THE PAGAN SAXON PERIOD
With the end of the Roman occupation, traditionally fixed at about A.D. 410 when
Honorius bade the Britons defend themselves, the fabric of Roman life did not
instantly fall to nothing. (fn. 40) The period during which the Romano-British population in
the area round London was replaced by an 'English' people is, however, hard to define.
It may perhaps be said to have begun with the arrival of early 'Pagan' (Teutonic)
elements and to be distinct from the later period during which a discernible organization
under known rulers was established. In any case the conventional picture of Teutonic
invaders arriving to take advantage of anarchy after the departure of the Romans needs
qualification. (fn. 41) In A.D. 429 and about 447 (fn. 42) Verulamium, less than nine miles from the
boundaries of Middlesex, was found by St. Germanus to be still run on Roman lines,
albeit creakily and timorously. But already 'Picts and Saxons' were advancing in that area
and Germanus is credited with helping to repel an attack. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
records a series of battles in south-east England between Britons and the invaders.
A reference to a Cuthwulf or Cutha capturing in A.D. 571, after a battle, places (fn. 43) as near
Middlesex as Aylesbury seems to imply that weapon-bearing Romano-British elements
remained at large in or near the Chilterns until at least the late 6th century. (fn. 44)
Some aspects of the 'Saxon' or Teutonic settlement may have originated as early
as the 3rd century or even before. Various Teutonic peoples were brought to Britain
by the Romans: these included Alamanni and, doubtless, others. Archaeological
corroboration for this has been found in pottery considered to incorporate both Teutonic and Romano-British features, and dating from the last century and a half of
Roman rule. (fn. 45) Ware of this kind has been found in places close to Middlesex: in,
for example, the City of London, at Verulamium, and in Essex and Kent. The pottery
can be attributed to the presence and influence of mercenaries, of casual or enforced
settlers, of traders, and of British women who married incomers. Detailed assessments
of this pottery are, however, far from complete or unanimous.
The true picture of arrivals in the mid-5th century and later may be complex, some
groups perhaps arriving under their 'lords', while others may have left their homeland
as a result of family enterprise. To these might well be added former mercenaries of the
Britons now seeking land, and to whom Middlesex, especially the south of the county,
offered reasonable agricultural land. Motives for the choice of settlement are not
difficult to find, but the direction from which the newcomers arrived is uncertain.
Evidence from burials indicates early settlement in the Upper Thames valley in, for
example, Berkshire and Oxfordshire. Kent and Surrey, especially around Mitcham,
Ewell, and Croydon, all near Middlesex, were also settlement areas; and in Cambridgeshire and elsewhere in East Anglia there were also settlements that can be termed 'early',
that is, of the 5th century. Essex, on the evidence of burials, was not an area of dense
settlement, although 'early' place-names ending in -ing are common. The settlers may
have extended their occupation by 'nibbling' where the opportunity offered, but since
few Middlesex sites have produced early Saxon material it is difficult to find affinities
with occupation areas elsewhere in south-east England.
Roman culture may possibly have remained intact for longer in the district around
London than in neighbouring areas. (fn. 46) That there are few Saxon finds from Middlesex
and in the area between St. Albans and London, (fn. 47) that Verulamium in A.D. 447 was
still 'Roman', (fn. 48) and that in A.D. 456 or 457 the Britons from Kent fled to London (fn. 49) is
evidence in support of this theory. After this, however, nothing is known for more than
a century, and whether London was destroyed and deserted or continued to exist as a
trading centre is uncertain. The earthwork in the Harrow area known as Grim's Dyke
was once thought to have been raised against the Saxons, but the finding in the 1950's
of Iron-Age pottery in the context of the rampart renders the date of the earthwork
problematical.

