Difference between revisions of "Banners"

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File:Banner Leiden I Maccabeesjpg | 850-950AD Carolingian <br> Leiden I Maccabees f.15v & f.22r
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File:Banner Leiden I Maccabees.jpg | 850-950AD Carolingian <br> Leiden I Maccabees f.15v & f.22r
 
File:Banner Aachen Liuthar Gospels.jpg | 990AD Ottonian <br> Aachen Liuthar Gospels
 
File:Banner Aachen Liuthar Gospels.jpg | 990AD Ottonian <br> Aachen Liuthar Gospels
 
File:Banner BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v.jpg | 1025-10505AD English <br> BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v
 
File:Banner BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v.jpg | 1025-10505AD English <br> BL Vatican lat.12 f.37v

Revision as of 18:04, 1 February 2015


More Weapons pages

Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 2 out of 5. Article structure and content is subject to change as data is still being collected.
Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 2 out of 5. Article structure and content is subject to change as data is still being collected.

Banners, standards, flags, gonfanon (gonfalon, guntfano) and pennons (pennants) were commonly adopted by the warriors of the 9th – 12th centuries. This article attempts to briefly outline what the authors currently know about the subject. The style of banner stays surprisingly consistent from the 9th to the 12th centuries and across Western Europe. For this reason we’ve decided to look at all the evidence together rather than, as we usually do, break the evidence into English, Carolingian, etc.

From Art

Pennons

These are triangular flags or streamers.


Banners

These are rectangular flags ending in ‘swallowtails’.

Before 1066AD

The Bayeux Tapestry

Bayeux Tapestry Banners.jpg


After 1066AD


From Literature

For a full list of banners mentioned in primary sources see Banners from Literature.

Included here are only those quotes that describe the appearance of banners. I have omitted those quotes that just describe the banner as golden.

Bede – Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 731AD

  • Osthryth, queen of the Mercians
"...that there might be a perpetual memorial of the royal character of this holy man [King Oswald], they hung up over the monument his banner of gold and purple." [SELLAR 1907]

The Song of Roland, 1040-115AD

  • Verse 39
"They held Valentian lances, and shield on shoulder wore.
White and blue and vermilion were the gonfalons they bore." [BACON 1914]

Late Roman Draco Standards

Art

Literature

  • About Witikind, an adversary of Charlemagne
"Hic arripiens signum quod apud eo habebatur sacrum, leonis atque draconis desuper aquilae volantis insignitum effigie ..." [OAKESHOTT 1960:p178]

Archaeology
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Discussion


"... be the end would have been different. But Harold was struck, and cut down by a Norman sword when William's knights burst through the Huscarles to trample down the Dragon standard and Harold's banner of the Fighting Man." [OAKESHOTT 1960:p.180]


The Viking 'Raven Banner'

Art

Literature

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (890-1116AD)

  • AD 878
“And in the winter of this same year the brother of Ingwar and Healfden landed in Wessex, in Devonshire, with three and twenty ships, and there was he slain, and eight hundred men with him, and forty of his army. There also was taken the war-flag, which they called the RAVEN.” [INGRAM 1912]

Swanton’s translation [SWANTON 2000:p.77] of Anglo-Saxon Chronicle E “.. and there the banner which they called ‘Raven', was taken.” It's also mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle's B, C and D (B was written in the second half of the C10th, probably in the 970's) but it is not mentioned in the oldest surviving copy of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, A (written from c.890AD to 1070AD).

Asser's The Life of Alfred (1000AD)

"...and there they gained a very large booty, and amongst other things the standard called Raven; for they say that the three sisters of Hingwar and Hubba, daughters of Lodobroch, wove that flag and got it ready in one day. They say, moreover, that in every battle, wherever that flag went before them, if they were to gain the victory a live crow would appear flying on the middle of the flag ; but if they were doomed to be defeated it would hang down motionless, and this was often proved to be so. " [GILES 1848:p62]

A major doubt exists regarding the authenticity of this chapter in Asser's Life of Alfred. It has been fairly well proved that Bishop Parker added this chapter directly from The Annals of St Neots in his 1574AD published version of Asser's Life of Alfred. [STEVENSON 1904] The original sole surviving Anglo-Saxon manuscript, Cotton MS Otho A xii, was lost in the Cotton Library fire of 1731AD. The two remaining transcripts have both been affected to varying degrees by Bishop Parkers interpolations.

The Annals of St Neots (1120-1140AD)

""

Although written in the C12th, The Annals of St Neots was based in part on a now missing early version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. [SWANTON]

Saga of Olaf, Tryggvi's Son. (c.1260AD)

"...Take thou here this banner which I have made with all my skill, and I ween that it will bring victory to him before whom it is borne, but death to its bearer." The banner was wrought with cunningly executed handiwork and elaborate art. It was made in the shape of a raven, and when floating in the wind it resembled the raven flying."

This saga is part of the Flateyjarbók written between 1387AD to 1394AD and contains expanded version of some of the sagas from the Heimskringla.


Archaeology
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Discussion
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References

<nocite> ANDERSON1873 BACON1914 GILES1847 GILES1848 GUMMERE1910 HEWITT1885 LAING1907 OAKESHOTT1960 SELLAR1907 STEVENSON1904 SWANTON2000 TAYLOR1837 </nocite> <biblio force=false>#Template:Bib</biblio>