Contents to include:
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Introduction
Opener: Arrival of ‘Brutus’. 9C story of what already seemed
ancient foundation by great grandson of Aeneas (from Historia
Brittonum, and Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Historia...). Idea of
England’s formation by successive waves of incomers/invaders.
Tabula Rasa: England won’t really have been blank cultural slate,
but we’ve no idea what stories were told through long centuries
from end of Ice Age to arrival of Celts, c. 500 BCE. Cultural
Conquest: Or, rather, of Celtic culture. Idea of cultural
exchange/as against invasion. Veni, Vidi, Vici: Romans – real
invasion, and conscious imposition of new culture and mythology.
[[The Road Not Taken: Celtic myth pushed out to the margins (Wales,
Scotland, Ireland), though much later, in modern times, brought
back into the mainstream – most obviously with Victorian Arthurian
revival.]] Christianity began to replace what had been state
paganism of Romans – though NB this process not complete by time
hold over Britain began to weaken in early 5th Century.
1. Anglo-Saxon Advent
Romano-British culture in its turn replaced after arrival of
Anglo-Saxons. (NB this too bit more gradual than word ‘invasion’
would suggest – brief history.) Hengist and Horsa (5C): Legendary
brothers said to have led the Angles, Saxons and Jutes in their
invasion of Britain in 5C; Horsa was killed fighting the Britons,
but Hengist successfully conquered Kent, becoming the forefather of
its Jutish kings. Who they were. Germanic mythology – pantheon
(Woden, Frigg, Tunor, Tiw), folklore not unlike (but by no means
identical to) famous ones of Viking myth. Elves, Nicor, Dragons.
[[Romans would in retrospect be mythologized themselves: A-S poem
The Ruin sees remains of Roman Bath as the ‘work of giants’.]] Some
earlier, Celtic stories subsequently seen through A-S filter: Herne
the Hunter; Wild Hunt.
2. Beowulf
Beowulf is a legendary Geatish hero (so from Götaland in S. Sweden)
in the eponymous epic poem, one of the oldest surviving pieces of
literature in the English language. ‘Hwaet ...’: Bardic background.
Mead-hall culture and the heroic (Homeric-style) storyteller.
Importance of oral tradition. [[‘Gemunde ...’ (‘I remember ...’):
Oral tradition in transmission of myth.]]
Story itself: exploits of Beowulf and his battles, 1) with a
monster named Grendel; 2) with Grendel’s revengeful mother; then,
finally, 3) with a dragon, guardian of a hoard of treasure. His
death and mourning follow.
Scribal Censors? Poems like Beowulf and FF written down by
Christian monks. Influence to some extent evident in texts
(Biblical allusions etc). Just how much did they help shape these
stories as we’ve come to know them now?
3. Danish Domination
‘Finnesburg Fragment’ – Anglo-Saxon poem about battle between Danes
and Frisians (which is also described in Beowulf). Vikings, Dane’s
especially, casting a long and growing shadow over Anglo-Saxon life
and myth. Briefest of outlines of Viking origins, culture, religion
and myth, esp. in sort of heroic (so bardic and Beowulf-like)
aspects foregrounded in the Sagas. [[England in the ‘Iceland’ Sagas
–
basically, seen as part of a ‘greater Scandinavia’ at this time;
point amplified by Beowulf (about Geats; FF Danes and
Frisians).]]
Myth and history not clearly demarcated at this time: mythic
material crops up in supposedly historical narrative and
vice-versa. Alfred the Great (849–899) a special focus for these
stories: In 878, burns the cakes in Athelney, Somerset before
defeating the Viking Great Heathen Army at the Battle of Edington.
[[Hagiographic Hero: Religion brought a mythology all its own,
especially in hagiography (saints’ lives). St Edmund, East Anglian
King killed (or martyred) by GHA, 869.]] Battle of Brunanburh: real
battle (937) that took on mythic status in Anglo-Saxon poem.
‘Never, before this,/were more men in this island slain/by the
sword's edge – as books and aged sages/confirm – since Angles and
Saxons sailed here...’ Murder of King Edward the Martyr (c.
962–78); Aethelraed the Unready (c. 966–1016; ‘Danegeld’);
Denmark’s Cnut (c. 990–1035) and North Sea Empire (and quarrel with
the tide).
4. Arthurian Legend
Coming of Normans brought further overlayering of existing culture
(cf. Romans, A- S, above), though more obviously at top of society
than at bottom. Idea of chivalry brought in from continental
courts.
