Hình ảnh trang
PDF
ePub
[ocr errors]

nius. In his second wife, perhaps, he might have been more fortunate, as we have no mention made of her; but it was otherwise with his third consort, who was de bauched by his own nephew Mordred. This produced a rebellion, in which the king and his traitorous kinsman meeting in battle, they slew each other.

In the mean time, while the Saxons were thus gaining ground in the West, their countrymen were not less active in other parts of the island. Adventurers A.D. still continuing to pour over from Germany, one 573. body of them, under the command of Uffa, seized upon the counties of Cambridge, Suffolk, and Norfolk, and gave their commander the title of king of the East Angles, which was the fourth Saxon kingdom founded in Britain.

Wachsen.

a. Another body of these adventurers formed a kingdom under the title of East Saxony, or Essex, comprehending Essex, Middlesex, and part of Hertfordshire. This kingdom, which was dismembered from that of Kent, formed the fifth Saxon principality founded in Britain. Rangi The kingdom of Mercia was the sixth which was Mä A.D. established by these fierce invaders, compre585. hending all the middle counties, from the banks

of the Severn to the frontiers of the two last-named kingdoms.

Koigi The seventh and last kingdom which they obtained Konigswich

Worth was that of Northumberland, one of the most powerful buland. and extensive of them all. This was formed from the

union of two smaller Saxon kingdoms, the one called Bernicia, containing the present county of Northumberland and the bishopric of Durham; the subjects of the other, called the Deiri, extending themselves over Lancashire and Yorkshire. These kingdoms were united in the person of Ethelfrid, king of Northumberland, by the expulsion of Edwin, his brother-in-law,

from the kingdom of the Deiri, and the seizure of his dominions.

In this manner, the natives being overpowered, or affische sächsische entirely expelled, seven kingdoms were established in paki Britain, which have been since well known by the name of the Saxon Heptarchy.-The unfortunate Britons, having been exhausted by continual wars, and even worn out by their own victories, were reluctantly compelled to forsake the more fertile parts of the country, and to take refuge in the mountainous parts of Wales and Cornwall. All the vestiges of Roman luxury were now almost totally destroyed by the conquerors, who rather aimed at enjoying the comforts of life than its magnificence. The few natives who were not either massacred or expelled from their habitations, were reduced to the most abject slavery, and employed in cultivating for their new masters those grounds which they once claimed as their own.

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

che.

From this time British and Roman customs entirely ceased in the island; the language, which had been ei-mulischen ther Latin or Celtic, was discontinued, and the Saxon or English only was spoken. The land, before divided into colonies or governments, was cantoned into shires, Eindfeilung Frires. with Saxon appellations to distinguish them. The habits of the people in peace, and arms in war, their titles of honour, their laws, and methods of trial by jury, were continued as originally practised by the Germans, only with such alterations as increasing civilisation produced. Conquerors, although they disseminate their own laws and manners, often borrow from the people they subdue. In the present instance they imitated the Britons in their government, by despotic and hereditary monarchies, while their exemplary chastity, and their abhorrence of slavery, were quite forgotten.

The Saxons being thus established in all the desirable Die Sachsen

[ocr errors]

parts of the island, and having no longer the Britons to
contend with, began to quarrel among themselves. A
country divided into a number of petty independent
principalities must ever be subject to contention, as
jealousy and ambition have more frequent incentives to
operate. The wars and revolutions of these little rival
states were extremely numerous, and the accounts of
them have swelled the historian's page. But these ac-
counts are so confusedly written, the materials so dry,
uninteresting, and filled with such improbable adven-
tures, that a repetition of them can gratify neither the
reader's judgement nor curiosity. Instead, therefore,
of entering into a detail of tumultuous battles, petty.
treacheries, and obscure successions, it will be more
conformable to the present plan to give some account
of the introduction of Christianity among the Saxons,
which happened during this dreary period.

