A. F. (Albert Pollard) Pollard
Capitolo 2
of history English; but before history started, earth had received the
insular configuration that has greatly determined his/her fortune; and the
various peoples that was to shape and is shaped by the earth, had
made different by the other runs of the world. Very of these
peoples had occupied the earth in front of its conquest from the Anglo-Saxons,
some before it was Britain you protect. If men of neolithic replaced
palaeolithics equip in these invasion islands or from national evolution,
we don't know; but centuries before the Christian era the British
overflowed the country and it overlapped on his brown, you squat him
inhabitants. They climbed on comparatively tall in the staircase of
civilization; they cultivated the ground, mines worked cultivated various
forms of art, and he/she also built city. But their tribal and loose organization
leaves them to the mercy of the Romans; and although Julius Cesare is two
raids in the 55 A.C. and 54 A.Cs. left anybody permanent results, the conquest
you/he/she was completed soon when the Romans entered AD deposit in 43.
The extension to that the Romans during the three and a half centuries of
their rule in Britain civilized its inhabitants it is a matter of doubtful
inference. The rests of Roman roads, walls Romans and Roman villas
you still bear witness to their activity of material; and an occupation of the
unloadings from Roman troops and Roman officers, spread on three hundred and
fifty years, you/he/she has had to thrill on the superior classes of the British
at least of the knowledge with the language, religion, administration,
and social and economic setups of the conquerors. But, on the
whole, the sharp evidence rather to military occupation that to
colonization; and the Roman province resembled to more almost a German
what an a British colony of to-day. Rome didn't have then population surplus
with which to fill new territory; the only emigrants were the soldiers,
the officers and some dealers or seekers; and of this the most greater part was
partially the provincials of Romanized from the other parts of the empire, for a