Old English literature (500-1100)
English literature started as Old English poetry and prose written in the various dialects of Old English. This language was brought from Europe by the Germanic tribes of the Angles, the Jutes, and the Saxons who overran England in the 5th century. They also brought a poetic tradition that remained relatively constant until the conquest by Norman-French invaders in 1066. Another important historic event that influence the formation of English national literature was the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity, which St. Augustine of Canterbury started in 597. So, English literature began through the combined influence of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and the Christian church.
Old English poetry, brought by the Anglo-Saxons, was alliterative, i.e. without rhyme, using words that begin with the same sound, though it had internal rhyme, in which a word within a line rhymes with a word at the end of the line. Old English poetry heavily relied upon kennings (elaborate descriptive phrases). Such poems, usually glorifying a real or imaginary hero and tried to teach the values of bravery and generosity, were delivered orally, i.e. chanted by a bard with harp or drum accompaniment.
The first major work of English literature and the greatest surviving epic poem is "Beowulf" (c. 700), which recounts the hero's battles with mythical foes such as the man-eating Grendel and his mother. The heroic tradition was continued in "The Battle of Maldon" written soon after the event 991, which glorifies heroic values of courage in defeat.
After about 750, poetry flourished in Northumbria, an Anglo-Saxon kingdom in the north. There, poets wrote verses about the lives and hardships of saints. The leading Northumbrian poet was Cynewulf. Several works are attributed to him, including the religious poems "The Fates of the Apostles" and "Elene" elegies, written before 940, which express the sense of loneliness in exile and an inflexible Fate.
Due to its oral form, much poetry has been lost. What remains owes its survival to monastic scribes who favoured verse with a Christian motivation or flavour. Such was one of the earliest attributed short poems praising God, "Caedmon's Hymn", which consists of nine lines, and was written by Caedmon the herder. He was the first Enlish poet known by name, who lived during the 600's and reputedly was inspired to sing about the Creation by a vision.
Prose in Old English was a later achievement represented by many religious works. Most prose writers wrote in Latin until the late 800's when King Alfred the Great of Wessex started English translations of Latin works. The most prominent prosaic work of the Old English Period is the Latin work "Ecclesiastical History of the English People" (731) by Saint Bede the Venerable, first published in Latin and then translated between 871 and 899. This work is the first history of the English people and a valuable source of information about English life from the late 500's to 731.
Historical writing began with the "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" (from about 892 to 1154) -- at first brief notes of yearly events but later a dignified and even poetic record of current events in England. The existing version of the
"Chronicle" dates from King Alfred's reign and was compiled from earlier records (now lost).
Some spells and riddles have also survived, including some later included into the famous "Mother Goose" collection of nursery rhymes.
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