The
Votadini (the
Wotādīnī, or
Votādīnī) were a people of the
Iron Age in
Great Britain, and their territory was briefly part of the
Roman province Britannia. Their territory was in south-east
Scotland and north-east
England, extending south of the
Firth of Forth and extended from the
Stirling area down to the English
River Tyne, including at its peak what are now the
Falkirk,
Lothian and
Borders regions of eastern Scotland, and
Northumberland in north east England. Their capital was probably the
Traprain Law hill fort in
East Lothian, until that was abandoned in the early
400s, moving to
Din Eidyn (
Edinburgh).
The name is recorded as Votadini in classical sources. Their descendants were the early medieval kingdom known in Old Welsh as Guotodin, and in later Welsh as Gododdin (pronounced [go'doðin]), resulting from established processes of language change.
Prehistory
The area was settled as early as
3000 BC, and offerings of that period imported from
Cumbria and
Wales left on the sacred hilltop at
Cairnpapple Hill,
West Lothian, show that by then there was a link with these areas. By around
1500 BC Traprain Law,
East Lothian was already a place of burial, with evidence of occupation and signs of ramparts after
1000 BC. Excavation at
Edinburgh Castle found late
Bronze Age material from about
850 BC.
Brythonic Celtic culture and language spread into the area at some time after the 8th century BC, possibly through cultural contact rather than mass invasion, and systems of kingdoms developed. Numerous hillforts and settlements support the image of quarrelsome tribes and petty kingdoms recorded by the Romans, though evidence that at times occupants neglected the defences might suggest that symbolic power was sometimes as significant as warfare.
The Roman period
In the
1st century the
Romans recorded the Votadini as a
British tribe. Between
138-
162 they came under direct Roman military rule as occupants of the region between
Hadrian's and the
Antonine Walls. Then when the Romans drew back to
Hadrian's Wall the Votadini became a friendly
buffer state, getting the rewards of
alliance with Rome without being under its rule, until about
400 when the Romans withdrew from southern Great Britain. Quantities of Roman goods found at
Traprain Law,
East Lothian might suggest that this proved profitable, though this is open to speculation.
Since the 3rd century Britannia had been divided into four provinces. In a late reorganisation a province called Valentia was created, which may have been a new province, perhaps including the Votadini territory, but is more likely to have been one of the four existing provinces renamed.
The sub-Roman period
After the Roman withdrawal in the early
5th century, the lands of the Votadini became part of the area known as the
Hen Ogledd (the "Old North").
By about 470 a new kingdom of Gododdin had emerged covering most of the original Votadini territory, while the southern part between the Tweed and the Tyne formed its own separate kingdom called Brynaich. Cunedda, legendary founder of the Kingdom of Gwynedd in north Wales, is supposed to have been a Gododdin chieftain who migrated south-west about this time.
Both kingdoms eventually fell to the Angles of Bernicia; it is this warfare that is commemorated in Aneirin's late 6th/early 7th century poem-cycle Y Gododdin.
Modern reference
The name has been taken by the
Votadini Motorcycle Club, based in the North East of England.
See also
References
Cited references
General references- Scotland Before History - Stuart Piggott, Edinburgh University Press 1982, ISBN 0-85224-348-0
- Scotland's Hidden History - Ian Armit, Tempus (in association with Historic Scotland) 1998, ISBN 0-7486-6067-4
External links