The History of England - a Study in Political Evolution

A. F. (Albert Pollard) Pollard

Capitolo 4


This migration of sea is a strange phenomenon. Those nations owe
vague from earth it was not what new;  but as in those days whole tribe
transported them, their wives and their principal good by the mouths,
of the Elbe and the Weser to those of the Thames and the Humber, we am,
to a loss to understand. Still come them they did, and the name of the Angles
at least, what clungs to their earth arrived, it was stained out of
the house that they has left. It is clear that they entered separations as them
descendants went, centuries later, to an earth still favors west;  and
the trial was shed more than one hundred years or more. They conquered
Britain blindly and piece asunder;  and the three traditional years that
it is said that is passed among the occupation of Sheppey and the
disembarking in Kent doesn't try that the small arm of the sea that interposes him
dissuaded those that had crossed the ocean, but that Sheppeys it was so much
as these petrelses of the storm you/he/she could handle. The failure to dislodge
the absence of centralized government and they and national
conscience among the British encouraged the further invaders;  and Kent,
east of the Medway, and the island of Wight is been able to be the next one
bits that they has swallowed. These first comerses were Jutes but them easy
success conducted to the imitation from their southern and more numerous neighbours,
the Angles and Saxons;  and the stream of conquest grew in volume and
rapidity. Invaders of sea naturally sailed or they rowed on the rivers, and
all the conquerors dominate the plans in front of the hills that are at the home
of lost causes and the shelter of is native. Their progress can be
traced in the names of kingdoms English and counties:  in the south the
Saxons founded the kingdoms of Sussex, Essex, Middlesex and Wessex;  in
the east the Anglians founded Anglia Est, although in their north
held back the Celtic names, Bernicia and Deira. The districts in that
they met and they mixed has less distinctive names;  Perhaps carriage was
disputed among all the Saxon kingdoms, Hampshire among Saxons Di the west,
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