Adoption of Frankish, Roman and Christian customs coin from c. 650–675.|alt= During the conversion period there was a shift away from Scandinavian influence and towards Frankish and
Eastern Roman culture. This reorientation and increased southern influence with Christianity led to the revival of
gold coins in the early 7th century, beginning in Kent, with large scale minting of silver coins seen from onwards. The adoption of Christianity by the elite can be seen in the archaeological record in the reduction of richly furnished
burials, with them becoming rare by the late 7th century and almost none between 730 and the beginning of the
Viking Age towards the end of the 8th century. Furnished graves also become scarce in lower status contexts between the late 7th and early 8th centuries, although it took until roughly the 10th century before most burials were taking place in churchyards. In the late 6th to early 8th centuries, some burials show influences of both heathen and Christian customs such as the
Prittlewell royal Anglo-Saxon burial which contained items such as gold foil crosses, a
drinking horn and a
lyre. The body was further positioned facing the east in a Christian manner whilst also being placed beneath a large
howe. It has been argued that trying to ascertain whether the man buried was a Christian or pagan is ultimately unproductive as this period was characterised by ideological experimentation and
religious syncretism. Written sources, such as Bede's letter to
Ecgbert of York, draw attention to the low number of bishops and people taking regular communion despite
tithes being taken. This sentiment is further attested in the 747
Council of Clovesho which stated that priests should have a correct understanding of the
doctrine of the Trinity and teach this, along with the Creed. They also record deficiencies in training restricting the influence of Christianity with Bede describing Bishop
John of York as noting that one priest was performing baptisms wrongly due to a lack of knowledge. Outside of royal nunneries, it has been suggested that Christianity was slow to enter into homes, where the power of women was greatest. Despite this, Christianity had become firmly established in the English kingdoms by 730 and although aspects of the pre-Christian culture remained, Christianity was the dominant intellectual paradigm.
Continuation and suppression of heathen practices , which lists a number of practices considered heathen as punishable offences. Whilst Bede equates the baptism of a king with the complete adoption of Christianity by the whole ruled population, royal baptisms were only an important step in the process that could have taken generations. Accounts of
apostasy of elites demonstrate that knowledge and respect for heathen traditions continued in some regions after baptism of the first king. Consistent with this, the early converts to Christianity Æthelburht, Edwin and Oswald appear to have allowed heathen rites to continue to be practised against the wishes of the clergymen, leading to Pope Gregory in 601 urging Æthelburht "hasten to extend the Christian faith among the people who are subject to you. Increase your righteous zeal for their conversion; suppress the worship of idols; overthrow their buildings and shrines". According to Bede, Eorcenberht of Kent, who ruled from 640 to 664, was the first king to begin trying to eliminate heathen cult activities. This reluctance shown in the early stages of Christianisation has been argued to have resulted from the need to balance the demands of the Church, practicalities of placating local elites and maintenance of positive relationships with other kingdoms. Active suppression of paganism in the wider population seems to only have begun in the late 7th century. From this point onwards, legal codes and
penitentials often forbid practices considered heathen. In its section entitled "Of the Worship of Idols", the late 7th- or early 8th-century
Penitential of Theodore assigns penance to those ("who sacrifice to demons"), lasting between 1 and 10 years depending on the deemed severity of the offence. The term "demons" in this context would likely have referred to heathen gods and other beings connected to Anglo-Saxon pre-Christian religion, as these were typically equated in Christian thinking. The penitential further lists the appropriate punishment for practices such as the eating of food offered in sacrifices to the recipient being and the burning of cereals where a man has died to bring good health to the household. Similar prohibitions are seen throughout other law codes from a similar time such as those of
King Wihtred of Kent, dating to around 695. The 8th-century lists punishments for those that act wrongly. For example, those who bring