Cruciform Brooch from Shepperton (actual size)
The subsequent story of the fairly rapid assertion of East-Saxon rule in the London
area has not been fully elucidated. London became the seat of a bishopric again early in
the 7th century, and this perhaps suggests that some continuity of settlement on the
site had been maintained. Moreover, the Old English name Lunden (London) is in form
very close to the late Celtic Lundenion, (fn. 50)
possibly suggesting that the Teutonic
newcomers heard the name from Celtic
speakers. Perhaps, then, there were in the
6th and even in the 7th centuries both
Celtic-speaking Britons and Teutons in
the region.
Archaeological finds in the county have
proved inconclusive and are considerably
scantier than might be expected from
place-name evidence. (fn. 51) Much of the
material was, moreover, discovered before
1900 and is therefore inadequately recorded. Finds at Shepperton and Hanwell, however, certainly belong to the 5th and 6th centuries A.D. At Shepperton
close to the Thames, near both Chertsey and Walton bridges, and at Shepperton
Range (approximately TQ. 06756711) were found at various times (fn. 52) many Saxon
burials in the gravels. The burials are varied and seem to suggest a connexion with
a settlement. Skeletons and four urns were reported by Shurlock as having been found
by labourers in 1867 and 1868. In 1868 eight skeletons were found, all with their feet
to the east, three side by side and the rest laid 'promiscuously'. Associated finds
included a cruciform brooch, three pots, and some sherds. Two vessels found before
1869 at Walton Bridge Green contained calcinated bones, a small 'opalized glass bead,
and a small fragment of a bronze ornament'. Shurlock claimed to have found traces of
Roman pottery nearby. An heptagonal pot, possibly of the 5th century, displayed in
Shepperton library may be one of those noted by Shurlock. A series of 19th-century
water colours (reproduced facing p. 75) of pottery of the 5th century and later from
the Shepperton and Walton area was found in the Guildford Museum in 1962. The
vessels have disappeared and little is known of the details of the burials with which they
were associated. (fn. 53) In a burial found in 1868, of which a drawing exists, (fn. 54) the skeleton is
on its back; of the wooden shield that was over the body there survives only the boss
over the face. A sword is by the right arm and on the left flank had been a lance, indicated by the remaining split-socket iron spearhead and ferrule. In the drawing is also
shown a plain, quasi-globular urn some distance from the feet, possibly the 'inverted
urn, covering a heap of calcinated bones' mentioned by Shurlock. The drawing is
perhaps not entirely trustworthy since the skeletal toes are shown pointing skywards.
The difficulty of generalizing about burial fashions is indicated by the variety of
arrangements recorded by Shurlock: 'some bodies were burnt . . . and placed in
urns . . .; some were buried at full length, while others were found in a contracted
position'. The split-socket spearhead, a brooch, (fn. 55) and the various items of pottery are
undoubtedly of the Pagan period, perhaps of the late 5th or early 6th century.
A Saxon burial of the 7th century or later recorded from Twickenham is noteworthy.
It provided an ogee-profile shield boss, a garnet-set disc jewel and other items. The
uncertain associations of these objects and doubts about their provenance (fn. 56) put them,
however, outside the scope of this study. The Hanwell area has produced PaganSaxon finds from at least two sites. (fn. 57) One site was Seward's Pit, noted for Palaeolithic
finds, and in an area said to have been 'once heathland'. Seven burials, at least three of
which were of men with spears, are said to have been found there in 1886. The skeletons
are said to have been found with 'their martial cloaks' held by gold-plated bronze
saucer brooches of mid-6th-century date. One of the three (fn. 58) saucer brooches has a
piece of fibre still attached to the back. Some fifty iron spearheads were found 'adjoining'
the graves.
