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Anglo Saxons

Anglo Saxon house The Anglo Saxons originally came to Britain when they were invited to settle in Kent by King Vortigern in return for their help in defending Britain after the Romans left.

The Saxons soon spread Northwards. By 642AD they had captured Din Eidyn (Edinburgh) and Stirling in Scotland.
Lothene (Lothian) remained a mainly Saxon area even after the Vikings settled in the West of Scotland.

The house shown opposite is built of wooden plank walls and a thatched roof. It has a pit under its floorboards which could be used as a cellar. There is also a window which is closed by a single shutter.
This picture shows some metal working tools.

Charcoal is made by burning wood slowly in a covered pit. This charcoal burns at a higher temperature than wood and can be used for melting metals such as pewter for casting.
It can also be used to heat iron up to red heat so that it can be shaped by a blacksmith.
Bellows made of wood and leather were used to blow air into a charcoal fire to increase the temperature.

Many of the tools the Saxons used in metal working are similar to those used today.
metal working tools
evening meal in the open air The early Anglo Saxons wore mainly woolen and linen clothes. The basic garment was a T-tunic with narrow sleeves. The wrists of the tunic might be fastened with a hook and eye or laced in to be particularly tight fitting.
click here to see pattern for T-tunic

Men wore the tunic shorter, with trousers underneath. Women wore the tunic as a longer dress and covered it with a sleeveless peplos dress, made by gathering a tube of material up at the shoulders with brooches.
There is some evidence from later in the medieval period that women would have worn trousers under their dresses too, perhaps in colder weather.
Clothing might be decorated with braid or embroidery.
The pole lathe shown opposite was used in the same way as a modern wood lathe. Cutting was performed using a separate blade held in the hand.
The Saxons made cups, bowls, plates, spoons and many other items on lathes like this.

Domestic items were also made of pottery, which was baked around a fire to harden it.
pole lathe
pig with piglets Livestock such as the pigs shown opposite wandered freely in the village and probably took shelter in the surrounding forest at night. Hens roosted in trees.
The animals would eat the scraps of food discarded by the human population. They would only be deliberately fed in order to fatten them up just before they were killed to be eaten.

These pictures were taken at West Stow Anglo Saxon Village near Bury St Edmonds in England. The village is run by the West Stow Trust.

More pictures


Bibliography

"Anglo Saxon England" - Martin Welch - English Heritage - 0-7134-6566-2
"A Handbook of Anglo Saxon Food" - Ann Hagen - Anglo Saxon Books - 0-9516209-8-3
"Scotland, The Making of the Kingdom" - A.A.M. Duncan - Mercat Press - 0 901824 836
Beowulf translation and pictures of manuscript
"Peace Weavers and Shield Maidens" - Kathleen Herbert - Anglo Saxon Books - 1-898281-11-4


Webpages

Map of Britain in the 8th Century
Map of Anglo-Saxon England
Viking and Saxon Women Warriors
West Stow Trust - reconstruction of part of an Anglo-Saxon village on its original site.
Sutton Hoo: Burial-Ground of the Wuffings - burial mound of a 7th Century Saxon king.
Anglo Saxon Buckets - an archeological study.
Bede's World - reconstruction of Anglo-Saxon buildings and farm.
The Old English Calendar
Angelcynn - re-enactment group
Theod - re-enactment group


For children

BBC Education Page on the Anglo Saxons
British Museum Page on Anglo Saxon England

Lothene Experimental Archaeology Home Page

Lothene Experimental Archaeology are available for displays, talks and educational visits - contact us for details
If you are interested in Scottish history, research, medieval crafts, swordfighting contact us to enquire about joining Lothene. We currently have members in Lothian, Fife and the Borders.