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In Search of the Dark Ages par Michael Wood
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In Search of the Dark Ages (original 1981; édition 2007)

par Michael Wood (Auteur)

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Examines a thousand year period of British history beginning with the invasion by the Anglo-Saxon immigrants and continuing through William the Conqueror in 1066.
Membre:TerryDeannePeyto
Titre:In Search of the Dark Ages
Auteurs:Michael Wood (Auteur)
Info:BBC Books (2007), 272 pages
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In Search of the Dark Ages par Michael Wood (1981)

  1. 10
    In Search of the Trojan War par Michael Wood (ed.pendragon)
    ed.pendragon: Another accessible book by the enthusiastic Michael Wood, historian and presenter of many BBC TV programmes such as the ones on which these are based.
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Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
Long named 'The Dark Ages', the time from the fall of the Roman Empire to the Battle of Hastings has been overlooked by history. There are few contemporary sources but the five hundred year stretch is full of events and characters that shape our lives even now. I remember reading this book many years ago (though not on publication!) and enjoying it but coming to this new edition was a joy. Wood has expanded his tales to include new ones, arguably to appeal more to modern desires, but this is still a very readable and insightful approach to a forgotten era. ( )
  pluckedhighbrow | Aug 9, 2022 |
This 40th anniversary edition of the book to accompany a 1980’s BBC television series has been updated and expanded from the original, but retains the overall structure of the original, and this is the fundamental weakness of the book compared to later works, such as Marc Morris’ The Anglo-Saxons and Max Adams The First Kingdom. The book covers the history of England from the Roman invasion through to the Norman conquest through chapters looking at the lives of specific individuals. This approach allows for excellent narrative storytelling of particular periods, but is necessarily disjointed.

The first chapter skilfully recounts the rebellion of Boudica in the early years of Roman occupation. I enjoyed this history of Roman Britain, but it isn’t about the “Dark Ages”.
There follows five chapters comprising about a third of the book broadly covering the period from 400 to 850 (ie more than two thirds of the period nominally under discussion), which deal with:
• King Arthur - the real “Dark Ages” (about 410-600) period when we don’t know how the Germanic tribes from Europe settled in South and Eastern Britain.
• Sutton Hoo - a pagan burial in the kingdom of the East Angles, probably of King Rædwald (early 600s)
• Penda (died 655) - the last pagan king of a major kingdom (Mercia)
• Theodore of Tarsus and Hadrian the African - an archbishop of Canterbury and abbot of Canterbury in 670 onwards, initiating a “renaissance” in learning, but feeling a bit politically correct perhaps as an added chapter, as they were originally a Syrian and an African (from now Libya).
• Offa (reigned 757 to 796) - who created a significantly enlarged kingdom of Mercia that claimed overlordship of other kingdoms (West Saxon, East Angles, Kent) and had diplomatic links with Charlemagne.
The chapters on Penda and Theodore & Hadrian are additions in this updated edition.
The book now switches to the more successful West Saxon (Wessex) dynasty with chapters on:
• Alfred the Great (lived 848-899) - who ruled Wessex from 871, resisting the Vikings who had first raided Britain in 753 (Thanet, and more famously Lindisfarne in 793), and uniting the Anglo-Saxons against the Viking invaders from 886
• Aethelflaed (lived about 870 to 918) - who was Alfred’s daughter and ruled in Mercia, with her brother Edgar ruling in Wessex, consolidating the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia
• Athelstan (lived 894 to 939) - grandson of Alfred who expanded the Anglo-Saxon kingdom, as King of the Anglo-Saxons from 924 to 927 and King of the English from 927 to his death in 939, after conquering the Viking kingdom of Northumbria (York).
• Lady Wynflaed (died mid-tenth century) - a rich widow whose Will is analysed to provide details of her life - see https://blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2018/09/wynflaed-and-the-price-of-fashi...
• Eadgyth Princess of Wessex, Queen of Germany (lived 910-946) - a granddaughter of Alfred the Great, who at 19 married Otto, a German prince, who became king (East Francia). Although written records are mainly German, this chapter discusses how royal princesses were part of the medieval diplomatic alliance process.
The chapters on Aethelflaed, Lady Wynflaed and Eadgyth are further additions in this updated edition.
The Anglo-Saxon kingdom is then disrupted by Vikings again and this is examined by looking at the life of Eric Bloodaxe (died 954), who ended his life after twice being King of Northumbria (c. 947–948 and 952–954).
The Anglo-Saxon kings are again looked at through the reign of Ethelred the Unready (reigned 978 to 1013 and again 1014 until his death in 1016), who was overthrown by Sweyn of Denmark in 1013-1014. Although mainly told through extracts from the contemporary Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, this chapter failed to illuminate Ethelred’s character for me. Although succeeded by his son Edmund “Ironside in 1016, Edmund was killed by Sweyn’s son Cnut (also king of Denmark and Norway) and an Anglo-Saxon rule was not reimposed until 1042, when the last Anglo-Saxon king, Edward “the Confessor” ruled to 1066.
The final chapter looks at how William “the Conqueror” came to have a claim to the English crown and the battles of 1066 that allowed him to take the crown.

