Music. Waves breaking on a shingle beach
Narrator: England. Sixteen hundred years ago. A beach on the East coast. A man and a girl have seen something, a boat, coming their way.
Girl: Who are they Father?
Man: I don鈥檛 know.
Girl: Are they Britons like us?
Man: I don鈥檛 think so. Their boat looks strange. It鈥檚 too long to be one of ours.
Girl: Look Father. There鈥檚 another one. Two boats.
Man: No. Not two. Look further out; three鈥our鈥ive. And see, there. More. Lots more.
Girl: Father - I鈥檓 frightened.
Narrator: They don鈥檛 know it, but the girl and her father are looking at visitors from across the sea. People who will change Britain forever. People we call The Anglo-Saxons.
Sixteen hundred years ago the Anglo-Saxons started coming across the sea to Britain from countries we now call Denmark, the Netherlands and Germany.
At first they were just raiders; they stole valuable possessions from the Britons and then went home.
But soon the invaders became settlers. They brought their families, they built farms and villages. These Anglo-Saxons had come to stay.
FX: A horse walking, a dog barking, a cockerel crows etc as a thane returns to his village/farm/home at evening.
Narrator: Two hundred years later: The Anglo-Saxons now rule Britain. An Anglo-Saxon lord - a thane - is returning home to his wife and family.
FX: Fire in hearth
Wife: I was worried; you鈥檝e been away for days.
Thane: It was a long way.
Wife: Sit. I鈥檒l bring you food.
Thane: Has all been well?
Wife: The children are fine, the crops are ripening. No wolves have attacked the sheep. All is well. Now鈥 tell me of the meeting.
Thane: The witan was held two nights ago.
Wife: Tell me.
Thane: I鈥檓 tired. Tomorrow.
Wife: Were you allowed to enter the Great Hall? Were all the other thanes there?
Thane: I need to sleep.
Wife: Did you see the king?
Thane: Later.
Wife: Tell me now. I want to hear everything.
Thane: Alright鈥es, I entered the Great Hall. Yes, all the thanes of the kingdom were there.
Wife: Is the hall big?
Thane: Huge. Twenty men standing on each other鈥檚 shoulders wouldn鈥檛 reach the ceiling. The walls are hung with furs and tapestries 鈥 the finest. And swords and shields鈥 The tables stretch the entire length of the hall.
Wife: And the king?
Thane: The king sat at the highest table, surrounded by his advisors. The thanes sat down the sides.
Wife: Was there a great feast?
Thane: Meat was roasting on two huge fires. The king鈥檚 servants poured horns of mead. Every man ate and drank his fill.
Wife: And鈥he witan?
Thane: The next day the King held his witan and we found out why he wanted us there; we are to prepare ourselves for battle.
Wife: A battle?
Thane: The kingdom to the north wants to take our land. We鈥檙e going to attack them before they attack us. I must leave in three days.
Wife: You? Why do you have to go?
Thane: It鈥檚 my duty as a thane. If the king asks me to fight then I must fight.
Wife: No, I don鈥檛 want you to go. There is work to be done here. Harvest is coming. Who鈥檒l tell the servants what to do?
Thane: You will. You鈥檒l be in charge.
Wife: They won鈥檛 listen to me!
Thane: They will listen. Anyway, I won鈥檛 be away for long. This is just a brief quarrel between kings. It鈥檒l be over in no time.
Wife: You don鈥檛 know that. Please鈥
Thane: I have no choice. The King calls me and I must go. If I have to fight then I will fight.
Wife: But you鈥檙e not a fighter.
Thane: Really?
Wife: Once perhaps, but not any more. Now we are a farmers鈥andowners.
Thane: And why are we landowners? Why do we have a farm and fields and animals? Why do we have servants and live in this place? Because the king gave it all to us! So we serve the King. And when he calls us to battle, we do not argue. We pick up our weapons and fight, to the death if we have to.
Narrator: For the next three hundred years the five main Anglo-Saxon kingdoms - East Anglia, Mercia, Kent, Northumbria and Wessex - became stronger and richer. Sometimes they quarrelled and fought battles against each other鈥 but they also built castles and towns and farmed the fertile soil of England.
But then, in 873, new ships appeared sailing towards the English coast - fierce invaders from the north. The Vikings.