What if the most powerful kingdom in 7th century Britain wasn’t built on rolling hills or fertile plains, but on a man-made island in a trackless swamp? This episode uncovers the lost realm of the *Gyrwe*, a kingdom of fen-dwellers whose mastery of the watery wilderness allowed them to hold the mighty Mercian war machine at bay for generations. We journey into the mist-shrouded landscapes of the East Anglian Fens, following the archaeology of fish weirs, hidden causeways, and floating fortresses. The episode explores how this amphibious culture used its environment as a weapon, creating a natural defense so formidable that kings like Penda and Wulfhere of Mercia were forced into negotiation rather than conquest. We examine the delicate diplomacy of eels, peat, and wicker, tracing how tribute flowed from dry land into the marshes. Listeners will discover a radically different model of Dark Age power, one built not on sword-blades alone, but on ecological expertise and control of vital trade corridors. This is the story of how geography could forge sovereignty, and how a people wrote their history not on parchment, but into the very waterways they commanded. Sometimes, the deepest strongholds are not made of stone, but of mud and mist. #ForgottenKingdoms #DarkAgeFens #Gyrwe #Mercia #AmphibiousWarfare #SeventhCenturyBritain #SwampSovereignty Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
続きを読む
一部表示