Affiliation:
1. Whitworth University in Spokane
Abstract
The existential threat of environmental collapse loomed large in the
early medieval English imagination. In particular, the work of Wulfstan,
Archbishop of York and Ælfric of Eynsham pointed to the imminence of
the apocalypse. Wulfstan explicitly attributed environmental collapse
to human sin, while Ælfric urged the faithful to look hopefully to the
post-apocalyptic establishment of a new Earth. The broad audience and
didactic intent of these prolific and well-connected theologians makes
their work a useful representation of English theology at the turn of the
millennium. Similarly, the 10th-century manuscript called the Exeter
Book—the largest, most diverse extant collection of Old English poetry,
including religious lyrics, obscene riddles, and elegies—may serve as a
representative of the contemporaneous poetic corpus.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press