From Dictionary of British History A prehistoric people of Britain. The Celts, who used iron instruments and weapons, occupied extensive areas of central and western Europe, including the British Isles.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia Ancient Celtic alphabet of one of the Irish runic languages. It was used by the druids and abandoned after the first few centuries of the Christian era.
From Cassell's Peoples, Nations and Cultures Ancient Bitons who inhabited present-day north Wales. Their name is thought to mean ‘hammer warriors’. The Ordovices put up stiff resistance to the Romans for nearly 20 years until they were finally pacified by Agricola in AD 78.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia Ancient inhabitants of central and N Scotland, of uncertain origin. First mentioned (A.D. 297) by the Roman writer Eumenius as northern invaders of Roman Britain, they were probably descendants of late Bronze Age and early Iron Age invaders of Britain.
From Reader's Guide to British History Alfred the Great, king of Wessex from 871 to 899, is the most celebrated of all Anglo-Saxon rulers. His reign coincided with Danish raiding and later settlement of England, but by a combination of military reforms and shrewd diplomacy, he was able to defend Wessex from the Vikings and save England from being completely overrun by them.
Name given to the Germanic-speaking peoples who settled in England after the decline of Roman rule there. They were first invited by the Celtic King Vortigern, who needed help fighting the Picts and Scots.
From Continuum Encyclopedia of British Literature Cædmon is widely regarded as the first English poet, and “Cædmon’s Hymn” or the “Hymn of Creation” is the earliest surviving example of Anglo-Saxon vernacular verse. Most of what is known of Cædmon comes from the religious historian BEDE, in his Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum.
From Encyclopedia of Medieval Literature
Other than Cædmon's “Hymn” the only Old English poet we can be sure of is Cynewulf, who signed his work by the acrostic nines of his name. Four major poems can, with some degree of certainty, be ascribed to his pen.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia
Originally the body of law that prevailed in the part of England occupied by the Danes after the treaty of King Alfred with Guthrum in 886.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia
name traditionally applied to the kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England in the period prior to the Danish conquests of the 9th century.
From The Routledge Companion to British History
Jutes, a Germanic people speaking a language akin to Frisian, inhabited Schleswig and were perhaps northern neighbours of the Angles, with whom they (or some of them) and the Saxons invaded Britain in the 5th cent.
From The Columbia Encyclopedia
One of the kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, consisting generally of the region of the Midlands. It was settled by Angles c.500, probably first along the Trent valley.
From Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained
A set of letters forming an ancient Germanic or Anglo-Saxon alphabet, in use from around the 2nd century ad to the end of the Middle Ages for writing, magic and divination; a set of tiles or stones inscribed with runes, used for divination.
From Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries
Sutton Hoo, a site located in Suffolk, England, was the cemetery of the Anglo-Saxon kings of East Anglia. It has been argued that it is the burial of the sixth-century king Raedwald (a.d. 599–635).
One of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in England. It may have been settled as early as 495 by Saxons under Cerdic, who is reputed to have landed in Hampshire.
From A Guide to the Ancient World A town in the county of Somerset, southwestern England. The Roman settlement, founded c AD 75, stood at the intersection of several roads, at a point where the river Avon was crossed by the Fosse Way. But it owed its existence and significance, then and later, to its hot springs, which reached the surface through three vents.
From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia Joint attack in AD 367 on Roman Britain from the north by Picts, Scots and Attacotti, and from Continental Europe by Franks and Saxons.
From Dictionary of British History Queen of the Iceni, who led a revolt against the Romans (61). Prasutagas, her husband, left his kingdom jointly to his daughters and the emperor, but this did not prevent Roman agents from seizing the kingdom.
From The Routledge Companion to British History This large British tribe occupied most of northern England except Humberside. At the coming of the Romans it was much divided by factions led by members of the royal family, some of whom intrigued with outside powers.
From Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable The Roman name for Scotland but now used only in poetry and in a few commercial or geographical connections, such as the Caledonian Hotel or the Caledonian Canal.
From The Routledge Companion to British HIstory Caratacus was a British king, a son of Cunobelinus, king of the Catuvellauni and the Trinovantes. With his brother Togodumnus he resisted the Roman occupation in AD 43 and fought against Vespasian on the Medway.
From Who's Who in the Roman World
Cartimandua was a queen of the Brigantes, the British nation that occupied most of Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cumbria. Her husband was Venutius, who in AD 51 rebelled against her when she surrendered Caratacus to Claudius (1) in compliance with the treaty of friendship between them establishing her as a ‘client’ ruler under the Romans.
From The Routledge Companion to British History
A powerful Belgic tribe which migrated to Britain in about 120 B.C. Its capital was at Wheathampstead (Herts) at the time of Caesar's invasions (55-4 B.C.) when its King was Cassivelaunus; he was followed by Tasciovanus, who in or about A.D. 5 was succeeded by Cunobelinus ('Cymbeline').
From The Routledge Companion to British History
A wealthy British tribe inhabiting Norfolk and Suffolk at the time of the Roman Conquest. Their chief town was Caister-by-Norwich.
From Who's Who in the Roman World
Ostorius after a suffect consulship was appointed legate (governor) of Britain in 47 in succession to Aulus Plautius (1). His time in Britain was passed in struggling with the peoples then inhabiting Wales.
From The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales
The Iron Age tribe of south-east Wales, the Silures provided the most implacable resistance to Roman expansion of any of the British tribes.
Romano-British town near St Albans, Hertfordshire, occupied until about AD 450. Verulamium superseded a nearby Belgic settlement and was first occupied by the Romans in 44-43 BC.
From A Guide to the Ancient World
A fort in northern Britannia (Northumberland, England). Founded by Cnaeus Julius Agricola as part of his (Stanegate) defence system c AD 80, Vindolanda was abandoned when the garrison was moved up to Hadrian's new Wall (122–26), but reoccupied under Antoninus Pius (c 163).