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Myth and History (Paperback)

Ethnicity & Politics in the First Millennium British Isles

Ancient History > Roman Britain P&S History > Medieval World > Viking & Early Medieval Europe > Viking & Early Medieval Archaeology

Imprint: Oxbow Books
Pages: 496
Illustrations: b/w illus throughout
ISBN: 9781842174784
Published: 30th November 2012
Casemate UK Academic

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Our recent understanding of British history has been slowly unravelling thanks to new techniques such as DNA analysis, new  archaeological data and reassessment of the literary evidence. There are considerable problems in understanding the early history of Britain; sources for the centuries from the first Roman invasion to 1000 AD are few and contradictory, the archaeological record complex and there is little collaboration or agreement between archaeologists, Roman and Anglo-Saxon historians. A common assumption concerning the development of the  English language and, therefore British history, is that there was an invasion from northern Europe in the 5th century, the so-called Anglo-Saxon migration; a model based on the writings of  Bede. However the Bedan model has become increasingly  unsustainable and is on the verge of collapse.

 

Myth and History offers a comprehensive re-assessment of  the present scientific, historical, archaeological and language evidence, debunking the model of British history based on Bede, and showing how Roman texts can be used in conjunction with the other evidence to build an alternative picture. Stephen Yeates  demonstrates that the evidence that has been used to construct the story of an Anglo-Saxon migration, with an incoming  population replacing most, if not all, of the British population has been found wanting, that initial attempts to interpret literally the DNA evidence based on historical sources are  problematic, and that the best DNA analysis of the British Isles fits the evidence into a broader European view which attempts to  plot the movement of people across the Continent and which sees the major migration periods in Europe as occurring in the  Mesolithic and the Neolithic. This DNA analysis is constant with the latest assessments based on language development, contemporary historical reports from the Roman period, and the analysis of archaeological data from the Iron Age and Roman  period. He also argues that the Roman texts can be used to identify where the Late Roman provinces of Britain actually lay and this leads to important conclusions about the ethnicity and  origins of the early British peoples. This book is a timely  attempt to unravel myth from history, present a cogent platform for Anglo-Saxon studies and understand who the British people really are.

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