Pieces of pot and four pierced lead discs were recovered about 1910 and in 1915 at
Boston Road, Hanwell (centring on TQ. 153800), which is not far from the Seward's
Pit site. Two sherds are said to be from the 'top soil of the gravel pit'. (fn. 59) The plainrimmed and flat-bottomed pots are fairly early, perhaps of the 6th century. The finds
suggest a settlement site and the discs were probably loom-weights. (fn. 60)
Between 1953 and 1958 the kitchen area of Northolt Manor was excavated. (fn. 61) The
Saxon remains from this site, which was occupied until Tudor times, have been dated as
'late 7th century-early 8th century'. The remains are three graves, at least two of which
contained males. A few trinkets were found but no associated structural remains. One
of the skeletons, more than 45 feet from the other two, was that of a man aged not more
than thirty with a decorated seax-type knife by his left leg; there was also a knife tip
and two pieces of iron. The seax was of a broad type found on the Continent in deposits
of the 7th century and similar to seaxes from Long Wittenham (Berks.), St. Neots
(Hunts.), and Purton (Wilts.). (fn. 62) The excavators of the site considered that there might
have been a gap in time between these Saxon burials and the 10th-century occupation.
Little other material firmly datable to the 'early' or Pagan period has been found in
Middlesex. Material from the county thought to be of this period is listed in Sir
Mortimer Wheeler's London and the Saxons (1935). Examples include a bronze bowl
(Roman ?) with triangular suspension lugs rising from the rim (fn. 63) and attractive coloured
beads which, despite their uncertain or Roman origins, have been found in Saxon
contexts in the Greater London area. (fn. 64)

Saucer Brooches (L.M. 49.107/967,/969) from Seward's Pit, Hanwell (actual size)
The London Museum has a large collection of split-socket iron spearheads, most of
which were found in the Thames, especially near Old England. (fn. 65) They are regarded as
being of the 'early' period since similar examples have been found in datable contexts
elsewhere in south-east England. They cannot, however, yet be precisely dated.
Other material, such as scramasaxes and swords, is omitted from this account. Many
of these objects may not belong to the 'early' period, and they have, in any case, been
listed elsewhere. (fn. 66) Their archaeological value is limited by the fact that most are unassociated finds from the Thames.
Place-name evidence (fn. 67)
Representing the survival of a description given centuries before, place-names may
sometimes indicate early settlements as surely as archaeological excavation. (fn. 68) Some
names are regarded as 'early', but it is not always possible to be sure that all the 'early'
names, for example, those ending in -ing(s), of which there is a great ring round London, (fn. 69)
are of the earliest settlements. Yeading and Ealing preserve the names respectively of
the Geddingas and the Gellingas, and Wapping perhaps that of Waeppa's people. (fn. 70)
A group of place-names in the west of the county, Uxbridge, Uxendon, and Waxlow,
probably denotes the area of influence of the Wixan, a tribe mentioned in a 7th-century
source, (fn. 71) while the name Harrow denotes the temple (hearg) of another ancient people
(gumeninga). (fn. 72) Wembley and Fulham contain rare personal names. (fn. 73) Sometimes, as
in Hounslow and in Earthbury in Stepney, a tumulus (hlaw) or an earthwork is featured
in a place-name. (fn. 74) Legendary figures appear in the names Grim's Dyke, attributed to
Woden (Grim), (fn. 75) and Grinsgate in Hendon, a name which recalls Grendel, the monster
of the Beowulf saga. (fn. 76)
The distribution of early Saxon place-names in Middlesex is significant. (fn. 77) Most
farm or settlement names are in the southern part of the county, whereas in northern
Middlesex there are hardly any of them. It is clear that early settlers avoided woodland,
moors, and some heath and clay areas, much preferring the gravels and the drier parts
of the alluvial plain.
Little information can be drawn from the name Middlesex itself. (fn. 78) Although the
Middle Saxons are otherwise unknown in history, it is clear from the form in which the
name appears in an 8th-century charter that 'Middle Saxons' is indicated. It is only
possible, however, to speculate on the relations of this group with the East Saxons
(Essex) and their southern counterparts, the men of Surrey and Sussex. They may have
been a powerful group or merely dwellers in a region between larger and more powerful
groups or kingdoms.