蒙茅斯的杰弗里和英国的过去

Rebecca Thomas
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摘要

杰弗里在《论不列颠》中没有给英国人留下太多篇幅。在某种程度上,这并不令人惊讶:杰弗里的历史可以追溯到特洛伊的不列颠人的起源,在罗马时代之前的不列颠花了大量的时间,因此英国人进入叙事的时间相当晚。然而,即使在他们到达之后,英国人也没有以我们所期望的方式出现。由比德的《教会史》和《盎格鲁-撒克逊编年史》等资料首创的、被杰弗里同时代的许多盎格鲁-诺曼历史学家接受和复制的英格兰王国发展的传统叙述,在DGB中没有立足之地。由于他对事件有着截然不同的看法,杰弗里当然不能被指责在处理英国历史方面缺乏独创性。他处理这个问题的方式不仅对我们理解他对英语的态度非常重要,而且对更普遍的DGB的组成也很重要。写英国历史的当代历史学家不乏其人,比如亨廷顿的亨利,他的《英国史》第一版于1130年完成,杰弗里很可能对这本书很熟悉。亨利向我们展示了英国历史的传统叙述,大量借鉴了比德和盎格鲁-撒克逊编年史。1亨格斯特和霍尔萨于449年到达英国,在叙述了他们与不列颠人的交易之后,亨利继续讲述了5世纪和6世纪其他各种撒克逊定居者。他们和不列颠人之间的战争经常被记录下来,只有在注意到519年威塞克斯王国的建立和17年的塞迪克国王统治之后,亨利才插入了亚瑟王的简短描述,主要是绘制的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Geoffrey of Monmouth and the English Past
Geoffrey does not grant much space to the English in the De gestis Britonum. In one respect, this is unsurprising: Geoffrey’s history extends back to the origins of the Britons in Troy, spending a significant amount of time in pre-Roman Britain, and as such the English enter the narrative rather late in the day. Even after their arrival, however, the English do not appear in the way which we might expect. The traditional narrative of the development of the English kingdoms, pioneered by sources such as Bede’s Ecclesiastical History and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and accepted and reproduced by many of Geoffrey’s contemporary Anglo-Norman historians, has no place in the DGB. With his strikingly different version of events, Geoffrey certainly cannot be accused of lacking originality in his treatment of English history. The way in which he approached this subject is highly significant not only for our understanding of his attitude toward the English, but also for the composition of the DGB more generally. There was no shortage of contemporary historians writing of the English past, such as Henry of Huntingdon, the first version of whose History of the English, with which Geoffrey was most likely familiar, was completed by 1130. Henry presents us with a conventional account of English history, drawing heavily on Bede and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.1 Hengist and Horsa arrive in Britain in 449, and after recounting their dealings with the Britons, Henry proceeds through the various other Saxon settlers of the 5th and 6th centuries. Battles between them and the Britons are often recorded, and it is only after noting the foundation of the kingdom of Wessex in 519 and the 17-year rule of King Cerdic that Henry inserts a brief account of King Arthur, drawn mainly
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