Anglo Saxon art - definition. What is Anglo Saxon art
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ART OF THE ANGLO-SAXON PERIOD
Anglo-Saxon Art; Anglo Saxon art; Anglo-Saxon cross; Anglo-Saxon metalwork
  • Disc brooch from Monkton, on display at the [[Ashmolean Museum]]
  • Brooch from the [[Pentney Hoard]], in the [[Trewhiddle style]].
  • Head of a [[tau cross]], with ''[[Christ Treading on the Beasts]]'', an especially popular subject in England
  • Bird from the Sutton Hoo shield (part replica)
  • The [[Fuller Brooch]], now in the [[British Museum]]
  • [[Claw beaker]] in glass
  • The [[evangelist portrait]] and [[Incipit]] to Matthew from the [[Stockholm Codex Aureus]], one of the "Tiberius group", show the Northumbrian Insular and classicising continental styles that combined and competed in early Anglo-Saxon manuscripts. It was probably made in [[Canterbury]].
  • 11th century walrus ivory cross reliquary (Victoria & Albert Museum)
  • The English army flee, the final surviving scene of the [[Bayeux Tapestry]].
  • Evangelist portrait from the [[Grimbald Gospels]], early 11th century, in the late Winchester style.
  • Fragment of cross shaft from [[St Oswald's Priory, Gloucester]]; at right with added, but perhaps not inauthentic, colour.
  • Shoulder-clasps from [[Sutton Hoo]], early 7th century
  • [[Sutton Hoo]], gold and [[niello]] belt buckle
  • alternative view]]) in [[Cumbria]]
  • The front cover of the [[St Cuthbert Gospel]], 690s; the original tooled red goatskin binding is the earliest surviving Western [[bookbinding]]

Anglo-Saxon art         
Anglo-Saxon art covers art produced within the Anglo-Saxon period of English history, beginning with the Migration period style that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from the continent in the 5th century, and ending in 1066 with the Norman Conquest of England, whose sophisticated art was influential in much of northern Europe. The two periods of outstanding achievement were the 7th and 8th centuries, with the metalwork and jewellery from Sutton Hoo and a series of magnificent illuminated manuscripts, and the final period after about 950, when there was a revival of English culture after the end of the Viking invasions.
Anglo-Saxon model         
ECONOMIC MODEL OF CAPITALISM
Anglo-Saxon capitalism; Anglo-Saxon economies; Anglo-Saxon economy (economic model); Anglo-Saxon economy
The Anglo-Saxon model (so called because it is practiced in English-speaking countries such as the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, New Zealand, AustraliaMitchell 2006, p.116.
Anglo-Saxon paganism         
  • A 1908 depiction of [[Beowulf]] fighting the dragon, by J. R. Skelton.
  • A political map of Britain {{circa}} 650 (the names are in modern English)
  • [[Roseberry Topping]] in [[North Yorkshire]], once known as the 'Hill of Óðin'
  • Funerary urn from the [[Snape Anglo-Saxon Cemetery]].
  • One of the burial mounds at Sutton Hoo
  • James Doyle Penrose]].
  • The Neolithic long barrow of [[Wayland's Smithy]] may have had cultic symbolism for the pre-Christian Anglo-Saxons
POLYTHEISTIC RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES OF THE ANGLO-SAXONS
Anglo-Saxon mythology; Anglo-saxon mythology; English legend; Anglo-Saxon polytheism; Wodenism; Anglo-Saxon heathenism; English heathenism; English paganism; Anglo-Saxon pantheon; Anglo Saxon mythology; Anglo Saxon paganism; Anglo-Saxon pagan; AS paganism; Anglo-Saxon Paganism; Anglosaxon neopaganism; Anglo-Saxon neopaganism; Saxon mythology; Paganism in England; Heathen Anglo-Saxons; Heathen Anglo-Saxon; Anglo-Saxon heathenry
Anglo-Saxon paganism, sometimes termed Anglo-Saxon heathenism (, "heathen practice or belief, heathenism", although not used as a self-denomination by adherents), Anglo-Saxon pre-Christian religion, or Anglo-Saxon traditional religion, refers to the religious beliefs and practices followed by the Anglo-Saxons between the 5th and 8th centuries AD, during the initial period of Early Medieval England. A variant of Germanic paganism found across much of north-western Europe, it encompassed a heterogeneous variety of beliefs and cultic practices, with much regional variation.

ويكيبيديا

Anglo-Saxon art

Anglo-Saxon art covers art produced within the Anglo-Saxon period of English history, beginning with the Migration period style that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them from the continent in the 5th century, and ending in 1066 with the Norman Conquest of England, whose sophisticated art was influential in much of northern Europe. The two periods of outstanding achievement were the 7th and 8th centuries, with the metalwork and jewellery from Sutton Hoo and a series of magnificent illuminated manuscripts, and the final period after about 950, when there was a revival of English culture after the end of the Viking invasions. By the time of the Conquest the move to the Romanesque style is nearly complete. The important artistic centres, in so far as these can be established, were concentrated in the extremities of England, in Northumbria, especially in the early period, and Wessex and Kent near the south coast.

Anglo-Saxon art survives mostly in illuminated manuscripts, Anglo-Saxon architecture, a number of very fine ivory carvings, and some works in metal and other materials. Opus Anglicanum ("English work") was already recognised as the finest embroidery in Europe, although only a few pieces from the Anglo-Saxon period remain – the Bayeux Tapestry is a rather different sort of embroidery, on a far larger scale. As in most of Europe at the time, metalwork was the most highly regarded form of art by the Anglo-Saxons, but hardly any survives – there was enormous plundering of Anglo-Saxon churches, monasteries and the possessions of the dispossessed nobility by the new Norman rulers in their first decades, as well as the Norsemen before them, and the English Reformation after them, and most survivals were once on the continent. Anglo-Saxon taste favoured brightness and colour, and an effort of the imagination is often needed to see the excavated and worn remains that survive as they once were.

Perhaps the best known piece of Anglo-Saxon art is the Bayeux Tapestry which was commissioned by a Norman patron from English artists working in the traditional Anglo-Saxon style. Anglo-Saxon artists also worked in fresco, stone, ivory and whalebone (notably the Franks Casket), metalwork (for example the Fuller brooch), glass and enamel, many examples of which have been recovered through archaeological excavation and some of which have simply been preserved over the centuries, especially in churches on the Continent, as the Vikings, Normans and Reformation iconoclasm between them left virtually nothing in England except for books and archaeological finds.