Settlers and saints
The Anglo-Saxon way of life in the Peterborough area was very
different to that of the Romano-British. The great pottery
industries that flourished along the Nene valley in the 4th century
AD were abandoned in the 5th century. The town of Durobrivae
was not maintained, and gradually was forgotten. The grand
Roman buildings at Castor, and countless villas in the surrounding
countryside, were left to fall down, or were robbed for their
stone. The shells or sites of some of these Roman buildings,
however, were re-occupied by Anglo-Saxon families or continued to
be occupied by the native families, albeit eventually in the
Anglo-Saxon fashion.
Early and Middle Anglo-Saxon settlements generally comprised
small clusters of timber houses, rather than substantial villages.
Such settlements have been excavated at Woodston, Orton Longueville
and Maxey. Evidence of Anglo-Saxon craftsmanship can be seen in the
spectacular artefacts found in cemeteries, such as those excavated
at Woodston, Gunthorpe and Alwalton. The Peterborough area lay
on the boundary of two great Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, Mercia, to the
west, and East Anglia. The abbey at Peterborough was founded by
Mercian royalty during the second half of the 7th century and came
to acquire large amounts of land. With the abbey came also the
beginnings of the settlement that would eventually grow to become
the medieval town.
The settlement at Peterborough was
originally named Medeshamstede. It was renamed 'Burh' in the late
10th century after it was enclosed by a wall and ditch. 'Burh' was
an Anglo-Saxon term applied to fortified places. Later on it became
known as 'Burh St Peter', from which was derived the present-day
name 'Peterborough'.
William the Conqueror's armies were frustrated by rebellion in
the fens long after much of England had been subdued. Hereward the
Wake, who became the most famous of the English resistance leaders,
fought a guerrilla war against the Normans in the
fens. Anticipating the arrival of Peterborough's new Norman
abbot and his soldiers, a Danish fleet, with Hereward's support,
attacked the burh and looted the abbey's treasures.