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  2. History of Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Anglo-Saxon_England

    The language of the migrants, Old English, came over the next few centuries to predominate throughout what is now England, at the expense of British Celtic and British Latin. The arrival of the Anglo-Saxons into Britain can be seen in the context of a general movement of Germanic peoples around Europe between the years 300 and 700, known as the ...

  3. Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_settlement_of...

    An 1130 depiction of Angles, Saxons, and Jutes crossing the sea to Britain equipped with war gear from the Miscellany on the Life of St. Edmund. Another 6th century Roman source contemporary with Gildas is Procopius who however lived and wrote in the Eastern Roman Empire, and expressed doubts about the stories he had heard about events in the west.

  4. Anglo-Saxons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxons

    In modern times, the term "Anglo-Saxons" is used by scholars to refer collectively to the Old English speaking groups in Britain. As a compound term, it has the advantage of covering the various English-speaking groups on the one hand, and to avoid possible misunderstandings from using the terms "Saxons" or "Angles" (English), both of which terms could be used either as collectives referring ...

  5. Saxons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saxons

    The Angles are the source of the term "English" which became the more commonly-used collective term. The term "Anglo-Saxon", combining the names of the Angles and the Saxons, also came into use by the eighth century, initially in the work of Paul the Deacon, to distinguish the Germanic-speaking inhabitants of Britain from continental Saxons ...

  6. Timeline of conflict in Anglo-Saxon Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_conflict_in...

    c. 446: The "Groans of the Britons" - A last appeal (possibly to the Consul Aetius) for the Roman army to come back to Britain. 449: Vortigern invites Saxons to come and help them against the Picts, who were raiding the east coast, and allows them to settle on "The eastern side of the island."

  7. Kingdom of Sussex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Sussex

    The Kingdom of the South Saxons, today referred to as the Kingdom of Sussex (/ ˈ s ʌ s ɪ k s /; from Middle English: Suth-sæxe, in turn from Old English: Suth-Seaxe or Sūþseaxna rīce, meaning "(land or people of/Kingdom of) the South Saxons"), was one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the Heptarchy of Anglo-Saxon England. [6]

  8. Old Saxony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Saxony

    Saxons had been raiding the eastern seaboard of Britain from here during the 3rd and 4th centuries (prompting the construction of maritime defences in eastern Britain called the Saxon Shore) and it is thought that following the collapse of the Roman defences on the Rhine in 407 pressure from population movements in the east forced the Saxons and their neighbouring tribes the Angles and the ...

  9. History of the Anglo-Saxons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Anglo-Saxons

    Under the influence of Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry he compiled the first edition of the History of the Anglo-Saxons between 1799 and 1805, and became one of the earliest scholars to document Anglo-Saxon historical manuscripts in the Cottonian collection at the British Museum. [1] By 1852, the history had seen seven ...