
Penda, Mercia's First King: The Last Great Heathen Warlord of Anglo-Saxon England
by: Paul Barrett (Author)
Publisher: Pen and Sword Military
Publication Date: 2024/7/30
Language: English
Print Length: 256 pages
ISBN-10: 1036102564
ISBN-13: 9781036102562
Book Description
Reexamine the life and impact of King Penda, whose villainous portrayal was challenged as he shaped early medieval Britain through cultural pluralism, stability, and the rise of Mercia during a transformative era.Since the Venerable Bede wrote his iconic Ecclesiastic History of England in the eighth century, King Penda has been relegated to the role of villain and treated as a barrier to advancement in a battle between new ideas and a new culture. Paul Barrett outlines the background to the Anglo-Saxon takeover in England and explores the broad concepts of the Angles’ traditional culture, before delving into the life of Penda (605 – 655). Penda’s life spanned the first half of the seventh century, the era which gave birth to national identities which still form the central components of modern Britain; Wales, Scotland, and England all take shape through this period. Penda’s seemingly impossible ascent to prominence starts on the very periphery of power and ends with the dominance of Britain. He is at the centre of Mercia’s birth, expansion and rise. Throughout his reign his kingdom becomes a bastion of stability in a period of endemic warfare, climate change challenges, cultural competition, and unstable nation-to nation relationships. Throughout his life Penda challenges the status quo and shows the value of cultural pluralism in a time when the growing power of a new faith, Christianity, was pushing all others into extinction. Guided by his loyalty to an ancient culture, service to his family, and his powerful Queen Cynewise, Penda launched Mercia towards eventual supremacy, which would last for over 200 years. He was the last of the great Anglo-Saxon heathen warlords.
About the Author
Reexamine the life and impact of King Penda, whose villainous portrayal was challenged as he shaped early medieval Britain through cultural pluralism, stability, and the rise of Mercia during a transformative era.Since the Venerable Bede wrote his iconic Ecclesiastic History of England in the eighth century, King Penda has been relegated to the role of villain and treated as a barrier to advancement in a battle between new ideas and a new culture. Paul Barrett outlines the background to the Anglo-Saxon takeover in England and explores the broad concepts of the Angles’ traditional culture, before delving into the life of Penda (605 – 655). Penda’s life spanned the first half of the seventh century, the era which gave birth to national identities which still form the central components of modern Britain; Wales, Scotland, and England all take shape through this period. Penda’s seemingly impossible ascent to prominence starts on the very periphery of power and ends with the dominance of Britain. He is at the centre of Mercia’s birth, expansion and rise. Throughout his reign his kingdom becomes a bastion of stability in a period of endemic warfare, climate change challenges, cultural competition, and unstable nation-to nation relationships. Throughout his life Penda challenges the status quo and shows the value of cultural pluralism in a time when the growing power of a new faith, Christianity, was pushing all others into extinction. Guided by his loyalty to an ancient culture, service to his family, and his powerful Queen Cynewise, Penda launched Mercia towards eventual supremacy, which would last for over 200 years. He was the last of the great Anglo-Saxon heathen warlords. Read more
Penda, Mercia's First King: The Last Great Heathen Warlord of Anglo-Saxon England
未经允许不得转载:电子书百科大全 » Penda, Mercia's First King: The Last Great Heathen Warlord of Anglo-Saxon England
相关推荐
Bodenstown revisited: The grave of Theobald Wolfe Tone, its monuments and its pilgrimages
Madame Brussels: The Life and Times of Melbourne's Most Notorious Woman
The Manchu Language at Court and in the Bureaucracy Under the Qianlong Emperor (Sinica Leidensia, 162)
A Mountain Oasis: Daily Life in a Village in the Yasin Valley, Pakistan (Iran and the Caucasus Monographs, 2)
Regnum Chinae: The Printed Western Maps of China to 1735 (Explokart Studies in the History of Cartography, 21)
Age of Exploration: How Chinese Scientists and Administrators Discovered China (Dialectics of the Global)
Blocking Kampfgruppe Peiper: The 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment in the Battle of the Bulge
House of Lilies: The Dynasty That Made Medieval France
电子书百科大全
评论前必须登录!
立即登录 注册