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

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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain

CHAPTER VII.

THE NA­TURE AND EX­TENT OF THE EN­GLISH SET­TLE­MENT.

It has been usu­al to rep­re­sent the En­glish con­quest of South-​east­ern Britain as an ab­so­lute change of race through­out the greater part of our is­land. The An­glo-​Sax­ons, it is com­mon­ly be­lieved, came to Eng­land and the Low­lands of Scot­land in over­pow­er­ing num­bers, and ac­tu­al­ly ex­ter­mi­nat­ed or drove in­to the rugged west the na­tive Celts. The pop­ula­tion of the whole coun­try south of Forth and Clyde is sup­posed to be now, and to have been ev­er since the con­quest, pure­ly Teu­ton­ic or Scan­di­na­vian in blood, save on­ly in Wales, Corn­wall, and, per­haps, Cum­ber­land and Gal­loway. But of late years this be­lief has met with stren­uous op­po­si­tion from sev­er­al able schol­ars; and though many of our great­est his­to­ri­ans still up­hold the Teu­ton­ic the­ory, with cer­tain mod­ifi­ca­tions and ad­mis­sions, there are, nev­er­the­less, good rea­sons which may lead us to be­lieve that a large pro­por­tion of the Celts were spared as tillers of the soil, and that Celtic blood may yet be found abun­dant­ly even in the most Teu­ton­ic por­tions of Eng­land.

In the first place, it must be re­mem­bered that, by com­mon con­sent, on­ly the east and south coasts and the coun­try as far as the cen­tral di­vid­ing ridge can be ac­count­ed as to any over­whelm­ing ex­tent En­glish in blood. It is ad­mit­ted that the pop­ula­tion of the Scot­tish High­lands, of Wales, and of Corn­wall is cer­tain­ly Celtic. It is al­so ad­mit­ted that there ex­ists a large mixed pop­ula­tion of Celts and Teu­tons in Strath­clyde and Cum­bria, in Lan­cashire, in the Sev­ern Val­ley, in De­von, Som­er­set, and Dorset. The north­ern and west­ern half of Britain is ac­knowl­edged to be main­ly Celtic. Thus the ques­tion re­al­ly nar­rows it­self down to the eth­ni­cal pe­cu­liar­ities of the south and east.

Here, the surest ev­idence is that of an­thro­pol­ogy. We know that the pure An­glo-​Sax­ons were a round-​skulled, fair-​haired, light-​eyed, blonde-​com­plex­ioned race; and we know that wher­ev­er (if any­where) we find un­mixed Ger­man­ic races at the present day, High Dutch, Low Dutch, or Scan­di­na­vian, we al­ways meet with some of these same per­son­al pe­cu­liar­ities in al­most ev­ery in­di­vid­ual of the com­mu­ni­ty. But we al­so know that the Celts, orig­inal­ly them­selves a sim­ilar blonde Aryan race, mixed large­ly in Britain with one or more long-​skulled dark-​haired, black-​eyed, and brown-​com­plex­ioned races, gen­er­al­ly iden­ti­fied with the Basques or Eu­skar­ians, and with the Lig­uri­ans. The na­tion which re­sult­ed from this mix­ture showed traces of both types, be­ing some­times blonde, some­times brunette; some­times black-​haired, some­times red-​haired, and some­times yel­low-​haired. In­di­vid­uals of all these types are still found in the un­doubt­ed­ly Celtic por­tions of Britain, though the dark type there un­ques­tion­ably pre­pon­der­ates so far as num­bers are con­cerned. It is this mixed race of fair and dark peo­ple, of Aryan Celts with non-​Aryan Eu­skar­ians or Lig­uri­ans, which we usu­al­ly de­scribe as Celtic in mod­ern Britain, by con­tradis­tinc­tion to the lat­er wave of Teu­ton­ic En­glish.