King Arthur (late 5th and early 6th centuries AD): a legendary
leader who, according to medieval histories and romances, led
defence of Britain against Saxon invaders. But most of the stories
that made it into the mythic legacy aren’t about this epic combat
but the romances of the court, and the ‘Knights of the Round
Table’. The Matter of Britain and the ‘Arthurian’ heritage of
English myth. Central idea of Arthur and his Knights presented a
sort of mythic centre around which endless other narratives could
be woven. [[Other Matters: NB not just English writers but
continental ones like Chrétien de Troyes, Gottfried von Strassburg,
etc, wrote Arthurian works with British settings. There were other
acknowledged story-cycles: Matter of France (or ‘Franks’ as we’d
see it now, so stories of Charlemagne’s empire); Matter of Rome –
again, not quite as we’d see it: more classical antiquity – Trojan
War and rise of Alexander the Great.]]
Many elements and incidents appear in Geoffrey's Historia ... (c.
1136), including Arthur's father Uther Pendragon; the magician
Merlin; Arthur's wife Guinevere; the sword Excalibur; Arthur's
conception at Tintagel; his final battle against Mordred at
Camlann, and final rest in Avalon [[Joseph of Aramathea and
Glastonbury]]. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight: Gawain accepts a
challenge from a mysterious ‘Green Knight’ who dares any knight to
strike him with his axe if he will take a return blow in a year and
a day. [[Green Knight’s relation to Green Man as wider symbol of
fertility and rebirth.]] Tristan and Iseult: Tragedy about the
adulterous love between the Cornish knight Tristan and the Irish
princess Iseult. [[Celtic Connections: 14C romance Sir Launfal –
exiled from Arthur’s court, and destitute, taken up by Fairy Queen
as lover. Involvement of this supernatural dimension points to
Celtic origins of story. These have been suggested for much
Arthurian material.]]
Tinged with nostalgia. Arthurian romances already involved the
high-medieval reinvention of an early-medieval king (if he ever
existed). We can’t help but read them now through a 19C filter.
Victorian vogue: Tennyson, Pre-Raphaelite art, etc.
5. Noble Knights and Ladies Fair
Arthurian stories only the most famous in a wider genre of
chivalric romance ... For example, mid-13C King Horn, a chivalric
romance in Middle English. Saint George and the Dragon: The legend
goes that Saint George, a Roman soldier in the 10th century, came
across a town plagued by an evil dragon about to kill the king of
England’s daughter. George is said to have slain the dragon, freed
the town and rescued the princess, thus becoming the patron saint
of England. Myth became far removed from origins, George remodelled
as a medieval knight. [[Naked Courage: Lady Godiva (dates to at
least the 13th century): 12C English noblewoman who, according to
legend, rode naked – covered only in her long hair – through the
streets of Coventry to gain a remission of the oppressive taxation
that her husband imposed on his tenants.]]
Guy of Warwick (dates to the 13th century): Legendary English hero
of Romance popular in England and France from the 13th to 17th
centuries.
Fighting Back: Stories of dispossessed nobles having to fight for
what’s rightly theirs. Gamelyn (14C); Fulk FitzWarin (c.
1180–1350). Shropshire nobleman cheated of lands by King John.
Fought to get them back. Real-life figure but acquired semi-
legendary status after death. Became sort of prototype figure for
...
6. Robin Hood
‘I cannot say my Pater Noster as perfectly as the priest does,/But
I know my rhymes of Robin Hood ...’ First mention comes (in John
Langland’s Piers Plowman) in the 1370s. Heroic outlaw of English
folklore who, according to legend, was a highly skilled archer and
swordsman. The folk hero became surrounded by a whole folk history
(Richard I’s worthless brother John usurping his kingdom while
warrior king away at Crusades; Sheriff of Nottingham and Sir Guy of
Gisborne his oppressive representatives on the ground), but NB this
didn’t happen till 16C.
RH traditionally depicted dressed in Lincoln green (cf. Green Man,
above p. xxx) and living beyond the law in Sherwood Forest,
reserved as royal hunting ground. [[The People’s Weapon: The
Longbow.]] A yeoman (explain) in the earliest ballads, he is said
to rob from the rich and give to the poor.
Succession of stories introducing key Merry Men: Little John, Will
Scarlet, Much the Miller’s Son, Allen a Dale, Friar Tuck (a late
addition). [[Sherwood on Stage: associated with May celebrations,
so late-medieval festive plays; popular dramas written in
Elizabethan and Jacobean periods too.]] Archery Contest.
A Woman’s Touch: RH’s Merry Men later (again 16C) joined by Merry
Woman in enchanting shape of Maid Marian. Her addition marks
growing sophistication and acceptance of story as romance (i.e.
literary, more courtly pretensions), rather than straightforward
folktale. RH’s comparative gentleness – and his gentility, his
courteous way with ladies – an indication of this. Tendency
culminates in RH’s elevation (in 1622 ballad by Martin Parker) to
rank of Earl of Huntingdon, who has more in common with
dispossessed aristocrats of previous chapter (‘Fighting Back’) than
popular brigand we might have imagined.
