Anglo-Saxons
Anglo-Saxon is the collective term usually used to describe the ethnically and linguistically related peoples living in the south and east of the island of Great Britain (modern Great Britain/United Kingdom) from around the early 5th century AD to the Norman conquest of 1066.BBC - History - Anglo-Saxons They spoke closely related Germanic dialects,
and they are identified by Bede as the descendants of three powerful Germanic tribes, the Angles and the Saxons from today's northern Germany, and the Jutes from today's Denmark; mostly from the Jutlandic peninsula.English and Welsh are races apart
Place names seem to show that smaller numbers of some other German peoples came over: Frisians at Fresham, Freston, and Friston; Flemings at Flempton and Flimby; Swabians at Swaffham; perhaps Franks at Frankton and Frankley.
It was perhaps under Offa of Mercia (reigned 755-759), or under Alfred the Great (reigned 871899) and his successors, that the several kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxons existed. Under the reign of Athelstan (reigned 924937) the Anglo-Saxon kingdom took shape into England.
The Old English terms ænglisc and Angelcynn ("Angle-kin", gens Anglorum) when they are first attested had already lost their original sense of referring to the Angles to the exclusion of the Saxons, and in their earliest recorded sense refers collectively to the Teutonic peoples who settled England in and after the 5th century.
Bede, writing in the early 8th century in his Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, (I.15) suggests that:
Other early writers do not bear out consistent distinctions, though in custom the Kingdom of Kent presents the most remarkable contrasts with the other kingdoms. West Saxon writers regularly speak of their own nation as a part of the Angelcyn and of their language as Englisc, while the West Saxon royal family claimed to be of the same stock as that of Bernicia in the north. On the other hand, it is by no means impossible that the distinction drawn by Bede was based solely on names such as Essex (East Saxons) and East Anglia (East Angles). That Bede could envisage one English people (gentis Anglorum and Anglorum populi) at least demonstrates that the Anglo-Saxons could be thought of in such terms in the 8th century.
The term Angli Saxones seems to have first been used in continental writing nearly a century before Alfred's time by Paul the Deacon, historian of the Lombards. There can be little doubt, however, that in this case it was used to distinguish the English Saxons from the continental Saxons.
Place names seem to show that smaller numbers of some other German peoples came over: Frisians at Fresham, Freston, and Friston; Flemings at Flempton and Flimby; Swabians at Swaffham; perhaps Franks at Frankton and Frankley.
It was perhaps under Offa of Mercia (reigned 755-759), or under Alfred the Great (reigned 871899) and his successors, that the several kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxons existed. Under the reign of Athelstan (reigned 924937) the Anglo-Saxon kingdom took shape into England.
Etymology :
The term "Anglo-Saxon" is from Latin writings going back to the time of King Alfred the Great, who seems to have frequently used the title rex Anglorum Saxonum or rex Angul-Saxonum.The Old English terms ænglisc and Angelcynn ("Angle-kin", gens Anglorum) when they are first attested had already lost their original sense of referring to the Angles to the exclusion of the Saxons, and in their earliest recorded sense refers collectively to the Teutonic peoples who settled England in and after the 5th century.
Bede, writing in the early 8th century in his Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, (I.15) suggests that:
- The people of the more northern kingdoms (East Anglia, Mercia, Northumbria) belonged to the Germanic Angles, whose name is be related to the name of the area Angeln (Anglia/Angeland) in Schleswig-Holstein (Germany).
- The people of Essex, Sussex and Wessex came from the Germanic Saxons, who came from the region of Old Saxony (Germany)
- The people of Kent and southern Hampshire came from the Germanic Jutes, who came from Juten (Jutia/Jutland) (Danemark and Germany)
Other early writers do not bear out consistent distinctions, though in custom the Kingdom of Kent presents the most remarkable contrasts with the other kingdoms. West Saxon writers regularly speak of their own nation as a part of the Angelcyn and of their language as Englisc, while the West Saxon royal family claimed to be of the same stock as that of Bernicia in the north. On the other hand, it is by no means impossible that the distinction drawn by Bede was based solely on names such as Essex (East Saxons) and East Anglia (East Angles). That Bede could envisage one English people (gentis Anglorum and Anglorum populi) at least demonstrates that the Anglo-Saxons could be thought of in such terms in the 8th century.
The term Angli Saxones seems to have first been used in continental writing nearly a century before Alfred's time by Paul the Deacon, historian of the Lombards. There can be little doubt, however, that in this case it was used to distinguish the English Saxons from the continental Saxons.