Now, ac­cord­ing to the ev­idence of the ear­ly his­to­ri­ans, as in­ter­pret­ed by Mr. Free­man and oth­er au­thors (whose ar­gu­ments we shall present­ly ex­am­ine), the En­glish set­tlers in the greater part of South Britain al­most en­tire­ly ex­ter­mi­nat­ed the Celtic pop­ula­tion. But if this be so, how comes it that at the present day a large pro­por­tion of our peo­ple, even in the east, be­long to the dark and long-​skulled type? The fact is that up­on this sub­ject the his­to­ri­ans are large­ly at vari­ance with the an­thro­pol­ogists; and as the his­tor­ical ev­idence is weak and in­fer­en­tial, while the an­thro­po­log­ical ev­idence is strong and di­rect, there can be very lit­tle doubt which we ought to ac­cept. Pro­fes­sor Hux­ley [Es­say “On some Fixed Points in British Ethnog­ra­phy,”] has shown that the melanochroic or dark type of En­glish­men is iden­ti­cal in the shape of the skull, the anatom­ical pe­cu­liar­ities, and the colour of skin, hair, and eyes with that of the con­ti­nent, which is un­de­ni­ably Celtic in the wider sense–that is to say, be­long­ing to the prim­itive non-​Teu­ton­ic race, which spoke a Celtic lan­guage, and was com­posed of mixed Celtic, Iberi­an, and Lig­uri­an el­ements. Pro­fes­sor Phillips points out that in York­shire, and es­pe­cial­ly in the plain of York, an es­sen­tial­ly dark, short, non-​Teu­ton­ic type is com­mon; while per­sons of the same char­ac­ter­is­tics abound among the sup­posed pure An­glians of Lin­colnshire. They are found in great num­bers in East An­glia, and they are not rare even in Kent. In Sus­sex and Es­sex they oc­cur less fre­quent­ly, and they are al­so com­par­ative­ly scarce in the Loth­ians. Dr. Bed­doe, Dr. Thur­nam, and oth­er an­thro­pol­ogists have col­lect­ed much ev­idence to the same ef­fect. Hence we may con­clude with great prob­abil­ity that large num­bers of the de­scen­dants of the dark Britons still sur­vive even on the Teu­ton­ic coast. As to the de­scen­dants of the light Britons, we can­not, of course, sep­arate them from those of the like-​com­plex­ioned En­glish in­vaders. But in truth, even in the east it­self, save on­ly per­haps in Sus­sex and Es­sex, the dark and fair types have long since so large­ly co­alesced by mar­riage that there are prob­ably few or no re­al Teu­tons or re­al Celts in­di­vid­ual­ly dis­tin­guish­able at all. Ab­so­lute­ly fair peo­ple, of the Scan­di­na­vian or true Ger­man sort, with very light hair and very pale blue eyes, are al­most un­known among us; and when they do oc­cur, they oc­cur side by side with re­la­tions of ev­ery oth­er shade. As a rule, our peo­ple vary in­finite­ly in com­plex­ion and anatom­ical type, from the quite squat, long-​head­ed, swarthy peas­ants whom we some­times meet with in ru­ral York­shire, to the tall, flax­en-​haired, red-​cheeked men whom we oc­ca­sion­al­ly find not on­ly in Dan­ish Der­byshire, but even in main­ly Celtic Wales and Corn­wall. As to the west, Pro­fes­sor Hux­ley de­clares, on pure­ly an­thro­po­log­ical grounds, that it is prob­ably, on the whole, more deeply Celtic than Ire­land it­self.

