Name given to the Germanic-speaking peoples
who settled in England after the decline of Roman rule there. They were
first invited by the Celtic King Vortigern, who needed help fighting the
Picts and Scots. The Angles (Lat. Angli), who are mentioned in Tacitus’
Germania, seem to have come from what is now Schleswig in the later
decades of the 5th cent. Their settlements in the eastern, central, and
northern portions of the country were the foundations for the later kingdoms
known as East Anglia, Mercia, and Northumbria. The Saxons, a Germanic tribe
who had been continental neighbors of the Angles, also settled in England
in the late 5th cent. after earlier marauding forays there. The later kingdoms
of Sussex, Wessex, and Essex were the outgrowths of their settlements.
The Jutes, a tribe about whom very little is known except that they probably
came from the area around the mouths of the Rhine, settled in Kent and
the Isle of Wight. The Anglo-Saxons eventually formed seven separate kingdoms
known as the heptarchy. The term “Anglo-Saxons” was first used in Continental
Latin sources to distinguish the Saxons in England from those on the Continent,
but it soon came to mean simply the “English.” The more specific use of
the term to denote the non-Celtic settlers of England prior to the Norman
Conquest dates from the 16th cent. In more modern times it has also
been used to denote any of the people (or their descendants) of the British
Isles.
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