英语国家概念-L2.pdf
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1、2ChapterThe O rigins of a Nation(5000 BC-1066)I.Early Settlers(5000 BC-55 BC)Britain was originally a part of the European continent.When the last Ice Ageended 7,000 years ago,melting ice flooded the low-lying lands,creating theEnglish Channel and the North Sea,and turning Britain into an island.1.T
2、he IberiansThe first known settlers of Britain were the Iberians.At about 3000 BC duringthe New Stone Age,these short,dark and long headed people came to Britain,probably from the Iberian peninsula,now Spain.They were farming folk who keptanimals and grew crops.The long barrows which can still be fo
3、und,mostly in thechalky lands of Wiltshire and Dorset,were their communal burial mounds.More dramatic monuments were the henges,the most important of whichwas Stonehenge in Wiltshire,constructed before 2000 BC.Exactly why it wasbuilt is unknown but it must have had religious and political significan
4、ce.Althoughin popular mythology Druids are associated with Stonehenge,they were Celticpriests who arrived much later.2.The Beaker FolkAt about 2000 BC the Beaker Folk arrived from the areas now known asHolland and the Rhineland.These people took their name from their distinctivebell-shaped drinking
5、vessels with which they were buried in crouching positionsin individual graves.They brought with them the art of pottery making,the abilityto fashion bronze toots and the custom of individual burial.They developed theirown farming society and built hill forts.These forts,of which Maiden Castle inDor
6、set is one of the finest examples,became small fortified towns.3.The CeltsThe Celts,a taller and fairer race than the people who had come before,beganto arrive about 700 BC arid kept coming until the arrival of the Romans.Theymay originally have come from eastern and central Europe,now France,Belgiu
7、mand southern Germany.They came to Britain in three main waves.The first wave were the Gaels,who started to come about 600 BC.The secondwave were the Brythons,who started to come about 400 BC.The Belgae cameabout 150 BC.The Celts did not kill off the Iberians.They drove some of them tothe north and
8、west,kept the rest as slaves,and in the end the two races mixed tovarying extent in different parts of the country.The Belgae were the most industrious and vigorous of the Celtic tribes.One ofthe most powerful of their chieftains was Cassivellaunus,uncle to Cunobelinus,Shakespeares Cymbeline,who rul
9、ed over a large area north of the Thames inwhat is now Hertforshire,Buckinghamshire and Berkshire.The Celts were practised farmers.They drained much of the marshlands andbuilt houses of wood and wickerwork with a weather-proof coating of mud.Theywere ironworkers,too.The Celtic tribes are ancestors o
10、f the Highland Scots,theIrish and the Welsh,and their languages are the basis of both Welsh and GaelicThe Celts religion was Druidism.The Druids(the wise men,astrologers andsoothsayers)worshipped and performed their rites in woods by the light of themoon.There is evidence that they offered up human
11、sacrifices to their gods,sometimes single victims,at other times groups of men in immense wickerworkcages.II.Roman Britain(55 BC-41.0 AD)British recorded history begins with the Roman invasion.Julius Caesar,the great Roman general,invaded Britain for the first time in 55BC,partly to gather informati
12、on about the island of which so lit tie was thenknown and partly to punish the Belgae who had helped their fellow tribesmen intheir fight against the conquering Romans in Gaul,the land that is now France.He landed in Kent with several thousand men but,meeting resistance and badweather,he decided to
13、withdraw.He returned the following year.His armymarched as far as Wheathampstead in Hertforshire,Cssivellaunuss hilifort,which he captured after fierce fighting.He then withdrew with hostages andprisoners.The successful invasion did not take place until nearly a century later,in AD 43,headed by the
14、Emperor Claudius.For nearly 400 years Britain was under the Roman occupation.But it wasnever a total occupation for two reasons.First,some parts of the country resisted.For example,Boadicea(or Boudicca),queen of the Iceni of East Anglia,attempted to drive the Romans from Britain in AD 61.She succeed
15、ed indestroying the capital of the Romans,Londinium,before being defeated.Secondily,Roman troops were often withdrawn from Britain to fight in other partsof the Roman Empire.Agricola,the Roman general and governor to Britain(77-84),couldnt make a full conquest of all the area corresponding to modemB
16、ritain.The tribes of Scotland were especially fierce.The Romans soon realizedthat they could not conquer them.They withdrew from the north in the secondcentury and built two great walls to keep the Picts,so called because of theirpainted faces,out of the area they had conquered.These were the Hadria
17、nsWall running from Carlisle to Newcastle,and the Antomne Wail linking theestuaries of the Forth and the Clyde The Romans still faced 3 problems in Britain.The Picts still attacked them periodically;Saxon pirates attacked them in thesoutheast;and control was only effective in the south-eastern part
18、of the country,a small section from Exeter to Tees.The Romans built a network of towns,mostly walled,many on the sites ofCeltic settlements or their own military camps.The suffix-caster or-Chester inEnglish place names-Lancaster,Winchester and Chester itself-deriyes fromcastra,the Latin word for cam
19、p.The Roman capital was London(Londinium).York had been created as a northern stronghold and Bath rapidly developed because of its waters.f Between the large towns the Romans constructed a networkof major and secondary roads,not always as straight as tradition would havethem but of remarkable solidi
20、ty as the surviving road across the moors atBlackstone Edge,Littleborough,still shows From London,roads radiated all overthe country along mutes which for much of their length are still in use as modernthoroqghfares:to the north by way of Watling Street and Ermine Street;to theeast by way of the Col
21、e hester road;to Chichester in the south by Stane Street;to the west by the road that passed through Silchester then on to Cirencester(Corinium)and GloucesterThe Romans made good use of Britains natural resources,mining lead,ironand tin and manufacturing pottery.They built baths,temples,amphitheatre
22、s andbeautiful v川as.The Romans also brought the new religion,Christianity,to Britain.This came atfirst by indirect means,probably brought by traders and soldiers,and was quitewell-established before the first Christian Emperor,Constantine,was proclaimedin AD 306.The Romans remained in control of Bri
23、tain for nearly 400 years.Then,withbarbarians from Eastern Europe at the gates of Rome,under repeated attacksfrom Picts and also from the Scots(the tattooed ones who invaded from thenorth of Ireland)and needing to set up a new military front on the east coast tohold off the Germanic Saxon tribes inv
24、ading from Europe,they pulled out in AD410.Although Britain became part of a vast sophisticated Roman Empire all aroundthe Mediterranean,the Roman impact upon the Britons was surprisingly limited.The Romans always treated the Britons as a subject people of slave class.Neverduring the 4 centuries did
25、 the Romans and Britons intermarry.The Romans hadno impact on the language or culture of ordinary Britons.However,otherinvasions of far less sophisticated peoples had far greater cultural impact uponBritainIII.The Anglo-Saxons(446-871)In the mid-5th century a new wave of invaders,Jutes,who fished an
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