
Alcuin and Cynewulf: the art and craft of Anglo-Saxon verse
Author(s) -
Andy Orchard
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the british academy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2052-7217
DOI - 10.5871/jba/008.295
Subject(s) - orality , period (music) , literature , situated , craft , poetry , art , identity (music) , old english , literacy , anglo saxon , history , classics , visual arts , sociology , computer science , aesthetics , pedagogy , artificial intelligence
The essentially bilingual nature of Anglo-Saxon poetry is explored through the verse of two of the most prolific poets from the period, namely Alcuin and Cynewulf, composing primarily in Latin and Old English, respectively, but each reflecting knowledge and appreciation of verse in both languages. Both Alcuin and Cynewulf are shown to have consciously copied the works of their predecessors,and both in turn had their own verse evidently echoed by contemporary and later poets in both Anglo-Latin and Old English, so much so that they seem to have been the centres of closely identifiable schools of verse, active at around the same period, within a decade or two either side of the year 800, and sharing a similar background, attitude, and training. An Appendix considers the authorship and identity of Cynewulf, and suggests that, like Alcuin, he too may be best situated at the interface of orality and literacy in contemporary Northumbria.