Anglo-Saxons beliefs
The early Anglo-Saxons were pagans. They believed in many gods, for
example the king of the Anlgo-Saxon gods was Woden; other gods were Thunor, god of thunder; Frige, goddess of love; and
Tiw, god of war: the names of the days
of the week come from gods’ names. Their gods and goddesses ruled practically every aspect of life and nature such as birth, life, death,
harvest, love, fertility, earth, sky, weather and much more.
In the most primitive of times these deities were probably worshipped as
natural phenomena, but over the
centuries they took human form.
When the Anglo-Saxons died their bodies were either cremated or buried
in a grave.
The bodies were buried with their instruments that they used during life: the man’s graves include instruments wich suggest hunting and farming and the women’s graves include tools used for sewing and weaving.
When the Romans leftBritain ,
Christianity continued in other places where the Anglo-Saxons did not settle,
such as Wales .
The decline of the Anglo-Saxon began around 597 A .D. with the arrival of the Roman
missionary St Augustine on the Isle of Thanet in
Kent .
The missionaries were sent out on the orders of Pope Gregory; in fact in 529 A .D. the Pope decided it
was time that the Anglo-Saxons in southern Britain heard about Christianity.
Over the next 100 years many Anglo-Saxons turned to Christianity. As the Anglo-Saxons were converted from pagan beliefs to Christian ones, they changed
their way of life and became less warlike.
The bodies were buried with their instruments that they used during life: the man’s graves include instruments wich suggest hunting and farming and the women’s graves include tools used for sewing and weaving.
When the Romans left
Monasteries were centres of learning,
where monks and nuns spent their time in prayer, study and worked in fields and
workshops. Moreover, these places where the only schools in Anglo-Saxons
England.
Thor with a hammer |
St Paul's Monastery at Jarrow. The monastery at Jarrow in Northumbria was a centre of the Christian Church in Anglo-Saxon times |
A pot used in an Anglo-Saxon burial. The burned remains and bones of a dead person were put in the pot, which was then buried. |