Pecset
I Pecseti erano una tribù anglosassone che viveva nell'area centro-settentrionale del Peak District (vedi Monti Pennini), in Inghilterra.
Etnografia
[modifica | modifica wikitesto]Potrebbero essere stati discendenti della tribù celtica dei Briganti, diventando poi un popolo anglosassone in seguito al contatto con queste genti. I loro primi insediamenti nel Derbyshire, odierno Peak District, furono di Angli dell'ovest, tribù che avanzò lungo le valli dei fiumi Derwent e Dove nel VI secolo. Presso i popoli locali furono conosciuti come Pecseti. In seguito il loro territorio fece parte della parte settentrionale della Mercia.
Bibliografia
[modifica | modifica wikitesto]- R. Bigsby, Historical and Topographical Description of Repton, Londra, 1854.
- J. Collis, Wigber Low Derbyshire: A Bronze Age and Anglian Burial site in the White Peak, Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield, 1983.
- W. Davies e H. Vierk, The contexts of Tribal Hidage: social aggregates and settlement patterns, in Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. VIII, 1974
- D. Dumville, The Tribal Hidage: an introduction to its texts and their history, in The Origins of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms, ed. S.Bassett, 1989. ISBN 0-7185-1317-7
- M. J. Fowler, The Anglian Settlement of the Derbyshire and Staffordshire Peak District, in DAJ n. 74, pagg. 134-151, 1954.
- C. R. Hart, The North Derbyshire Archaeological Survey, Leeds: A. Wigley & Sons, 1981
- R. Hodges e M. Wildgoose, Roman or native in the White Peak, in K. Branigan ed. Rome and the Brigantes, pagg. 48-53. Sheffield, Sheffield University Press, 1980
- R. Hodges, Notes on the Medieval Archaeology of the White Peak, in R. Hodges e K. Smith ed. Recent Developments in the Archaeology of the Peak District, pagg. 111-22, Sheffield Archaeological Monographs 2, Sheffield, 1991
- R. G. Hughes, Archaeological Sites in the Trent Valley, South Derbyshire, in DAJ n. 81, pagg. 149-50, 1961.
- H. Jones, The Region of Derbyshire and North Staffordshire from AD350 to AD700: an analysis of Romano-British and Anglian barrow use in the White Peak, PhD thesis, University of Nottingham, 1997
- A. Ozanne. The Peak Dwellers, in Medieval Archaeology pagg. 6-7 e 15-52, 1962-1963
- D. Roffe, The Origins of Derbyshire, in DAJ n. 106, pagg. 102-112, 1986
- T. Routh, A Corpus of the Pre-Conquest Carved Stones of Derbyshire, in DAJ n. 58, pagg. 1-46, 1937
- P.C. Sidebottom, Schools of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture in the North Midlands, Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Sheffield, 1994
- P.C.Sidebottom, Stone Crosses in the Peak and the Sons of Eadwulf, in DAJ n. 119, pagg. 206-19, 1999
- Frank Stenton, Introduction to the Derbyshire Domesday, in W. Page ed. The Victoria History of the County of Derbyshire, Londra, 1905
- T. Unwin, Towards a model of Anglo-Scandinavian rural settlement in England, in D. Hooke ed. Anglo-Saxon Settlements, pagg. 77-98, 1988
- Barbara Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England, Londra: Seaby, 1990