A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition
landowners, with slaves and dependent peasants working for them; others were
independent peasants of modest means. While some Jews lived in cities—the few
that remained—most, like their Christian neighbors, lived on the land.
The British Isles
Celtic groups from the north and west had often attacked Roman Britain. When the
last of the Roman garrisons left Britain c.410, new immigrants—Saxon and other
Germanic groups—arrived piecemeal. They came as families, in small boats made of
animal skins, to settle and farm along Britain’s east coast. Irish immigrants gradually
settled in the west. Elsewhere—in what is today the north and west of England,
Scotland, and Ireland—Celtic kingdoms survived.
Where the Germanic tribes settled, their tastes, expectations, styles, and religious
practices affected the indigenous British population, and vice versa. In the eighth
century the monk-historian Bede portrayed this amalgamated culture as utterly pagan:
Anglo-Saxon England was, in his words, “a barbarous, fierce, and unbelieving
nation.”^14 But the story that archaeology tells is more nuanced: holy sites of the
saints remained magnets for pilgrimage, burial and settlement. Most, perhaps all, of
the British Isles remained Christian. Wales was already Christian when, in the course
of the fifth century, missionaries converted Ireland and Scotland. (Saint Patrick,
apostle to the Irish, is only the most famous of these.) However, in contrast to Bede’s
vision of a highly organized church led by the pope, post-Roman Britain’s
Christianity was decentralized and local. The same was true in the Celtic kingdoms—
Wales, Ireland, and Scotland—which supported relatively non-hierarchical church
organizations. Rural monasteries often served as the seats of bishoprics as well as
centers of population and settlement. Abbots and abbesses, often members of
powerful families, enjoyed considerable power and prestige.
At the end of the sixth century the Roman form of Christianity arrived to
compete with the diverse forms already flourishing in the British Isles. In 597
missionaries sent by Pope Gregory the Great, led by Augustine (not the fifth-century
bishop of Hippo!), arrived at the court of King Ethelbert of Kent (d.616). According
to Bede, Ethelbert was a pagan. Yet he was married to a Christian Frankish princess,
and he welcomed the missionaries kindly: “At the king’s command they sat down and
preached the word of life to himself and all his officials and companions there
present.” While he refused to convert because “[I cannot] forsake those beliefs which
I and the whole people of the Angles have held so long,” the king did give the
missionaries housing and material support.^15