Читаем History of England 1-6 полностью

Some of the original houses were long, approximately 15 by 50 feet (4.5 by 15 metres), with animals living at one end and people at the other. These longhouses were inhabited in the same period as simple two-room cottages that were of variable size according to the resources of the particular owner. The cottages were originally made of timber, but the wood was replaced with stone in the late thirteenth century. A continuous process of building and rebuilding took place, so that the village seems to breathe and move. The cottages had ‘back gardens’ that led down to a ‘back-lane’, which divided the village from the adjacent farmland. There were two millponds, and a triangular green. On the green were two stock pounds. One of these circular pounds, however, might have been used as an arena for cock-fighting or for bull-baiting.

Yet this utterly medieval landscape is deceptive. Since the site of the village is determined by the presence of six springs in the immediate neighbourhood, it is clear that the territory would have invited earlier English settlers. The archaeology of field-walking has found a Mesolithic site in the immediate vicinity of the village, as well as evidence of wood clearance in the Neolithic and Bronze ages. The presence of stone axes and flints suggests continuous human occupation of the area. In a hollow, just to the south of the church, successive levels of earth or ‘hill-slip’ were found that can be dated continuously from the Neolithic to the late medieval period. Beside the church of St Martin, on a natural terrace, were found the remains of a grand burial of the Iron Age. It must always have been a sacred place. Under the first manor house was found evidence of a Romano-British building. Under the village itself have been uncovered traces of three Romano-British farms with trackways running beside them. There are also the remains of two buildings from the sixth century in the Saxon style.

The continuity of human life at Wharram Percy can still be seen, therefore, persisting for many thousands of years from the time when the first scattered settlers made a camp in this place. Indeed it is likely that the shape of the village itself was determined by the layout of the prehistoric fields. Its life persisted until the need for pasture declined or disease intervened. The population of Wharram Percy began to fall in the fifteenth century, and the village was finally deserted at the very beginning of the sixteenth century.

Wharram Percy is not an isolated example. It just happens to be the only village in England that has been so exhaustively documented. This suggests, although it does not prove, that there are many other English villages with prehistoric origins. No one can dig to find them because the ground is still inhabited. The history of the oldest settlements in the country lies buried in the silent earth. It is possible to conclude, however, that the sites of Mesolithic and Neolithic settlements still flourish.

15

The great charter

It was said of King Richard I that he cared only for the success he carved out with his own sword, and that he was happy only when that royal sword was covered with the blood of his enemies. He had the ferocity, rather than the heart, of a lion. As a whelp, too, he had his fair share of fighting; as we have seen, his adversaries were often the members of his own family.

Although he was born in Oxford, in the autumn of 1157, his ancestry was thoroughly French. As duke of Aquitaine he ruled over a vast dominion that may be compared to England in terms of wealth and prestige; it was in no sense an appendage of the Angevin Empire but, rather, at the centre of it. Yet in France he was only a duke; in England, he was king. That made all the difference. He had no interest in, or care for, the country itself; he just wanted to be known as sovereign by divine right. At his coronation in the autumn of 1189, he was stripped down to his breeches with his chest bare; the archbishop of Canterbury anointed him with chrism or holy oil on the breast, head and hands. This was the sign or token of sacral kingship. He then donned the ceremonial robes, and was crowned. It was usual for the archbishop to take the crown and lay it on the king’s head. Richard pre-empted the gesture by handing the crown to the cleric. It was a characteristic act of self-sufficiency. Certainly he looked the part. He was tall, at an estimated height of 6 feet and 5 inches (1.9 metres); in the twelfth century, that made him a giant; he had strong limbs, a good figure and piercing blue eyes.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

100 великих кораблей
100 великих кораблей

«В мире есть три прекрасных зрелища: скачущая лошадь, танцующая женщина и корабль, идущий под всеми парусами», – говорил Оноре де Бальзак. «Судно – единственное человеческое творение, которое удостаивается чести получить при рождении имя собственное. Кому присваивается имя собственное в этом мире? Только тому, кто имеет собственную историю жизни, то есть существу с судьбой, имеющему характер, отличающемуся ото всего другого сущего», – заметил моряк-писатель В.В. Конецкий.Неспроста с древнейших времен и до наших дней с постройкой, наименованием и эксплуатацией кораблей и судов связано много суеверий, религиозных обрядов и традиций. Да и само плавание издавна почиталось как искусство…В очередной книге серии рассказывается о самых прославленных кораблях в истории человечества.

Андрей Николаевич Золотарев , Борис Владимирович Соломонов , Никита Анатольевич Кузнецов

Детективы / Военное дело / Военная история / История / Спецслужбы / Cпецслужбы
100 знаменитых чудес света
100 знаменитых чудес света

Еще во времена античности появилось описание семи древних сооружений: египетских пирамид; «висячих садов» Семирамиды; храма Артемиды в Эфесе; статуи Зевса Олимпийского; Мавзолея в Галикарнасе; Колосса на острове Родос и маяка на острове Форос, — которые и были названы чудесами света. Время шло, менялись взгляды и вкусы людей, и уже другие сооружения причислялись к чудесам света: «падающая башня» в Пизе, Кельнский собор и многие другие. Даже в ХIХ, ХХ и ХХI веке список продолжал расширяться: теперь чудесами света называют Суэцкий и Панамский каналы, Эйфелеву башню, здание Сиднейской оперы и туннель под Ла-Маншем. О 100 самых знаменитых чудесах света мы и расскажем читателю.

Анна Эдуардовна Ермановская

Документальная литература / История / Прочая документальная литература / Образование и наука / Документальное