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has been a welcome freeing-up of attitudes. In the past two decades the intellectual climate in archaeology has become more liberal, and slightly less intolerant of dissent from within. Ironically, only history—in perhaps a century or two—will be able to judge the extent to which archaeology is actually revealing truths or is building castles in the air.

      There is one important difference between history and archaeology which has nothing to do with the quality of the data we study, but rather its quantity. Written historical information on the post-Roman era in Britain is surprisingly scarce, and new discoveries happen very rarely; when they do, it is often in the course of archaeological excavation. By contrast with the essentially static historical ‘database’, that of archaeology is constantly increasing. Hardly a day goes by without some new discovery. Often these discoveries might appear routine and unimportant, such as the exposure of the footings of yet another Saxon-period house, but these isolated pieces of information can be fitted together to form a coherent pattern. It’s a process that can take years, as we will see (Chapter 8) in the case of Dominic Powlesland’s work at West Heslerton in Yorkshire, but that does not make it any less reliable. The progress of archaeological research tends to be gradual and cumulative; it can only be measured from time to time. That is why it is sometimes necessary to step back in both time and space to take a broader view.

      When I started writing this book, I intended to organise it much as we had done the three television films, for the simple reason that it seemed to work very well. I also liked the process that gave rise to the structure of the films. In many ways the making of the television series was like an archaeological project, being based on a small and closely integrated team. As the months passed its structure grew in complexity: stories nested within stories in a way that is only possible on film, where one can show one thing on screen, while telling another in commentary and flashback. I decided to arrange the book in a simpler fashion, that was only broadly based on the structure of the films. I start with two chapters on the ancient sources and modern origin myths of Britain, and the legends that surround King Arthur. In subsequent chapters I turn to the archaeological evidence, starting not in the Dark Ages of immediately post-Roman Britain, not even in the preceding Roman period, but in pre-Roman, or prehistoric, times, where the roots of the mythical King undoubtedly lie.7

       Dates and Periods

Date Period Name Alternative Names Period
1500 Post-medieval
1066 Medieval (can start c. AD 800) The Middle Ages
800 Late Saxon Early Medieval
650 Middle Saxon
450 Early (or Pagan) Saxon (‘Pagan’ is an older usage) Early Christian (in the south-west) ‘The Dark Ages’ or Migration Period
410 Sub- or Post-Roman
43 AD The Roman Period
BC 150 Late Iron Age
450 Middle Iron Age
750 Early Iron Age
1250 Late Bronze Age
1500 Middle Bronze Age
2500 Early Bronze Age
4200 Neolithic or New Stone Age
10,000 Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age
500,000 Palaeolithic or Old Stone Age
Archaeological Characteristics Notes
1485 Le Morte d’Arthur printed c. 1136 Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain 1066 Norman Conquest
Towns flourish 871-899 King Alfred reigns
Appearance of first towns in Britain 731 Bede’s History finished 664 Synod of Whitby
625 King Raedwald of Essex buried at Sutton Hoo 597 St Augustine’s mission to the Anglo-Saxons lands in Thanet c. 475-550 Gildas writes
‘Anglo-Saxon’ pottery at end of 4th century
Most of Britain a part of the Roman Empire 409 British reject Roman rule367 great Barbarian Conspiracy60-61 Boudica’s revolt
Wheel-made pottery British Celtic Art flourishes 54-55 Caesar’s two expeditions to Britain
Period of rapid population rise
Appearance of earliest Celtic Art
First construction of hillforts
Era of metalwork hoards
Era of round barrows Appearance of Beaker pottery 1600 Plank-built sea-going boats
2950 Stonehenge started First farming in Britain around 4200
Hunter-gathering and fishing communities, using small flint implements and weapons End of the last Ice Age
Hunter-gathering communities, using large flint implements and weapons Ages of IceEarliest people in what was later to become Britain