These an­thro­po­log­ical opin­ions are ful­ly borne out by those sci­en­tif­ic archæol­ogists who have done most in the way of ex­plor­ing the tombs and oth­er re­mains of the ear­ly An­glo-​Sax­on in­vaders. Pro­fes­sor Rolle­ston, who has prob­ably ex­am­ined more skulls of this pe­ri­od than any oth­er in­ves­ti­ga­tor, sums up his con­sid­er­ation of those ob­tained from Ro­mano-​British and An­glo-​Sax­on in­ter­ments by say­ing, “I should be in­clined to think that whole­sale mas­sacres of the con­quered Ro­mano-​Britons were rare, and that whole­sale im­por­ta­tions of An­glo-​Sax­on wom­en were not much more fre­quent.” He points out that “we have anatom­ical ev­idence for say­ing that two or more dis­tinct va­ri­eties of men ex­ist­ed in Eng­land both pre­vi­ous­ly to and dur­ing the pe­ri­od of the Teu­ton­ic in­va­sion and dom­ina­tion.” The in­ter­ments show us that the races which in­hab­it­ed Britain be­fore the En­glish con­quest con­tin­ued in part to in­hab­it it af­ter that con­quest. The dolicho­cephali, or long-​skulled type of men, who, in part, pre­ced­ed the En­glish, “have been found abun­dant­ly in the Suf­folk re­gion of the Lit­tus Sax­on­icum, where the Celt and Sax­on [En­glish­man] are not known to have met as en­emies when East An­glia be­came a king­dom.” Thus we see that just where peo­ple of the dark type oc­cur abun­dant­ly at the present day, skulls of the cor­re­spond­ing sort are met with abun­dant­ly in in­ter­ments of the An­glo-​Sax­on pe­ri­od. Sim­ilar­ly, Mr. Ak­er­man, af­ter ex­plo­rations in tombs, ob­serves, “The to­tal ex­pul­sion or ex­tinc­tion of the Ro­mano-​British pop­ula­tion by the in­vaders will scarce­ly be in­sist­ed up­on in this age of en­quiry.” Nay, even in Teu­ton­ic Kent, Jute and Briton still lie side by side in the same sepul­chres. Most mod­ern En­glish­men have some­what long rather than round skulls. The ev­idence of archæol­ogy sup­ports the ev­idence of an­thro­pol­ogy in favour of the be­lief that some, at least, of the na­tive Britons were spared by the in­vad­ing host.

On the oth­er hand, against these un­equiv­ocal tes­ti­monies of mod­ern re­search we have to set the tes­ti­mo­ny of the ear­ly his­tor­ical au­thor­ities, on which the Teu­ton­ic the­ory main­ly re­lies. The au­thor­ities in ques­tion are three, Gildas, Bæ­da, and the En­glish Chron­icle. Gildas was, or pro­fess­es to be, a British monk, who wrote in the very midst of the En­glish con­quest, when the in­vaders were still con­fined, for the most part, to the south-​east­ern re­gion. Ob­jec­tions have been raised to the au­then­tic­ity of his work, a small rhetor­ical Latin pam­phlet, en­ti­tled, “The His­to­ry of the Britons;” but these ob­jec­tions have, per­haps, been set at rest for many minds by Dr. Guest and Mr. Green. Nev­er­the­less, what lit­tle Gildas has to tell us is of slight his­tor­ical im­por­tance. His book is a dis­ap­point­ing Jeremi­ad, couched in the florid and in­flat­ed Latin rhetoric so com­mon dur­ing the deca­dence of the Ro­man em­pire, in­ter­min­gled with a strong flavour of hy­per­bol­ical Celtic imag­ina­tion; and it teach­es us prac­ti­cal­ly noth­ing as to the state of the con­quered dis­tricts. It is whol­ly oc­cu­pied with fierce di­atribes against the Sax­ons, and com­plaints as to the weak­ness, wicked­ness, and ap­athy of the British chief­tains. It says lit­tle that can throw any light on the ques­tion as to whether the Welsh were large­ly spared, though it abounds with wild and vague decla­ma­tion about the ex­ter­mi­na­tion of the na­tives. Even Gildas, how­ev­er, men­tions that some of his coun­try­men, “con­strained by famine, came and yield­ed them­selves up to their en­emies as slaves for ev­er;” while oth­ers, “com­mit­ting the safe­guard of their lives to moun­tains, crags, thick forests, and rocky isles, though with trem­bling hearts, re­mained in their fa­ther­land.” These pas­sages cer­tain­ly sug­gest that a Welsh rem­nant sur­vived in two ways with­in the En­glish pale, first as slaves, and sec­ond­ly as iso­lat­ed out­laws.

