Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Illustrations of damnation in late Anglo-Saxon manuscripts

View through CrossRef
‘Many tribulations and hardships shall arise in this world before its end, and they are heralds of the eternal perdition to evil men, who shall afterwards suffer eternally in the black hell for their sins.’ These words, composed by Ælfric in the last decade of the tenth century, reflect a preoccupation in the late Anglo-Saxon Church with perdition and the infernal punishments that awaited sinners and heathens. Perhaps stimulated in part by anxiety at the approach of the millennium, both Ælfric and Wulfstan (archbishop of York, 1002–23) show an overt concern with the continuation of paganism and the evil deeds of mankind in their sermons and homilies. Their works stress the terrible judgement that awaited sinners and heathens and the infernal torment to follow. The Viking raids and incursions, during the late eighth to ninth and late tenth centuries, partially inspired the great anxiety apparent in the late Anglo-Saxon ecclesiastical leadership. Not only were these events perceived as divine punishment for a lack of religious devotion and fervour in the English people, but the arrival of Scandinavian settlers in the late ninth century may have reintroduced pagan practice and belief into England.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Illustrations of damnation in late Anglo-Saxon manuscripts
Description:
‘Many tribulations and hardships shall arise in this world before its end, and they are heralds of the eternal perdition to evil men, who shall afterwards suffer eternally in the black hell for their sins.
’ These words, composed by Ælfric in the last decade of the tenth century, reflect a preoccupation in the late Anglo-Saxon Church with perdition and the infernal punishments that awaited sinners and heathens.
Perhaps stimulated in part by anxiety at the approach of the millennium, both Ælfric and Wulfstan (archbishop of York, 1002–23) show an overt concern with the continuation of paganism and the evil deeds of mankind in their sermons and homilies.
Their works stress the terrible judgement that awaited sinners and heathens and the infernal torment to follow.
The Viking raids and incursions, during the late eighth to ninth and late tenth centuries, partially inspired the great anxiety apparent in the late Anglo-Saxon ecclesiastical leadership.
Not only were these events perceived as divine punishment for a lack of religious devotion and fervour in the English people, but the arrival of Scandinavian settlers in the late ninth century may have reintroduced pagan practice and belief into England.

Related Results

A handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits
A handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits
There is no acknowledged corpus of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits. Scholars have had the benefit of Bigelow's Placita Anglo-Normannica for over a century, and this will soon be superseded by...
Some aesthetic principles in the use of colour in Anglo-Saxon art
Some aesthetic principles in the use of colour in Anglo-Saxon art
In a paper in Anglo-Saxon England 3 N. F. Barley has drawn attention to the richness of Anglo-Saxon colour vocabulary, which, he suggests, emphasized the light–dark axis of colour ...
Kings and books in Anglo-Saxon England
Kings and books in Anglo-Saxon England
AbstractThis article examines the evidence for books associated with kings in Anglo-Saxon England, making the case for the ninth century as the key period of change. A wide variety...
Settlement mobility and the ‘Middle Saxon Shift’: rural settlements and settlement patterns in Anglo-Saxon England
Settlement mobility and the ‘Middle Saxon Shift’: rural settlements and settlement patterns in Anglo-Saxon England
The traditional image of the stable Anglo-Saxon village as the direct ancestor of the medieval village is no longer tenable in view of growing evidence for settlement mobility in t...
Lapidary traditions in Anglo-Saxon England: part II, Bede'sExplanatio Apocalypsisand related works
Lapidary traditions in Anglo-Saxon England: part II, Bede'sExplanatio Apocalypsisand related works
Part I of this article1treated the three main streams of lapidary knowledge current in the early Middle Ages (the classical encyclopaedists, the patristic2and the medical tradition...
Cooking and cuisine in late Anglo-Saxon England
Cooking and cuisine in late Anglo-Saxon England
AbstractThis article tries to explore the question of whether the Anglo-Saxons in the tenth and eleventh centuries actually had an interest in elaborate and socially distinctive fo...
Anglo-Saxon carpentry
Anglo-Saxon carpentry
During the last century there were vigorous arguments between architectural historians about whether any buildings had survived from before the Norman Conquest. Although as early a...
Late Anglo-Saxon metal-work: an assessment
Late Anglo-Saxon metal-work: an assessment
It is a decade since the British Museum published its catalogue of late Anglo-Saxon metal-work – ‘late’ in this context meaning between the eighth century and the eleventh – and th...

Recent Results

Afropolitanism
Afropolitanism
African discourse has been dominated for almost a century by three politico-intellectual paradigms: anticolonial nationalism, various reinterpretations of Marxism, and a Pan-Africa...
Chinese color prints of today
Chinese color prints of today
Tschichold, Jan, Chinese Color prints, 1953, Beechhurst Press...

Back to Top