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Bede's Ecclesiastical History and the Material Conditions of Anglo-Saxon Life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2014

Joel T. Rosenthal*
Affiliation:
State University of New Yorkat Stony Brook

Extract

The author of the Ecclesiastical History of the English People was the greatest historian writing in the West between the later Roman Empire and the twelfth century, when we come to William of Malmesbury, Otto of Freising, and William of Tyre. Bede's qualities as a historian are well known and widely appreciated, and they need no further exposition here. Instead, we propose to be perverse and to attempt to read Bede's text as though he had been a sociologist or an economic anthropologist: What can we learn from him about the “material conditions” of life in post-Roman and early Anglo-Saxon England, especially about life in the sixth and seventh centuries. This is surely a strange purpose for which to use the Ecclesiastical History. We do so both to show that Bede is so rich and so multifaceted that he is immensely valuable for many purposes besides those of greatest obvious interest to him, and because the sources for social and economic life in those years are so poor that everything available is legitimate grist for the mills of our analysis.

Actually there are two reasons why Bede might have furnished us with the kind of information we are seeking. One is that among classical and early medieval historians there was a considerable tradition of describing the barbarian world, of paying particular attention to the institutions, mores, and customs of the Germanic people or whoever might be the subject of the tale.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1979

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References

1 An earlier version of this paper was read at the Mid-Atlantic States Conference on Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies at Villanova University, September 1976. I would like to acknowledge the helpful comments of Paul Szarmach and William McDermott and of the members of Donald Fry's Old English seminar at Stony Brook.

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