Bæ­da stands on a very dif­fer­ent foot­ing. His au­then­tic­ity is un­doubt­ed; his lan­guage is sim­ple and straight­for­ward. He was born in or about the year 672, on­ly two hun­dred years af­ter the land­ing of the first En­glish colonists in Thanet. Scarce­ly more than a cen­tu­ry sep­arat­ed him from the days of Ida. The con­stant lin­ger­ing war­fare with the Welsh on the west­ern fron­tier was still for him a liv­ing fact. The Celt still held half of Britain. At the date of his birth the north­ern Welsh still re­tained their in­de­pen­dence in Strath­clyde; the Welsh prop­er still spread to the banks of the Sev­ern; and the West Welsh of Corn­wall still owned all the penin­su­la south of the Bris­tol Chan­nel as far east­ward as the Som­er­set­shire marsh­es. Be­yond Forth and Clyde, the Picts yet ruled over the greater part of the High­lands, while the Scots, who have now giv­en the name of Scot­land to the whole of Britain be­yond the Cheviots, were a mere in­tru­sive Irish colony in Ar­gyll­shire and the West­ern Isles. He lived, in short, at the very pe­ri­od when Britain was still in the act of be­com­ing Eng­land; and no his­tor­ical doubts of any sort hang over the au­then­tic­ity of his great work, “The Ec­cle­si­as­ti­cal His­to­ry of the En­glish peo­ple.” But Bæ­da un­for­tu­nate­ly knows lit­tle more about the first set­tle­ment than he could learn from Gildas, whom he quotes al­most _ver­ba­tim_. He tells us, how­ev­er, noth­ing of ex­ter­mi­na­tion of the Welsh. “Some,” he says, “were slaugh­tered; some gave them­selves up to un­der­go slav­ery: some re­treat­ed be­yond the sea: and some, re­main­ing in their own land, lived a mis­er­able life in the moun­tains and forests.” In all this, he is mere­ly tran­scrib­ing Gildas, but he saw no im­prob­abil­ity in the words. At a lat­er date, Æthel­frith, of Northum­bria, he tells us, “ren­dered more of their lands ei­ther trib­utary to or an in­te­gral part of the En­glish ter­ri­to­ry, whether by sub­ju­gat­ing or ex­pa­tri­at­ing[1] the na­tives,” than any pre­vi­ous king. Ead­wine, be­fore his con­ver­sion, “sub­dued to the em­pire of the En­glish the Meva­ni­an is­lands,” Man and An­gle­sey; but we know that the pop­ula­tion of both is­lands is still main­ly Celtic in blood and speech. These ex­am­ples suf­fi­cient­ly show us, that even be­fore the in­tro­duc­tion of Chris­tian­ity, the En­glish did not al­ways ut­ter­ly de­stroy the Welsh in­hab­itants of con­quered dis­tricts. And it is uni­ver­sal­ly ad­mit­ted that, af­ter their con­ver­sion, they fought with the Welsh in a milder man­ner, spar­ing their lives as fel­low-​Chris­tians, and per­mit­ting them to re­tain their lands as trib­utary pro­pri­etors.

[1] The word in the orig­inal is _ex­ter­mi­natis_, but of course _ex­ter­minare_ then bore its et­ymo­log­ical sense of ex­pa­tri­ation or ex­pul­sion, if not mere­ly of con­fis­ca­tion, while it cer­tain­ly did not im­ply the idea of slaugh­ter, con­not­ed by the mod­ern word.

