From Caledonia to Pictland: Scotland to 795 (New Edinburgh History of Scotland)
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Reader Reviews:
 Triumphant but turgid (2/2 people found this helpful)This book starts with the Roman attempt to conquer Caledonia in the first century A.D., and ends with the `Pictish Project': the formation of Scotland's first effective native state. Just because the Picts disappeared in the ninth century AD and left no written records of their own, there was for a long time an assumption that their history must be fundamentally different from the rest of the peoples of the post-Roman British Isles, unfathomable, static and `aboriginal'. In the last few years it has only taken a fresh, unbiased look at the sources to realise that real political history can be written about the Picts, that they were just as dynamic, just as capable of change and self-re-invention as anyone else on this island - and, indeed, that some of their rulers, especially the mid-eighth-century Onuist son of Uurguist, were state-builders as adroit as any of the better-known Anglo-Saxon kings.
The myth of Pictish peculiarity is just one of the received wisdoms that James E. Fraser sets out to explode. He downplays the importance of fifth-century Irish immigration into western Scotland in creating the nucleus of a future Scottish kingdom; he maximises the neglected evidence for British-speaking polities in southern Scotland; and he is determined to insist on the contribution of the Angles of Northumbria. None of this is likely to endear him to Scottish nationalists. Nor is plain speaking like this: `Popular culture ... has embraced the uplifting idea of a free Caledonia, where native Celts manfully and womanfully preserved their independence and their beloved ancient ways untouched by the grasping talons of a Roman eagle... . It is an utter fairy tale - our own way of writing pseudo-history which reveals more about ourselves (especially our anxieties about imperialism and globalisation) than it does about the past. The peoples of Caledonia had been snug in bed with the Roman elephant long before Severus came to northern Britain...' (and he goes on to outline the attractions of a strong mediating State for people who lived with the constant threat of total war that a non-state society entails). All this is a blast of fresh air amid the prevailing political correctness of textbooks like Edward James's Britain in the First Millennium.
However, if one of the aims of this book was to show the interested student and layman how Dark Age history is actually written, it is much less completely achieved. Some reviewers have charitably assumed that the difficulties of the source-material are bound to result in a narrative that is an impenetrable tangle of strange names, genealogies and technical terms. That is not the case, and it is a pity Fraser did not model himself on great explainers and de-mystifiers of the Celtic past like Kathleen Hughes and Richard Sharpe. Writing verbal spaghetti and expecting your readers to unwind it is not the mark of a great intellectual, it is just lazy showing off. Not content with the existing technicalities of his subject, Fraser insists on inventing technical terms of his own like `diphyletic'. He wilfully goes for the least familiar forms of historical names (Urbgen rather than Urien, AEdilfrith rather than AEthelfrith, without any justification), makes up confusing geographical descriptors like `Moravian' for people around the Moray Firth, and, right after he has shown the unreliability of genealogical evidence for the sixth century, invents pompous titles like `the House of Guipno' and `the AEdilfrithings' that make shadowy gangster families sound like something out of Debrett. Some of the sources - Bede, Adomnán, early Welsh poetry - are reasonably well explained, but some of the trickiest key sources, like the Irish annals and the genealogical texts that bear on Dál Riata (or Corcu Réti as Fraser capriciously prefers to call it), are barely introduced at all. Given that some of his most convoluted political arguments actually depend on very brief sections of these texts, if Fraser was serious about helping students see how it was done he would quote them in full, or print the relevant sections in an appendix. (It is still not particularly easy to get hold of copies of the Irish annals or the genealogies.) As it is, we have plenty of statements about the readiness of medieval writers to put a `spin' on their historical statements, but a determined clutching of cards to the chest when it comes to the way Fraser arrives at his own.
Early Scottish history has always suffered from a lack of helpful textbooks, and unfortunately on present form it does not look as if the new Edinburgh history is going to plug that particular gap. On the other hand, if you want proof that it is possible to have lots of new ideas about a badly evidenced period of history long thought hopeless (as Fraser gleefully outlines in his introduction), and, moreover, ideas which present people of the remote past as improvisers facing recognisable problems, and not as either barbaric dupes or plaster saints (one of whom, St Ninian, is convincingly dismissed as a ghost created by manuscript miscopying!), then it is worth the tussle of reading the book - a little at a time.
