| atheling: the highest (and smallest) class
of noblemen, related to the King or heir to the King
aurochs: bos taurus primigenius a
giant (skeletal remains show them as being fully 2 m tall at the shoulder)
form of early cattle, no longer found in Britain after the Bronze Age but
which continued to wander the forests and grasslands of Southern and Central
Europe. The last Aurochs, a cow, died in Poland in 1627. Aurochs
horns were used as high status ceremonial drinking horns, embellished with
silver fittings. Such an aurochs horn was laid with the dead king in the
Sutton Hoo burial, circa 625 CE. The aurochs was memorialized in the second
letter of the runic alphabet, the futhark, the letter Ur
signifying primal strength. The Old English Rune Poem describes the letter
Ur thus: Aurochs is fierce and high-horned/the courageous beast fights
with its horns/a well-known moor-treader, it is a brave creature (translation
Stephen Pollington, Rudiments of Runelore)
baldric: a long shoulder strap which
runs diagonally across the chest, from which a sword scabbard is attached.
The hilt of the sword rests not at the hip but higher up against the chest
Bookland/Folkland: distinctions of land
ownership. Bookland (bocland) was land held by charter (by "book")
from the King and his Witan, was often granted to religious houses, and
was mainly exempt from the three obligations which holders of Folkland
were subject to, that of sending warriors to the King's army (fyrdfare);
the repairing of forts, roads, and bridges (burhbot and bricgbot);
and the requirement of paying taxes to, and feeding and sheltering the
King and his men when visiting (gafol).
bourn: in this sense, its ancient meaning,
a destination or goal
browis: a cereal-based stew, often made
with fowl
burh: A fortified village
or lordly residence with administrative responsibilities. Fortifications
included palisade walls, ditches, and earth works surrounding the enclosed
buildings. King Ælfred (r 871-899) decreed during his reign that
such a burh be established every 40 miles apart throughout Wessex so that
in times of emergency the entire populace would be within 20 miles -or
a day's journey by foot - of protection. Some burhs were reused Iron
Age and Roman forts, but many were built new during Ælfred's reign.
ceorl: ("churl") a freeman ranking directly
below a thegn, able to bear arms, own property, and improve his rank
cottar: free agricultural worker, in later
eras, a peasant
cresset:
stone, bronze, or iron lamp fitted with a wick that burnt oil
ealdorman: a nobleman with jurisdiction
over given lands; the rank was generally appointed by the King and not
necessarily inherited from generation to generation. The modern derivative
alderman
in no way conveys the esteem and power of the Anglo-Saxon term.
frumenty: cereal-based main dish pudding,
boiled with milk. A version flavoured with currents, raisins and spices
was ritually served on Martinmas (November 11th) to ploughmen.
scop: ("shope") a poet,
saga-teller, or bard, responsible not only for entertainment but seen as
a collective cultural historian. A talented scop would be greatly valued
by his lord and receive land, gold and silver jewellry, costly clothing
and other riches as his reward.
seax: the curve-bladed dagger which gave
its name to the Saxons; all freemen carried one.
Sun-stone: the mineral Iolite. A slice
of this mineral acts as a polarizing filter, so that the position of the
Sun may be determined even in an overcast sky. Iolite can appear
violet, blue, or yellow, depending on the direction of the viewer.
thegn: ("thane") a freeborn warrior-retainer
of a lord; thegns were housed, fed and armed in exchange for complete fidelity
to their sworn lord. Booty won in battle by a thegn was generally offered
to their lord, and in return the lord was expected to bestow handsome gifts
of arms, horses, arm-rings, and so on to his best champions.
trev: a settlement of a few huts, smaller
than a village
tun: a large cask or barrel used for ale
weir: a trap for catching
fish made by pounding stakes into the bed of a river or stream and so creating
an enclosure in which the captured fish can be easily dipped out or speared
wergild: Literally,
man-gold; the amount of money each man's life was valued at. The Laws of
Æthelbert, a 7th century King of Kent, for example, valued the life
of a nobleman at 300 shillings (equivalent to 300 oxen), and a ceorl was
valued at 100 shillings. By Ælfred's time (reigned 871-899) a nobleman
was held at 1200 shillings and the ceorl's at 200.
Witan: a council of ealdorman, other high-ranking
lords, and bishops; their responsibilities included choosing the King from
amongst their numbers.
withy: a willow or willow wand; withy-man:
a figure woven from such wands |