Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain by Allen, Grant - CHAPTER I.

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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain

CHAPTER I.

THE ORI­GIN OF THE EN­GLISH.

At a pe­ri­od ear­li­er than the dawn of writ­ten his­to­ry there lived some­where among the great ta­ble-​lands and plains of Cen­tral Asia a race known to us on­ly by the un­cer­tain name of Aryans. These Aryans were a fair-​skinned and well-​built peo­ple, long past the stage of abo­rig­inal sav­agery, and pos­sessed of a con­sid­er­able de­gree of prim­itive cul­ture. Though main­ly pas­toral in habit, they were ac­quaint­ed with tillage, and they grew for them­selves at least one kind of ce­re­al grain. They spoke a lan­guage whose ex­is­tence and na­ture we in­fer from the rem­nants of it which sur­vive in the tongues of their de­scen­dants, and from these rem­nants we are able to judge, in some mea­sure, of their civil­isa­tion and their modes of thought. The in­di­ca­tions thus pre­served for us show the Aryans to have been a sim­ple and fierce com­mu­ni­ty of ear­ly war­riors, farm­ers, and shep­herds, still in a par­tial­ly no­mad con­di­tion, liv­ing un­der a pa­tri­ar­chal rule, orig­inal­ly ig­no­rant of all met­als save gold, but pos­sess­ing weapons and im­ple­ments of stone,[1] and wor­ship­ping as their chief god the open heav­en. We must not re­gard them as an idyl­lic and peace­able peo­ple: on the con­trary, they were the fiercest and most con­quer­ing tribe ev­er known. In men­tal pow­er and in plas­tic­ity of man­ners, how­ev­er, they prob­ably rose far su­pe­ri­or to any race then liv­ing, ex­cept on­ly the Semitic na­tions of the Mediter­ranean coast.

[1] Pro­fes­sor Boyd Dawkins has shown that the Con­ti­nen­tal Celts were still in their stone age when they in­vad­ed Eu­rope; whence we must con­clude that the orig­inal Aryans were un­ac­quaint­ed with the use of bronze.

From the com­mon Cen­tral Asian home, colonies of war­like Aryans grad­ual­ly dis­persed them­selves, still in the pre-​his­toric pe­ri­od, un­der pres­sure of pop­ula­tion or hos­tile in­va­sion, over many dis­tricts of Eu­rope and Asia. Some of them moved south­ward, across the pass­es of Afghanistan, and oc­cu­pied the fer­tile plains of the In­dus and the Ganges, where they be­came the an­ces­tors of the Brah­mans and oth­er mod­ern high-​caste Hin­doos. The lan­guage which they took with them to their new set­tle­ments be­yond the Hi­malayas was the San­skrit, which still re­mains to this day the near­est of all di­alects that we now pos­sess to the prim­itive Aryan speech. From it are de­rived the chief mod­ern tongues of north­ern In­dia, from the Vin­dhyas to the Hin­du Kush. Oth­er Aryan tribes set­tled in the moun­tain dis­tricts west of Hin­dus­tan; and yet oth­ers found them­selves a home in the hills of Iran or Per­sia, where they still pre­serve an al­lied di­alect of the an­cient moth­er tongue.

But the mass of the em­igrants from the Cen­tral Asian fa­ther­land moved fur­ther west­ward in suc­ces­sive waves, and oc­cu­pied, one af­ter an­oth­er, the mid­land plains and moun­tain­ous penin­su­las of Eu­rope. First of all, ap­par­ent­ly, came the Celts, who spread slow­ly across the South of Rus­sia and Ger­many, and who are found at the dawn of au­then­tic his­to­ry ex­tend­ing over the en­tire west­ern coasts and is­lands of the con­ti­nent, from Spain to Scot­land. Min­gled in many places with the still ear­li­er non-​Aryan abo­rig­ines–per­haps Iberi­ans and Eu­skar­ians, a short and swarthy race, armed on­ly with weapons of pol­ished stone, and rep­re­sent­ed at the present day by the Basques of the Pyre­nees and the As­turias–the Celts held rule in Spain, Gaul, and Britain, up to the date of the sev­er­al Ro­man con­quests. A sec­ond great wave of Aryan im­mi­gra­tion, that of the Hel­lenic and Ital­ian races, broke over the shores of the _Ægean_ and the Adri­at­ic, where their cog­nate lan­guages have be­come fa­mil­iar to us in the two ex­treme and typ­ical forms of the clas­si­cal Greek and Latin. A third wave was that of the Teu­ton­ic or Ger­man peo­ple, who fol­lowed and drove out the Celts over a large part of cen­tral and west­ern Eu­rope; while a fourth and fi­nal swarm was that of the Slavon­ic tribes, which still in­hab­it on­ly the ex­treme east­ern por­tion of the con­ti­nent.

