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Published byTracy Correll Modified over 9 years ago
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The Anglo-Saxons
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When the Romans left Britain in 410 A.D., a new group of people came in ships across the North Sea. These people were the Anglo-Saxons, and they were a mixture of people from north Germany, Denmark and northern Holland.
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Farmers, sailors, iron smiths, woodworkers Lived in villages Houses built from wood Clothes made from woolen cloth or animal skins Men: tunics with tight trousers or leggings Women: long dresses
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Gatherings and feasts took place in great halls Loved tales about brave warriors Music often played to accompany stories and poems (harp or lyre) Enjoyed riddles for entertainment
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Anglo-Saxons at War Armies usually small, with only a few hundred men Soldiers had spears, axes, swords and bows and arrows Helmets and wooden shields Fought on foot during a battle
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Religion Anglo-Saxons arrived in Britain as Pagans, but gradually converted to Christianity. Paganism: represents a wide variety of traditions that emphasize reverence for nature and a revival of ancient polytheistic and animistic religious practices. Polytheism: the belief in or worship of more than one god. Animism: the belief in the existence of individual spirits that inhabit natural objects and phenomena
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Kennings Literary devices in which a poetic phrase substitutes for a noun Provides powerful imagery that helps the audience focus on the words of the scop, or poet telling the story
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Alacrity (noun) speed or quickness; eagerness
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Antithesis (noun) the direct or exact opposite
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Arbitrate (verb) to judge or decide in the matter so as to reconcile differences
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Baleful (adj.) portending evil; ominous
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Cache (noun) a hiding place used especially for storing provisions
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Caroused (verb) to engage in boisterous, drunken merrymaking
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Contrived (adj.) obviously planned or calculated; not spontaneous or natural
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Deluge (noun) something that overwhelms as if by a great flood
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Ethos (noun) the distinctive spirit of a culture or an era
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Extol (verb) to praise highly or exalt
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Exultant (adj.) marked by great joy or jubilation; triumphant
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Fissure (noun) a long narrow opening; a crack or cleft
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Glutton (noun) a person who is devoted to eating and drinking to excess
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Inexorable (adj.) not capable of being persuaded by entreaty; relentless
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Keel (noun) the principle structural member of a ship, running lengthwise down the center from bow to stern
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Pinioned (verb) to restrain or immobilize by binding the arms
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Quell (verb) to put down forcible; suppress
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Reticence (noun) the state or quality of being reluctant; unwillingness
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Solace (noun) comfort in sorrow, misfortune, or distress; consolation
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Stalwart (adj.) having or marked by imposing physical strength
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Unavailing (adj.) ineffectual or useless; futile
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Vernacular (noun) the standard native language of a country or locality
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