 Early Scottish History (0/0 people found this helpful)A brilliant series of books by Edinburgh University. All Scots should read them. This volume may be uncomfortanle reading as it challenges a lot of conventional wisdom about the Picts, the Scots of Dalriada and the influence of Northumbria.  Thorough Narrative on Northern Britain (2/3 people found this helpful)The chronologically first episode in the New Edinburgh History of Scotland is an impressive exposition of early Medieval northern Britain that paints a picture of the key players and power groups. The work reasserts the position of the Picts in early Scottish history and establishes the rivalries and pressures facing that ethnic group as well as the Gaels and Northumbrians.
The ebb and flow of power between various factions is painstakingly put together over the centuries with the role of key individuals such as Adomnan or Onuist being laid out extensively. This work is an excellent source for collated information on the Picts in particular who have traditionally been on the short end of historical analysis. The implications of who the Picts are and were to become are there for the reader to take on board if never truly espoused because it requires a logical step that strict historical analysis might not allow.
For a fair amount of the work I was under the impression that Fraser's narrative would suffer from the restrictions that most analysis of history falls under - that the sources available just do not document enough of the life and times of a culture to leave anything more than Kinglists. I found it quite difficult to follow the various familial trees as generations passed by in a flash and new kinglists emerged. Still, Fraser came through with a decent chapter near the end in discussing the warrior society and the requirements for ordinary folk to follow a leader into battle.
I did though have a quibble with the work and that is that there is some context missing around the role of religion in society. Fraser assumes an understanding of the importance of the Church in medieval society when discussing various power struggles between religious authorities. It is understandable that religious people are over-represented as the original sources were typically written by men of the cloth but it was difficult to get a feel for why it mattered when one centre of religious fervour was favoured over another.
Overall though as the first step in the New Edinburgh series it is a terrific scene setter that establishes some of the peoples around at the time of the Romans and populating the northern reaches of the British isles prior to the arrival of the Vikings.  Essential reading for the early medievalist (5/5 people found this helpful)James E. Fraser's new book is a marvelous re-casting of much of the earliest history of northern Britain. His narrative is engaging and convincing (though of course not always definite!). Used in tandem with Alex Woolf's 'From Pictland to Alba', Fraser's book will help the reader acquire a new understanding of the importance of the early medieval age in forming the kingdoms of twelfth and thirteenth-century Britain.
In particular, Fraser's chapter on 'The Age of Onuist' gives one an enhanced appreciation of Pictish power in the eighth century. Fraser highlights the rise of Onuist son of Vurguist, king of the Picts for some thirty years during the mid-eighth century, and emphasises the importance of this oft-ignored figure. To Fraser, Onuist is among the greatest of northern Britain's kings despite his infrequent mention by other historians.
Fraser writes in an easy, unadorned style, making 'From Caledonia to Pictland' very readable. That said, a history of this period must make heavy use of king-list, geneological, linguistic, place-name, archaeological and other problematic evidence, so one must have a head for that sort of thing. One further note: Fraser uses name spellings that might frighten the uninitiated. Instead of 'Angus' or 'Kenneth' the reader will find 'Onuist' and 'Cinaed' along with a sometimes-bewildering array of others. A little perseverence and the layman will have no trouble grasping his points.
Anyone looking for the cutting edge of historical understanding of northern Britain from the earliest times to the Viking Age should look no further.  Up to date survey by authoritative academic (6/8 people found this helpful)This volume in the New Edinburgh history of Scotland series should not be missed by anyone with an interest in the history of early Scotland (although I suppose 'Scotland' is something of an anachronism for this period?). Amazon has it listed as by 'Forsyth' (perhaps they're thinking of Katherine? They've also got the title slightly wrong! 'From Caledonia to Pictland to 795'): it's actually by James Fraser, University of Edinburgh, who is one of the pre-eminent scholars in this field just now. Buy it with 'From Pictland to Alba 789-1070' by Alex Woolf (another distinguished medievalist of the University of St Andrews), and you'll get a fascinating picture of everything that led up to the creation of 'Scotland' in the later middle ages, as well as an honest appraisal of the difficulties faced by historians researching this period. A great leap forward! Similar Products
From Pictland to Alba: Scotland, 789-1070 (New Edinburgh History of Scotland) Portmahomack: Monastery of the Picts Alba: The Gaelic Kingdom of Scotland AD 800-1124 (The Making of Scotland) The Wars of Scotland, 1214-1371 (New History of Scotland) Scotland Re-formed, 1488-1587 (New Edinburgh History of Scotland, Volume 6)
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