With the Slavo­ni­ans we shall have noth­ing to do in this en­quiry; and with the Greek and Ital­ian races we need on­ly deal very in­ci­den­tal­ly. But the Celts, whom the En­glish in­vaders found in pos­ses­sion of all Britain when they be­gan their set­tle­ments in the is­land, form the sub­ject of an­oth­er vol­ume in this se­ries, and will nec­es­sar­ily call for some small por­tion of our at­ten­tion here al­so; while it is to the Ger­man­ic race that the En­glish stock it­self ac­tu­al­ly be­longs, so that we must ex­am­ine some­what more close­ly the course of Ger­man­ic im­mi­gra­tion through Eu­rope, and the na­ture of the prim­itive Teu­ton­ic civil­isa­tion.

The Ger­man­ic fam­ily of peo­ples con­sist­ed of a race which ear­ly split up in­to two great hordes or stocks, speak­ing di­alects which dif­fered slight­ly from one an­oth­er through the ac­tion of the var­ious cir­cum­stances to which they were each ex­posed. These two stocks are the High Ger­man and the Low Ger­man (with which last may be in­clud­ed the Goth­ic and the Scan­di­na­vian). Mov­ing across Eu­rope from east to west, they slow­ly drove out the Celts from Ger­many and the cen­tral plains, and took pos­ses­sion of the whole dis­trict be­tween the Alps, the Rhine, and the Baltic, which formed their lim­its at the pe­ri­od when they first came in­to con­tact with the Ro­man pow­er. The Goths, liv­ing in clos­est prox­im­ity to the em­pire, fell up­on it dur­ing the de­cline and de­cay of Rome, set­tled in Italy, Gaul, and Spain, and be­com­ing ab­sorbed in the mass of the na­tive pop­ula­tion, dis­ap­pear al­to­geth­er from his­to­ry as a dis­tin­guish­able na­tion­al­ity. But the High and Low Ger­mans re­tain to the present day their dis­tinc­tive lan­guage and fea­tures; and the lat­ter branch, to which the En­glish peo­ple be­long, still lives for the most part in the same lands which it has held ev­er since the date of the ear­ly Ger­man­ic im­mi­gra­tion.

The Low Ger­mans, in the third cen­tu­ry af­ter Christ, oc­cu­pied in the main the belt of flat coun­try be­tween the Baltic and the mouths of the Rhine. Be­tween them and the old High Ger­man Swabi­ans lay a race in­ter­me­di­ate in tongue and blood, the Franks. The Low Ger­mans were di­vid­ed, like most oth­er bar­bar­ic races, in­to sev­er­al fluc­tu­at­ing and ill-​marked tribes, whose names are loose­ly and per­haps in­ter­change­ably used by the few au­thor­ities which re­main to us. We must not ex­pect to find among them the def­inite­ness of mod­ern civilised na­tions, but rather such a vague­ness as that which char­ac­terised the loose con­fed­era­cies of North Amer­ican In­di­ans or the var­ious shift­ing peo­ples of South Africa. But there are three of their tribes which stand fair­ly well marked off from one an­oth­er in ear­ly his­to­ry, and which bore, at least, the chief share in the coloni­sa­tion of Britain. These three tribes are the Jutes, the En­glish, and the Sax­ons. Close­ly con­nect­ed with them, but less strict­ly bound in the same fam­ily tie, were the Frisians.

The Jutes, the north­ern­most of the three di­vi­sions, lived in the marshy forests and along the wind­ing fjords of Jut­land, the ex­treme penin­su­la of Den­mark, which still pre­serves their name in our own day. The En­glish dwelt just to the south, in the heath-​clad neck of the penin­su­la, which we now call Sleswick. And the Sax­ons, a much larg­er tribe, oc­cu­pied the flat con­ti­nen­tal shore, from the mouth of the Oder to that of the Rhine. At the pe­ri­od when his­to­ry lifts the cur­tain up­on the fu­ture Ger­man­ic colonists of Britain, we thus dis­cov­er them as the in­hab­itants of the low-​ly­ing lands around the Baltic and the North Sea, and close­ly con­nect­ed with oth­er tribes on ei­ther side, such as the Frisians and the Danes, who still speak very cog­nate Low Ger­man and Scan­di­na­vian lan­guages.

