Saturday, March 23, 2019

Early Medieval Wales :: British History

Early Medieval WalesTowards the end of the 6th century the Angles and Saxons in eastern Britain began to entertain designs on the westerly lands. The inability of the independent western peoples to unify against this threat left the nigh powerful kingdom, Gwynedd, as the core of cultural and political resistance, a position it has retained until today. The weaker groups were unable to living the invaders and later the Battle of Dyrham, near Gloucester in 577, the Britons in Cornwall were separated from those in Wales who became similarly cut off from their northern kin in Cumbria after the Battle of Chester in 616. Though still geographically in a state of change, Wales could now be said to exist. At this point, the racial compound in Wales was probably little different from that to the east, where Saxon numbers were small, tho Wales was held together by the peoples resistance to the Saxons. The Welsh started to refer to themselves as Cymry (fellow countrymen), not by the Saxo n term used by English-speakers today, which is generally judgement to mean either foreigners or Romanized people. Wales, like England in the Dark Ages, was a land of multiple kingships. The rugged terrain, with impenetrable mountain massifs and inhospitable alpestrine ranges, broken by river valleys, did not make for a unified discipline or a unified development. The boundary with England was not marked by natural defences, and productive lowland areas as well as utile upland pastures were open to frequent attacks. Not until Offa of Mercia built his dyke in the second half of the 8th century was there a definable frontier, and that was designed mainly to deter Welsh attacks and control trade crossways the new border. It was much the longest as well as the most striking man-made boundary in the whole of western medieval Europe, and clearly came to play an important role in shaping the cognition of the extent and identity of Wales. Small local communities acknowledged a ruler whose wiz function might seem at times to remuneration war on his neighbors and to plunder their lands. In general, war made them defensive. The principal divisions of Wales (right) were the four major kingdoms or principalities. Gwynedd was based on the Snowdonia massif and on Anglesey. Powys stretched from the borders of Mercia into primal Wales. Dyfed, in the south-west, has been thought to represent the survival of very early traditions, most pre-Roman, some linked with the settlement of those who spoke the Goedelic form of Celtic.

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