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Saxon Identities, AD 150–900

Dr Robert Flierman author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:24th Jan '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Saxon Identities, AD 150–900 cover

This book brings into focus an ongoing written discourse on (Continental) Saxon identity in the period 150–900 AD.

This study is the first up-to-date comprehensive analysis of Continental Saxon identity in antiquity and the early middle ages. Building on recent scholarship on barbarian ethnicity, this study emphasises not just the constructed and open-ended nature of Saxon identity, but also the crucial role played by texts as instruments and resources of identity-formation. This book traces this process of identity-formation over the course of eight centuries, from its earliest beginnings in Roman ethnography to its reinvention in the monasteries and bishoprics of ninth-century Saxony. Though the Saxons were mentioned as early as AD 150, they left no written evidence of their own before c. 840. Thus, for the first seven centuries, we can only look at the Saxons through the eyes of their Roman enemies, Merovingian neighbours and Carolingian conquerors. Such external perspectives do not yield objective descriptions of a people, but rather reflect an ongoing discourse on Saxon identity, in which outside authors described who they imagined, wanted or feared the Saxons to be: dangerous pirates, noble savages, bestial pagans or faithful subjects. Significantly, these outside views deeply influenced how ninth-century Saxons eventually came to think about themselves, using Roman and Frankish texts to reinvent the Saxons as a noble and Christian people.

Robert Flierman’s original discussion of perceptions of the people labelled ‘Saxons’ in antiquity and the early middle ages neatly and convincingly addresses texts as instruments of identity formation. The development of views of the Saxons as disparate groups of ‘barbarian’ outsiders in Roman texts to their being regarded, in Merovingian sources at least, as a well-defined people, is traced authoritatively. The book culminates in the role of the Saxons in Carolingian war narratives and Saxon self-representation. Flierman's book is not only an important and engaging contribution to the debate about ethnicity in the barbarian successor kingdoms of Europe. It also represents a timely challenge to the assumptions of a link between textual representation and ethnic reality. * Rosamond McKitterick, Fellow in History, University of Cambridge *

ISBN: 9781350098923

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 413g

288 pages