But we have not yet ful­ly grasped the ex­tent of the re­la­tion­ship be­tween the first Teu­ton­ic set­tlers in Britain and their con­ti­nen­tal brethren. Not on­ly are the true En­glish­men of mod­ern Eng­land dis­tant­ly con­nect­ed with the Franks, who nev­er to our knowl­edge took part in the coloni­sa­tion of the is­land at all; and more close­ly con­nect­ed with the Frisians, some of whom prob­ably ac­com­pa­nied the ear­li­est pi­rat­ical hordes; as well as with the Danes, who set­tled at a lat­er date in all the north­ern coun­ties: but they are al­so most close­ly con­nect­ed of all with those mem­bers of the colonis­ing tribes who did not them­selves bear a share in the set­tle­ment, and whose de­scen­dants are still liv­ing in Den­mark and in var­ious parts of Ger­many. The En­glish prop­er, it is true, seem to have de­sert­ed their old home in Sleswick in a body; so that, ac­cord­ing to Bæ­da, the Chris­tian his­to­ri­an of Northum­ber­land, in his time this old­est Eng­land by the shores of the Baltic lay waste and un­peo­pled, through the com­plete­ness of the ex­odus. But the Jutes ap­pear to have mi­grat­ed in small num­bers, while the larg­er part of the tribe re­mained at home in their na­tive marsh­land; and of the more nu­mer­ous Sax­ons, though a great swarm went out to con­quer south­ern Britain, a vast body was still left be­hind in Ger­many, where it con­tin­ued in­de­pen­dent and pa­gan till the time of Karl the Great, long af­ter the Teu­ton­ic colonists of Britain had grown in­to peace­able and civilised Chris­tians. It is from the state­ments of lat­er his­to­ri­ans with re­gard to these con­ti­nen­tal Sax­ons that our knowl­edge of the ear­ly En­glish cus­toms and in­sti­tu­tions, dur­ing the con­ti­nen­tal pe­ri­od of En­glish his­to­ry, must be main­ly in­ferred. We gath­er our pic­ture of the En­glish and Sax­ons who first came to this coun­try from the pic­ture drawn for us of those among their brethren whom they left be­hind in the prim­itive En­glish home.

These three tribes, the Jutes, the En­glish, and the Sax­ons, had not yet, ap­par­ent­ly, ad­vanced far enough in the idea of na­tion­al uni­ty to pos­sess a sep­arate gen­er­al name, dis­tin­guish­ing them al­to­geth­er from the oth­er tribes of the Ger­man­ic stock. Most prob­ably they did not re­gard them­selves at this pe­ri­od as a sin­gle na­tion at all, or even as more close­ly bound to one an­oth­er than to the sur­round­ing and kin­dred tribes. They may have unit­ed at times for pur­pos­es of a spe­cial war; but their union was mere­ly anal­ogous to that of two North Amer­ican peo­ples, or two mod­ern Eu­ro­pean na­tions, pur­su­ing a com­mon pol­icy for awhile. At a lat­er date, in Britain, the three tribes learned to call them­selves col­lec­tive­ly by the name of that one among them which ear­li­est rose to suprema­cy–the En­glish; and the whole south­ern half of the is­land came to be known by their name as Eng­land. Even from the first it seems prob­able that their lan­guage was spo­ken of as En­glish on­ly, and com­par­ative­ly lit­tle as Sax­on. But since it would be in­con­ve­nient to use the name of one dom­inant tribe alone, the En­glish, as equiv­alent to those of the three, and since it is de­sir­able to have a com­mon ti­tle for all the Ger­man­ic colonists of Britain, when­ev­er it is nec­es­sary to speak of them to­geth­er, we shall em­ploy the late and, strict­ly speak­ing, in­cor­rect form of “An­glo-​Sax­ons” for this pur­pose. Sim­ilar­ly, in or­der to dis­tin­guish the ear­li­est pure form of the En­glish lan­guage from its lat­er mod­ern form, now large­ly en­riched and al­tered by the ad­di­tion of Ro­mance or Latin words and the dis­use of na­tive ones, we shall al­ways speak of it, where dis­tinc­tion is nec­es­sary, as An­glo-​Sax­on. The term is now too deeply root­ed in our lan­guage to be again up­root­ed; and it has, be­sides, the mer­it of sup­ply­ing a want. At the same time, it should be re­mem­bered that the ex­pres­sion An­glo-​Sax­on is pure­ly ar­ti­fi­cial, and was nev­er used by the peo­ple them­selves in de­scrib­ing their fel­lows or their tongue. When they did not speak of them­selves as Jutes, En­glish, and Sax­ons re­spec­tive­ly, they spoke of them­selves as En­glish alone.