Verfolgung
The Christian religion never suffered more persecu-
In filiution than it underwent in Britain from the barbarity of
Religion the Saxon pagans, who burned all the churches, stained

the altars with the blood of the clergy, and massacred all those whom they found professing Christianity. This deplorable state of religion in Britain was first taken into consideration by St. Gregory, who was then pope; Verbreitung and he undertook to send missionaries thither. It is den selben said, that before his elevation to the papal chair, he chanced one day to pass through the slave-market at Rome, and perceiving some children of great beauty who were set up for sale, he inquired about their country; and finding they were English pagans, he is said to have cried out, in the Latin language, Non Angli sed Angeli forent, si essent Christiani—“ They would not be English, but Angels, had they been Christians." From that time he was struck with an ardent desire to convert that unenlightened nation, and actually embarked in a ship

for Britain; when his pious intentions were frustrated by his being detained at Rome by the populace, who loved him. He did not, however, lay aside his holy resolution; for, having succeeded to the papal chair, he ordered a monk, named Augustine, and others of the same fraternity, to undertake the mission into Britain. It was not without some reluctance that these reverend men undertook so dangerous a task; but some favourable circumstances in Britain seemed providentially to prepare the way for their arrival. Ethelbert, king of Kent, in his father's lifetime, had married Bertha, the only daughter of Caribert, king of Paris, one of the descendants of Clovis, king of Gaul. But before he was admitted to this alliance, he was obliged to stipulate that this princess should enjoy the free exercise of her religion, which was that of Christianity. She was therefore attended to Canterbury, the place of her residence, by Luidhard, a Gaulish prelate, who officiated in a church dedicated to St. Martin, which had been built by the Romans, near the walls of Canterbury. The exemplary conduct and powerful preaching of this primitive bishop, added to the queen's learning and zeal, made very strong impressions upon the king, as well as the rest of his subjects, in favour of Christianity. The general reception of this holy religion all over the continent, might also contribute to dispose the minds of these idolaters for its admission, and make the attempt less dangerous than Augustine and his associates at first supposed.

A.

This pious monk, upon his first landing in the Isle of de 1: Missio Thanet, sent one of his interpreters to the Kentish king, declaring he was come from Rome with offers of eternal salvation. In the mean time he and his followers lay in the open air, that they might not, according to the belief of the times, by entering a Saxon house, subject themselves to the power of heathen necromancy. The king

[blocks in formation]

immediately ordered them to be furnished with all ne-
cessaries, and even visited them, though without declar-
ing himself as yet in their favour. Augustine, however,
encouraged by this favourable reception, and now seeing
a prospect of success, proceeded with redoubled zeal to
preach the Gospel, and even endeavoured to call in the
aid of miracles to enforce his exhortations. So much
assiduity, together with the earnestness of his address,
the austerity of his life, and the example of his followers,
at last powerfully operated. The king openly espoused
the Christian religion, while his example wrought so
successfully on his subjects, that numbers of them came
voluntarily to be baptized, their missionary loudly de-
claring against any coercive means towards their con-
version. The heathen temples, being purified, were
changed to places of Christian worship; and such
churches as had been suffered to decay, were repaired.
To facilitate the reception of Christianity, the pope en-
joined his missionary to remove the pagan idols, but not
to throw down the altars, observing, that the people
would be allured to frequent those places which they
had been taught to revere. He also permitted him to
indulge the people in those feasts and cheerful enter-
tainments, which they had been formerly accustomed to
celebrate near the places of their idolatrous worship.
The people thus exchanged their ancient opinions with
readiness, since they found themselves indulged in those
innocent relaxations, which are only immoral when car-
ried to an excess. Augustine was consecrated arch-
bishop of Canterbury, endowed with authority over ail
the British churches; and his associates, having spread
themselves over all the country, completed that conver-
sion which was so happily begun.

محمد

Verberitung des The kingdom of the heptarchy which next embraced the Christian faith was that of Northumberland, at that in Nord Humbreland.

« TrướcTiếp tục »