RH reinvented yet again in 19C by e.g. Chartists Thomas Miller
(novelist) and W.J. Linton (poet); romantic patriot Walter Scott
and followers: for both these groups RH became A-S freedom fighter
battling Norman domination. [[Historicity, in so far as he has any:
Loxley, Yorkshire; grave at Kirklees (and Little J’s at
Hathersage).]]
7. From the Piskies to Puck
Cornish Piskies: stories of piskie interactions with humans tell
how they have the power to abduct, befuddle and lead people astray
over the landscape. This conception of the fairy folk as malicious
and often ugly an old, originally-Celtic one. Idea survives in
Cornish (esp. West Penwith) tradition of the Spriggan.
Just about makes it into modernity in wider English tradition in
figure of Puck or Robin Goodfellow, often referred to in 16C but
most famously now in Shakespeare’s portrayal of Puck, sometimes
known as Robin Goodfellow, is a domestic and nature sprite, demon
or fairy, in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (c. 1595). Shakespeare’s
Puck is mischievous and sometimes spiteful, but not actually evil.
It’s in this play, moreover, that Shakespeare ‘invents’ the tiny,
cute, benevolent fairies we think of nowadays. ‘Queen Mab’, in
Romeo and Juliet (c. 1591), a sort of female version of Robin
Goodfellow, seems to have originated in Shakespeare’s imagination.
Generally, though, sense now creeping in that the fairies are a
source of entertainment rather than of fear. Hence the story of
...
Tom Thumb: The first fairy tale printed in English, Richard
Johnson’s The History of Tom Thumb was published in 1621, though
the character appears to have existed earlier in the folk
tradition. Given ploughman father’s grief at his childlessness,
mother seeks help from Arthur’s court magician Merlin. Tom, who’s
delivered by fairy midwives, is no bigger than his father's thumb.
His adventures include being swallowed by a cow, tangling with
giants, and becoming a favourite of King Arthur.
8. Bogeymen and Beasts
Jack o’ Kent: (16C, or earlier) a cunning figure from
Herefordshire/Monmouth with an aptitude for outwitting the devil.
The Lincoln Imp: Grotesque carving in Cathedral. Satan sent two
imps to Earth to cause mischief. On reaching Lincoln, the imps
began damaging the Cathedral before being stopped by an angel who
turned one to stone. Witches: Heart on a wall above a window
overlooking market square in Kings Lynn, Norfolk, supposedly marks
the point at which it was struck by the heart of Margaret Read,
which leapt from her body as she burned at the stake for witchcraft
in 1590. Arguably whole story of witchcraft in England is a long
and elaborate myth, but consequences – for men and (mainly) women,
here and at e.g. Pendle, Lancashire, 1612, were all too real.
Grindylow – This water-dwelling bogeyman from Yorkshire or
Lancashire has long sinewy arms, and is famed for drowning children
in bogs and pools. (NB associated with trad. of Grendel, p. xxx,
above.) Jenny Greenteeth – Green-skinned with long hair and sharp
teeth, she pulls children or the elderly into water to drown
them.
The Black Dog legend – In 16th century Suffolk, this calf-sized
malevolent hound with saucer-sized glowing red eyes is a harbinger
of doom and death. The black dog is essentially a nocturnal
apparition, in some cases a shapeshifter, and is often said to be
associated with the Devil or described as a ghost or supernatural
hellhound. Beast of Bodmin Moor: a black panther-like beast seen
roaming this wild and isolated landscape in Southwest England (and
not usually a habitat for big cats). Spring-Heeled Jack, Victorian
urban Legend. Diabolical figure, 10 ft tall, who hopped over
houses. [[Hairy Hands of Dartmoor: Disembodied hands causing car
accidents on B3212, Dartmoor, since 1910.]]
Famous Phantoms: Anne Boleyn, Blickling Hall, Norfolk; Jane Seymour
and Katherine Howard, Hampton Court; Sir Francis Drake, Buckland
Abbey, Devon; Welsh rebel Owain Glyndwr, among several others, at
Croft Castle, W. Midlands; Longleat’s Grey Lady; Roman Legionary,
Treasurer’s House, Yorks ... [[The Cock Lane Ghost: an 18C
sensation.]]
Index
Illustrated history of English mythology from Beowulf to Shakespeare and beyond
Michael Kerrigan was educated at St. Edward’s College and University College, Oxford, England. He is the author of History of the World, Dark History of the Catholic Church, The Knights Templar and Amazing Churches of the World. He is a columnist, book reviewer, and feature writer for publications including the Scotsman and the Times Literary Supplement. Michael Kerrigan lives with his family in Edinburgh.
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