Following the story of the Britons through the troubled centuries between 400 and 1100, this salient account reveals the critical role these native Celtic people played in the shaping of Scottish history during the first millennium AD - and how, unlike the Picts and the Vikings, their place in history has often been ignored. Studying the rise and fall of the northern Britons - from their departure of Rome to the birth of medieval Scotland, their heroic poetry commemorating the valor of their warriors, images of warfare, political rivalry, and the influence of Christianity running like a thread through the centuries - this remarkable discourse considers how and why the once-powerful Britons lost their distinct identity to join their old enemies the Picts as one of Scotland’s vanished nations.
A very dense but very informative book. Tim Clarkson is a man who knows how to pack an immense amount of research into a very condensed space and because of that the book is most certainly not a light read. It takes effort to put together the tapestry that he weaves but the diligent reader will be rewarded with a incredibly rich and detailed picture of life for the Britons of Southern Scotland in the early Middle Ages.
An excellent and well-constructed volume filled to the brim with valuable information. The book is a comprehensive survey of early medieval Brythonic kingdoms in Southern Scotland and Northern Britain. Despite the scarcity of written and archaeological evidence in this historical period, the author did not fall into the trap of putting forward highly speculative or far-fetched hypotheses. Instead, he evaluates available evidence carefully and arrives at conclusions that I consider logical, though by no means definitive. Worth reading!
An excellent history of a perhaps neglected aspect of Scotland's past. It's well written and adds perspective to the contribution made by the Britons to the melting pot of what is now Scotland.
Clarkson has a remarkable gift for combining the excitement of the mystery of poorly understood and largely lost history with the sober analysis of the evidence we do have. Parts of this book are dense and difficult, but it is rewarding to the reader. This is learned and interesting, and it made me long to go exploring in southern Scotland.
A fascinating account of the Brythonic tribes that used to rule southern Scotland from a base at Dumbarton, and a salutary reminder that Celtic history is not as simple as "Scotland and Ireland = Goidelic, everything else = Brythonic".