The En­glish Chron­icle, our third au­thor­ity, was first com­piled at the court of Æl­fred, four and a-​half cen­turies af­ter the Con­quest; and so its val­ue as orig­inal tes­ti­mo­ny is very slight. Its ear­li­er por­tions are main­ly con­densed from Bæ­da; but it con­tains a few frag­ments of tra­di­tion­al in­for­ma­tion from some oth­er un­known sources. These frag­ments, how­ev­er, re­fer chiefly to Kent, Sus­sex, and the old­er parts of Wes­sex, where we have rea­son to be­lieve that the Teu­ton­ic coloni­sa­tion was ex­cep­tion­al­ly thor­ough; and they tell us noth­ing about York­shire, Lin­colnshire, and East An­glia, where we find at the present day so large a pro­por­tion of the pop­ula­tion pos­sess­ing an un­mis­tak­ably Celtic physique. The Chron­icle un­doubt­ed­ly de­scribes the con­flict in the south as sharp and bloody; and in spite of the myth­ical char­ac­ter of the names and events, it is prob­able that in this re­spect it right­ly pre­serves the pop­ular mem­ory of the con­quest, and its gen­er­al na­ture. In Kent, “the Welsh fled the En­glish like fire;” and Hengest and Æsc, in a sin­gle bat­tle, slew 4,000 men. In Sus­sex, Ælle and Cis­sa killed or drove out the na­tives in the west­ern rapes on their first land­ing, and af­ter­wards mas­sa­cred ev­ery Briton at An­deri­da. In Wes­sex, in the first strug­gle, “Cerdic and Cyn­ric off­slew a British king whose name was Natan­leod, and 5,000 men with him.” And so the dis­mal an­nals of rap­ine and slaugh­ter run on from year to year, with sim­ple, un­ques­tion­ing con­cise­ness, show­ing us, at least, the man­ner in which the lat­er En­glish be­lieved their fore­fa­thers had ac­quired the land. More­over, these fright­ful de­tails ac­cord well enough with the vague gen­er­al­ities of Gildas, from which, how­ev­er, they may very pos­si­bly have been man­ufac­tured. Yet even the Chron­icle nowhere speaks of ab­so­lute ex­ter­mi­na­tion: that idea has been whol­ly read in­to its words, not di­rect­ly in­ferred from them. A great deal has been made of the mas­sacre at Pevensey; but we hear noth­ing of sim­ilar mas­sacres at the great Ro­man cities–at Lon­don, at York, at Veru­lam, at Bath, at Cirences­ter, which would sure­ly have at­tract­ed more at­ten­tion than a small out­ly­ing fortress like An­deri­da. Even the Teu­ton­ic cham­pi­ons them­selves ad­mit that some, at least, of the Celts were in­cor­po­rat­ed in­to the En­glish com­mu­ni­ty. “The wom­en,” says Mr. Free­man, “would, doubt­less, be large­ly spared;” while as to the men, he ob­serves, “we may be sure that death, em­igra­tion, or per­son­al slav­ery were the on­ly al­ter­na­tives which the van­quished found at the hands of our fa­thers.” But there is a vast gulf, from the eth­no­log­ical point of view, be­tween ex­ter­mi­nat­ing a na­tion and en­slav­ing it.[2]

[2] In this and a few oth­er cas­es, mod­ern au­thor­ities are quot­ed mere­ly to show that the es­sen­tial facts of a large Welsh sur­vival are re­al­ly ad­mit­ted even by those who most strong­ly ar­gue in favour of the gen­er­al Teu­ton­ic ori­gin of En­glish­men.

In the cities, in­deed, it would seem that the Britons re­mained in great num­bers. The Welsh bards com­plain that the ur­ban race of Ro­man­ised na­tives known as Loe­gri­ans, “be­came as Sax­ons.” Mr. Kem­ble has shown that the En­glish did not by any means al­ways mas­sacre the in­hab­itants of the cities. Mr. Free­man ob­serves, “It is prob­able that with­in the [En­glish] fron­tier there still were Ro­man towns trib­utary to the con­querors rather than oc­cu­pied by them;” and Canon Stubbs him­self re­marks, that “in some of the cities there were prob­ably el­ements of con­tin­uous life: Lon­don, the mart of the mer­chants, York, the cap­ital of the north, and some oth­ers, have a con­tin­uous po­lit­ical ex­is­tence.” “Wher­ev­er the cities were spared,” he adds, “a por­tion, at least, of the city pop­ula­tion must have con­tin­ued al­so. In the coun­try, too, es­pe­cial­ly to­wards the west and the de­bate­able bor­der, great num­bers of Britons may have sur­vived in a servile or half-​servile con­di­tion.” But we must re­mem­ber that in on­ly two cas­es, An­deri­da and Chester, do we ac­tu­al­ly hear of mas­sacres; in all the oth­er towns, Bæ­da and the Chron­icle tell us noth­ing about them. It is a sig­nif­icant fact that Sus­sex, the one king­dom in which we hear of a com­plete an­ni­hi­la­tion, is the very one where the Teu­ton­ic type of physique still re­mains the purest. But there are nowhere any traces of En­glish clan nomen­cla­ture in any of the cities. They all re­tain their Celtic or Ro­man names. At Cam­bridge it­self, in the heart of the true En­glish coun­try, the char­ter of the thegn's guild, a late doc­ument, men­tions a spe­cial dis­tinc­tion of penal­ties for killing a Welsh­man, “if the slain be a ce­orl, 2 ores, if he be a Welsh­man, one ore.” “The large Ro­man­ised towns,” says Pro­fes­sor Rolle­ston, “no doubt made terms with the Sax­ons, who ab­horred city life, and would prob­ably be con­tent to leave the un­war­like burghers in a con­di­tion of heav­ily-​taxed sub­mis­sive­ness.”