offerings to springs, stones or trees should fast on only bread and water for three years, whilst those that only eat there should fast for one year in the same manner. Similar law codes are produced such as the early 11th-century
law codes of Cnut and
Canons of Edgar, written by Archbishop
Wulfstan (died 1023) of York, which enforce observance of Christianity across the whole of England, including the baptism of newborns, paying of
tithes, worship and love of one god and participation in
housel. They further state that priests should strive to extinguish all heathen practices and forbid the worship of the traditional gods. Many laws specify punishments for those caught following heathen customs such as the
Norðhymbra preosta lagu, dating to after 1027, which describes how those guilty of carrying out acts such as and "
idol worship" are to pay a fine to the Church and to the king. In the case of the building of a ("sanctuary"), the laws state that half the fine should go to Christ (likely meaning the Church) and the other to the landowner where the was made, suggesting they were secret places, typically attended by those of low social standing. Wulfstan's
the Peace of Edward and Guthrum similarly prescribes
wergild or a fine proportional to the severity of the crime for those who honour heathenship, whilst the
II Cnut law code states that apostates should be exiled or executed. Furthermore, the
VII Æthelred law code dated to around 1009 instructs that all religious foundations should sing masses daily named "" ("Against the pagans"). These writings frequently list forbidden practices, possibly allowing inference of what may have been taking place, such as the veneration of the sun and moon, and the "nonsense" practised at elder trees, in ("sanctuaries") and at stones. Whilst it is difficult to discern which of these existed in Britain before the migrations of heathen Scandinavians in the 9th centuries and onwards, and which were brought by them, there does not seem to be a significant difference between the practices condemned in Northumbria and the more southern parts of England, where Scandinavian influence was less extensive. Furthermore, there is agreement between Wulfstan's writings and the 8th-century on matters such as forbidding the bringing offerings to trees,
springs and stones, which Wulfstan records aims for good health of themselves or their livestock. So many early medieval churches are found nearby to prehistoric monuments that it is unlikely to be coincidental. The variety of contexts, however, has been used to argue that they are not all due to the single explanation of the churches being built to Christianise a heathen holy place. Alternative reasons may be due to the sites also being settled and their use as fortifications. Written sources tend to focus on the active use of Roman ruins rather than pre-Christian monuments such as howes or ditches. One possible example of it however is in
Guthlac A, where the author may have intentionally depicted the demon-haunted howe into which the saint ventures as resembling a heathen holy place, making the narrative one in which a place of heathen worship is made into a Christian one. A similar changing of association is likely also attested in the marking of a cross on the prehistoric
standing stone at Rudston, which a church was built next to. It has been further proposed that in an attempt to replace heathen beliefs, tales were spread that described the miracles of saints and their power both to heal, and over nature and harvests, such as those from
Lives of Cuthbert and
Dialogues.
Blending of heathen and Christian cultural elements , depicting the Germanic tale of
Wayland (left) alongside the Christian
Adoration of the Magi (right). Several modern English religious words still used in Christianity derive from Old English and are cognate with terms in other Germanic languages such as
Old Norse, having roots in Proto-Germanic and predating the introduction of Christianity to England. These include words such as
god, holy, bless,
heaven and
hell (cognate with ). Furthermore, the term
Yule originally referred to a Germanic heathen winter festival that was incorporated into the celebration of Christmas and Easter likely derives its name from the name of the god
Eostre.
Old English writings also represent Jesus in the framework of the Anglo-Saxon elite, using terms for him such as ("lord") and describing his disciples as
þegns. The
Anglo-Saxon royal genealogies further trace the descent of the kings to gods such as Woden and
Seaxneat, with in some cases the ancestry being extended back to Biblical figures such as
Noah. Similarly, Old English literature attests to the combination and adaptation of Christian imagery and
Germanic heroic traditions originating in the pre-Christian religion.
