Beowulf
Beowulf
answer, many scholars believe it was either the 600s or 700s. Because the
poem makes many allusions to historical figures, it is thought that if the
poem were any later, these figures would have already been forgotten.
Scholars have recently begun to believe that Beowulf could have been
composed in the 900s, much later than they first suspected.
If Beowulf were created in the 7th or 8th centuries, it can be further
narrowed down by considering where the author might have lived. Scholars
believe there are three possibilities: Northumbria, during the Age of Bede,
in the late 7th and early 8th centuries; during King Offa's reign in Mercia,
in the latter half of the 8th century; or East Anglia during the 600s.
Although the possibility that Beowulf begun in Northumbria is no
longer a popular idea, it was at one time. The idea of Mercia is possible
because of the references to the King in the poem may have been a tribute
to the poet's patron. That the poem's origin comes from East Anglia is quite
a popular notion comes with the discovery of the Sutton Hoo: the ship
burial is extraordinarily similar to those mentioned in Beowulf, but, even
more, the items found in the burial ship can be closely linked with the
Uppsala, the royal court of Sweden at that time. It is thought that
Beowulfand the East Anglians share some ancestral lines. Beowulf may
have been means to define East Anglical history all the way back to
Scandinavia.