
Today, we’re walking into an Anglo-Saxon mead hall to meet the storytellers of early medieval England – the men whose voices carried heroes, monsters, and memories through the centuries.
The scop is part historian, part musician, part memory-keeper. He’s expected to know lineages of kings, famous battles, past victories, and the deeds of long-dead warriors. In a largely non-literate society, that knowledge isn’t in books; it’s in his head, shaped into verses that people can remember.
And importantly, he isn’t the only one telling tales. Away from the great halls, families share shorter stories around the hearth at home. In these cottages and farmhouses, storytelling is more communal: anyone might sing a song, repeat a local legend, or pass on a favourite tale to children half-asleep by the fire.
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