Beowulf, for example, has been argued to be the result of Christian attempts to reinterpret the old lore in the light of the new theology. This is seen in their description of
ettins (such as
Grendel) and
elves as kindred of
Cain, harmonising
Germanic folklore and
Biblical mythology. Similarly, this combination of cultural elements is also seen in
The Dream of the Rood when Jesus actively
mounts the cross himself, in contrast to the typical Christian focus on humility and submission to death. The popularity of tales originating in the pre-Christian culture is attested by a letter sent in 797 by
Alcuin to
Hygebald, the
bishop of Lindisfarne, in which he asks "" ("What has
Ingeld to do with Christ?"), in criticism of the monks' fondness of listening in the refectory to Germanic legends, which he described as pagan, instead of focusing on spiritual wisdom. Charms such as
Æcerbot show blending of heathen cultural elements into a Christian ritual context that have been suggested to be as much a "folklorisation" of Christianity as a Christianisation of folklore. Furthermore, other charms focus on defending against beings from Germanic folklore such as elves, dwarfs and
ēse. This is also seen in material finds such as the
Near Fakenham plaque which was likely made to cause the death of a dwarf that was either causing, or equated with, an illness and forms part of a wider cultural practice also reflected in the
Ribe skull fragment. Often explicitly Christian figures are invoked for help, such as in the
Ƿið dƿeorh charms. One of these invokes the names of saints while another requires the writing of the names of the
Seven Sleepers of Ephesus on
Communion wafers, the hanging of them around a virgin's neck and the reciting of a that describes the dwarf's sister making it swear oaths to not harm the afflicted person again. Christian figures are not exclusively relied on, however, with the
Canterbury charm from a manuscript dated to around 1073 invoking the god
Þórr for healing an illness caused by a
þyrs, similar to the
Sigtuna and
Kvinneby amulets from Sweden. Some themes in British ballads and other popular culture have been argued to derive from pre-Christian sources, though there are many uncertainties in their influences due to dynamic elements and continued close contacts with Germanic-speaking cultures across the North Sea and multiple possible cultures of origin. One such example is the early 16th-century English
chapbook Mary of Nemmegen, in which the
devil appears to a woman in the form of a man with only one eye as he must always have a physical fault, resembling
Óðinn who is identified with the devil in several North-Germanic sources. It has been suggested this motif was present in other Germanic-speaking areas as the source of the text was Dutch. Similar motifs proposed to derive from tales of Óðinn include one of the
Child Ballads in which the devil engages in a wisdom contest with a young girl, threatening to make her his lover if she cannot answer them. In some cases, names of beings in ballads and folklore more widely derive from those from Anglo-Saxon and Nordic paganism such as
Hind Etin (from or ), who abducts a woman and is not Christian, in line with some depictions of in North-Germanic sources. Elves similarly are ultimately derived from Germanic paganism though how they were understood has changed significantly over time and it is unclear if their roles in ballads align well with how they were conceived of in pre-Christian religions.
Importance of English missionaries baptising (top) and being martyred (bottom) as depicted on the
Fulda Sacramentary After the establishment of the Church in England, many
English missionaries became instrumental in the adoption of Christianity amongst other peoples in
Northern Europe such as the
Saxons and
Scandinavians.
Saint Boniface also spent 6 years in
Frisia in the early 8th century in an ultimately unsuccessful mission. In particular, after the failed German missions in the 9th century, the
Christianisation of Denmark, Norway and Sweden during the late 10th and 11th centuries was dominated by Englishmen. Notably,
Hákon góði, the son of
Haraldr hárfagri, was also fostered by
Æðelstān around 930, leading to him later being referred to as ("Æðelstān's foster-son"). According to later sagas such as Hákonar saga góðá, he later returned to Norway and became the first king there to encourage the adoption of Christianity in the region, inviting a bishop and priests from England to help him. The reliability of these sources is unclear, given that they are not contemporary to Hákon and that the poem composed in his praise shortly after his death,
Hákonarmál, refers to him still as heathen. Further English missionaries in Norway, such as those in the company of
Olaf Tryggvason and
Olaf Haraldsson are recorded by accounts such as that written by
Adam of Bremen and sagas. Bede writes that English missionaries were inspired to convert the continental Saxons by their shared ancestry and it has been suggested that the missionaries to Scandinavia may also have been motivated by this reason. The ability for English bishops and priests to perform missionary work in Scandinavia was also facilitated by the extensive political interactions between the regions that were occurring at the time, such as the formation of the
North Sea Empire under
Cnut. ==See also==