Thus, even in the east it is ad­mit­ted that a Celtic el­ement prob­ably en­tered in­to the pop­ula­tion in three ways,–by spar­ing the wom­en, by mak­ing ru­ral slaves of the men, and by pre­serv­ing some, at least, of the in­hab­itants of cities. The skulls of these An­gli­cised Welsh­men are found in an­cient in­ter­ments; their de­scen­dants are still to be recog­nised by their phys­ical type in mod­ern Eng­land. “It is quite pos­si­ble,” says Mr. Free­man, “that even at the end of the sixth cen­tu­ry there may have been with­in the En­glish fron­tier in­ac­ces­si­ble points where de­tached bod­ies of Welsh­men still re­tained a pre­car­ious in­de­pen­dence.” Sir F. Pal­grave has col­lect­ed pas­sages tend­ing to show that par­ties of in­de­pen­dent Welsh­men held out in the Fens till a very late pe­ri­od; and this con­clu­sion is ad­mit­ted by Mr. Free­man to be prob­ably cor­rect. But more im­por­tant is the gen­er­al sur­vival of scat­tered Britons with­in the En­glish com­mu­ni­ties them­selves. Traces of this we find even in An­glo-​Sax­on doc­uments. The sig­na­tures to very ear­ly char­ters,[3] col­lect­ed by Thor­pe and Kem­ble, sup­ply us with names some of which are as­sured­ly not Teu­ton­ic, while oth­ers are demon­stra­bly Celtic; and these names are borne by peo­ple oc­cu­py­ing high po­si­tions at the court of En­glish kings. Names of this class oc­cur even in Kent it­self; while oth­ers are borne by mem­bers of the roy­al fam­ily of Wes­sex. The lo­cal di­alect of the West Rid­ing of York­shire still con­tains many Celtic words; and the shep­herds of Northum­ber­land and the Loth­ians still reck­on their sheep by what is known as “the rhyming score,” which is re­al­ly a cor­rupt form of the Welsh nu­mer­als from one to twen­ty. The laws of Northum­bria men­tion the Welsh­men who pay rent to the king. In­deed, it is clear that even in the east it­self the En­glish were from the first a body of ru­ral colonists and landown­ers, hold­ing in sub­jec­tion a class of na­tive serfs, with whom they did not in­ter­min­gle, but who grad­ual­ly be­came An­gli­cised, and fi­nal­ly co­alesced with their for­mer mas­ters, un­der the stress of the Dan­ish and Nor­man suprema­cies.

[3] Kem­ble “On An­glo-​Sax­on Names.” Proc. Arch. In­st., 1845.

In the west, how­ev­er, the En­glish oc­cu­pa­tion took even less the form of a reg­ular coloni­sa­tion. The laws of Ine, a West Sax­on king, show us that in his ter­ri­to­ries, bor­der­ing on yet un­con­quered British lands, the Welsh­man of­ten oc­cu­pied the po­si­tion of a rent-​pay­ing in­fe­ri­or, as well as that of a slave. The so-​called Nen­nius tells us that El­met in York­shire, long an in­tru­sive Welsh prin­ci­pal­ity, was not sub­dued by the En­glish till the reign of Ead­wine of Northum­bria; when, we learn, the Northum­bri­an prince “seized El­met, and ex­pelled Cerdic its king:” but noth­ing is said as to any ex­ter­mi­na­tion of its peo­ple. As Bæ­da in­ci­den­tal­ly men­tions this Cerdic, “king of the Britons,” Nen­nius may prob­ably be trust­ed up­on the point. As late as the be­gin­ning of the tenth cen­tu­ry, King Æl­fred in his will de­scribes the peo­ple of De­von, Dorset, Som­er­set, and Wilts, as “Welsh kin.” The phys­ical ap­pear­ance of the peas­antry in the Sev­ern val­ley, and es­pe­cial­ly in Shrop­shire, Worces­ter­shire, Glouces­ter­shire, and Here­ford­shire, in­di­cates that the west­ern parts of Mer­cia were equal­ly Celtic in blood. The di­alect of Lan­cashire con­tains a large Celtic in­fu­sion. Sim­ilar­ly, the En­glish clan-​vil­lages de­crease grad­ual­ly in num­bers as we move west­ward, till they al­most dis­ap­pear be­yond the cen­tral di­vid­ing ridge. We learn from Domes­day Book that at the date of the Nor­man con­quest the num­ber of serfs was greater from east to west, and largest on the Welsh bor­der. Mr. Isaac Tay­lor points out that a sim­ilar ar­gu­ment may be de­rived from the area of the hun­dreds in var­ious coun­ties. The hun­dred was orig­inal­ly a body of one hun­dred En­glish fam­ilies (more or less), bound to­geth­er by mu­tu­al pledge, and an­swer­able for one an­oth­er's con­duct. In Sus­sex, the av­er­age num­ber of square miles in each hun­dred is on­ly twen­ty-​three; in Kent, twen­ty-​four; in Sur­rey, fifty-​eight; and in Herts, sev­en­ty-​nine: but in Glouces­ter it is nine­ty-​sev­en; in Der­by, one hun­dred and six­ty-​two; in War­wick, one hun­dred and sev­en­ty-​nine; and in Lan­cashire, three hun­dred and two. These facts im­ply that the En­glish pop­ula­tion clus­tered thick­est in the old set­tled east, but grew thin­ner and thin­ner to­wards the Welsh and Cum­bri­an bor­der. Al­to­geth­er, the his­tor­ical ev­idence re­gard­ing the west­ern slopes of Eng­land bears out Pro­fes­sor Hux­ley's dic­tum as to the thor­ough­ly Celtic char­ac­ter of their pop­ula­tion.

