xxvi-xxvii). Finally, manuscript F
or the Canterbury Bi-Lingual Epitome was a bilingual (Latin and Old English) version started
around AD 1100, which drew from the lost
Northern Version as well as from the Winchestermanuscript (Swanton 2000: xxvii-xxviii).
3 Hadley (2006: 10) has questioned whether there
was any intention on the part of the invaders
already at this stage to settle permanently, although
she does acknowledge that the involvement of the
raiders in the internal politics of three Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms marked a change in tactics from the hitand-run raids of earlier periods and paved the way
for subsequent Scandinavian rule and settlement in
parts of northern and eastern England.
4 In recent decades, the presence of the raiding
army at Torksey has been confirmed through
numerous discoveries by metal-detectorists, which
this article will return to at a later stage.
5 Blair (2005: 49) has drawn attention to the fact
that our archaeological data are consistent, to put it
no more strongly, with the proposition that some
radical changes occurred in social hierarchies, and
in means of controlling resources, at the end of the
sixth century. Nevertheless, the causal relationship
between the spread of Christianity and the
increased importance of landed wealth is unclear.
This is largely due to the fact that the practice of
writing did not arrive in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms
until their conversion in the very late sixth and
seventh centuries. Prior to the spread of
Christianity, Anglo-Saxon literature had been
entirely oral. The first surviving written source that
provides an insight into the structure of Anglo1
Acknowledgements
This article is loosely based on two different
versions of a twenty-minute paper presented
at the Department of Archaeology, University
of Sheffield, in January 2009, and at the third
Early
Medieval
Archaeology
Student
Symposium (EMASS), held in Sheffield in May
2009. Many thanks must go to the audiences
on these two occasions for their feedback, in
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