Overall, this book is very readable and provides engaging portraits of individuals who lived during the long period covered by the history, but feels more like a series of snapshots.

I received a Netgalley copy of this book, but this review is my honest opinion. ( )
  CarltonC | May 1, 2022 |
A side effect of watching the TV series Vikings is that I became aware how little I knew about British history, expecially the early leaders and their provenance. I saw this book online and thought it looked like a good primer on the dark ages so picked it up. What I wasn't aware of at the time is that it was written as an accompaniment to a BBC TV series from the late 70's, early 80's. The people the book picks out to explore are Boadicea, King Arthur, Sutton-Hoo man, Offa, Alfred the Great, Athelstan, Eric Bloodaxe, Ethelred the Unready, and William the Conqueror. All of these are covered in an introductory level of detail and provides good information backed up with sources. The writing is engaging and I found this to be a great toe dip into the huge subject of the dark ages. ( )
1 voter Brian. | Mar 12, 2021 |
Well done information on England in the Dark Ages. He goes over what we know and what is only speculation. He explains why he puts more faith in some accounts over others. ( )
  nx74defiant | Aug 11, 2019 |
A good introduction to this period of Britain's history by the great Michael Wood, possibly the most accessible historian of the past couple of decades. The style is clear and concise and eminently readable, with chapters focusing on major figures of the times, such as Alfred the Great, Athelstan, Eric Bloodaxe and William the Conquerer. This was, I think, Woods' first major work for the BBC back in the 80's and as such it has dated, as recent archaeology has shed new light on the Dark Ages. But this is a great starting point and in a postscript at the end Woods' is generous enough to point people in the direction of more recent works in this area. Well worth a look. ( )
  David.Manns | Nov 28, 2016 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 12 (suivant | tout afficher)
He humanizes some of the most uninspiring or obscure figures in British history, including Ethelred the Unready; Eric Bloodaxe, ruler of Viking York; Anglo-Saxon imperialist king Offa, who staged a coup d'etat; and Alfred the Great, pioneer of town planning
ajouté par John_Vaughan | modifierPublishers Weekly (Jun 29, 1987)
 
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She was very tall, the glance of her eye most fierce; her voice harsh. A great mass of the reddish hair fell down to her hips. Around her neck was a large golden necklace, and she always wore a tunic of many colours over which she fastened a thick cloak with a brooch. Her appearance was terrifying.
Dio Cassius, Roman history.

Chapter 1. Boadicea.
Then Arthur fought against them in those days with the kings of the Britons, and it was he who led their battles.
Nennius, History of the Britons.

Chapter 2. King Arthur.

[And similar for chapters 3 to 9].
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For my mother and father
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The modern British are a nation of immigrants.

Introduction.
Boadicea has a place of her own in British folk history.

Boadicea.
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There was no capital of the Mercian empire. Offa was itinerant and only ruled by moving from place to place, constantly showing himself to friends and cowing his enemies.
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Examines a thousand year period of British history beginning with the invasion by the Anglo-Saxon immigrants and continuing through William the Conqueror in 1066.

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