कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
HOW TO SURVIVE THE DARK AGES
BBC History UK
|October 2022
The collapse of Roman rule in Britain left a vacuum that numerous powers competed to fill - but only a few realms endured. How did some thrive while others vanished or were vanquished? Thomas Williams offers six crucial survival tips for would-be rulers of early medieval kingdoms
1 Go big or go home
After Roman rule collapsed at the start of the fifth century, everything changed in Britain - politically, socially, culturally and economically. Migration from northern Europe and around the Irish Sea contributed to the development of new kingdoms across the island that competed for power, or just for survival, until the advent of the Vikings marked a watershed at the end of the eighth century. Some of these kingdoms - Wessex in south-west England; Mercia in the Midlands; Northumbria in the north-east; East Anglia; and Gwynedd in north-west Wales - left an enduring legacy.
Others sank with barely a trace. So what factors brought long-term success? Growth was one key strategy. It wasn't a universal prerequisite - East Anglia, for example, remained largely static in size and shape until the Viking Great Army conquered it in AD 869. But most of the big beasts of early medieval Britain were realms that pursued aggressive, expansionist policies.
Take Northumbria, itself formed from the merger of two smaller kingdoms, Bernicia and Deira. It swallowed up several near neighbours, and had a crack at others.
Mercia was the midland realm with perhaps the greatest ambitions of all particularly during the reign of Offa (ruled 757-796) and his successor Coenwulf (r796-821). In the eighth century, it controlled an empire that extended from the Welsh borders to the Wash and south to the Channel. At its height, Mercia could claim overlordship of Sussex and Ken Hwicce, Lindsey and parts of Wales.
Wessex, the south-western realm that was later the only survivor of the Viking cataclysm, entered the mid-ninth century in control of all of Britain south of the Thames.
यह कहानी BBC History UK के October 2022 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
BBC History UK से और कहानियाँ
History Extra
Going for gold
PATRICIA FARA recommends a globetrotting, time-travelling account of the roots of chemistry
2 mins
May 2026
History Extra
Viking revenge
JAMES OSBORNE indulges his love of Norse history in a role-playing game that scores high on the visuals but only skates over the underlying history
1 mins
May 2026
History Extra
Siena in five places
One of Tuscany's most magical hilltop cities is a medieval marvel of civic pride.
3 mins
May 2026
History Extra
The great survivor
When Elizabeth II ascended the throne in 1952, she could barely have conceived the currents - imperial retreat, multiculturalism, de-industrialiation – that would transform the nation during her reign. On the centenary of the Queen's birth, David Cannadine explores how she navigated seven decades of dizzying change
10 mins
May 2026
History Extra
Georgian Chocolate Tart
ELEANOR BARNETT serves up a rich chocolate tart that was once fit for a recovering king
2 mins
May 2026
History Extra
Capital ideas
A Kingdom and a Village: A One -Thousand-Year History of Moscow
1 mins
May 2026
History Extra
War report
SAM WILLIS enjoys a richly detailed and entertaining account of Admiral Horatio Nelson's greatest victory and its complicated aftermath
2 mins
May 2026
History Extra
The Peasants Revolt erupts
Popular anger at rising living costs shakes feudal England to its core
1 mins
May 2026
History Extra
Tales of coexistence
HEATHER J SHARKEY is impressed by a sweeping yet nuanced book challenging the idea that Jews and Muslims have been locked in a perpetual state of war
2 mins
May 2026
History Extra
"Narratives of victimhood, resistance and sacrifice are core to the Iranian regime's identity"
Revolution, repression and recurring crisis have shaped Iran's recent past – and continue to define its volatile present
10 mins
May 2026
Translate
Change font size