On the oth­er hand, it is im­pos­si­ble to de­ny that Mr. Free­man and Canon Stubbs have proved their point as to the thor­ough Teu­ton­isa­tion of South­ern Britain by the En­glish in­vaders. Though it may be true that much Welsh blood sur­vived in Eng­land, es­pe­cial­ly amongst the servile class, yet it is none the less true that the na­tion which rose up­on the ru­ins of Ro­man Britain was, in form and or­gan­isa­tion, al­most pure­ly En­glish. The lan­guage spo­ken by the whole coun­try was the same which had been spo­ken in Sleswick. On­ly a few words of Welsh ori­gin re­lat­ing to agri­cul­ture, house­hold ser­vice, and smithcraft, were in­tro­duced by the serfs in­to the tongue of their mas­ters. The di­alects of the York­shire moors, of the Lake Dis­trict, and of Dorset or De­von, spo­ken on­ly by wild herds­men in the least cul­ti­vat­ed tracts, re­tained a few more ev­ident traces of the Welsh vo­cab­ulary: but in York, in Lon­don, in Winch­ester, and in all the large towns, the pure An­glo-​Sax­on of the old Eng­land by the shores of the Baltic was alone spo­ken. The Celtic serfs and their de­scen­dants quick­ly as­sumed En­glish names, talked En­glish to one an­oth­er, and soon for­got, in a few gen­er­ations, that they had not al­ways been En­glish­men in blood and tongue. The whole or­gan­isa­tion of the state, the whole so­cial life of the peo­ple, was en­tire­ly Teu­ton­ic. “The his­tor­ical civil­isa­tion,” as Canon Stubbs ad­mirably puts it, “is En­glish and not Celtic.” Though there may have been much Welsh blood left, it ran in the veins of serfs and rent-​pay­ing churls, who were of no po­lit­ical or so­cial im­por­tance. These two as­pects of the case should be kept care­ful­ly dis­tinct. Had they al­ways been sep­arat­ed, much of the dis­cus­sion which has arisen on the sub­ject would doubt­less have been avoid­ed; for the strongest ad­vo­cates of the Teu­ton­ic the­ory are gen­er­al­ly ready to al­low that Celtic wom­en, chil­dren, and slaves may have been large­ly spared: while the Celtic en­thu­si­asts have thought in­cum­bent up­on them to de­rive En­glish words from Welsh roots, and to trace the ori­gin of En­glish so­cial in­sti­tu­tions to Celtic mod­els. The facts seem to in­di­cate that while the mod­ern En­glish na­tion is large­ly Welsh in blood, it is whol­ly Teu­ton­ic in form and lan­guage. Each of us prob­ably traces back his de­scent to mixed Celtic and Ger­man­ic an­ces­try: but while the Celts have con­tribut­ed the ma­te­ri­al alone, the Teu­tons have con­tribut­ed both the ma­te­ri­al and the form.