🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

How England Began

Product image 1

How England Began

An engaging, wide-ranging exploration of the end of Roman Britain and the beginnings of England

In 410 CE, Roman rule of Britain collapsed, bringing a centuries-long occupation to an end. A century later, Britain was dividing into two areas with contrasting cultures, an expansive "Anglo-Saxon" south and east, and a shrinking Celtic west and north. How did this transition happen? And why did the customs of the Germanic incomers prevail in England, unlike elsewhere in Europe?

In this deeply researched account, Nicholas J. Higham addresses these difficult questions head on. Higham draws on archaeological evidence and contemporary literature, including the writings of Gildas, to reconsider the accepted narrative. We see anew the importance of culture, warfare, and language-as the arrival, spread, and dominance of incomers irrevocably changed the country. This period marked the beginnings of Englishness, and of such insular identities as Welsh and Cornish. Offering surprising new insights, Higham provides a penetrating account of how, as Roman Britain ended, Anglo-Saxon England emerged.

$27.19
How England Began
$27.19

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

An engaging, wide-ranging exploration of the end of Roman Britain and the beginnings of England

In 410 CE, Roman rule of Britain collapsed, bringing a centuries-long occupation to an end. A century later, Britain was dividing into two areas with contrasting cultures, an expansive "Anglo-Saxon" south and east, and a shrinking Celtic west and north. How did this transition happen? And why did the customs of the Germanic incomers prevail in England, unlike elsewhere in Europe?

In this deeply researched account, Nicholas J. Higham addresses these difficult questions head on. Higham draws on archaeological evidence and contemporary literature, including the writings of Gildas, to reconsider the accepted narrative. We see anew the importance of culture, warfare, and language-as the arrival, spread, and dominance of incomers irrevocably changed the country. This period marked the beginnings of Englishness, and of such insular identities as Welsh and Cornish. Offering surprising new insights, Higham provides a penetrating account of how, as Roman Britain ended, Anglo-Saxon England emerged.

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bean'S Gallipoli

$5.01

$1.75

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Restless Nation

$9.30

NEW

Sarah, Duchess of York

$6.44

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

The Politics of Work

$15.02

$5.26

-65%NEW

This Republic of Suffering

$6.44

$2.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Wine and War

$4.29

NEW
Thumbnail 1

1945: The Reckoning

$18.60

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

America, America

$21.46

$7.51

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Under the same Moon

$18.60

$6.51

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

King Leopold's Ghost

$14.31

$5.01

NEW
Thumbnail 1

A Little History of Archaeology

$12.16

NEW
Thumbnail 1

A Little History of the World

$12.16