Early Britain - Anglo-Saxon Britain by Grant Allen
page 35 of 206 (16%)
page 35 of 206 (16%)
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Queenslandâso Northumbria stood off from East Anglia, and Kent from
Sussex. Each colony represented a little English nucleus along the coast or up the mouths of the greater rivers, such as the Thames and Humber, where the pirates could easily drive in their light craft. From such a nucleus, perched at first on some steep promontory like Bamborough, some separate island like Thanet, Wight, and Selsey, or some long spit of land like Holderness and Hurst Castle, the barbarians could extend their dominions on every side, till they reached some natural line of demarcation in the direction of their nearest Teutonic neighbours, which formed their necessary mark. Inland they spread as far as they could conquer; but coastwise the rivers and fens were their limits against one another. Thus this oldest insular England is marked off into at least eight separate colonies by the Forth, the Tyne, the Humber, the Wash, the Harwich Marshes, the Thames, the Weald Forest, and the Chichester tidal swamp region. As to how the pirates settled down along this wide stretch of coast, we know practically nothing; of their westward advance we know a little, and as time proceeds, that knowledge becomes more and more. CHAPTER V. THE ENGLISH IN THEIR NEW HOMES. If any trust at all can be placed in the legends, a lull in the conquest followed the first settlement, and for some fifty years the Englishâor at least the West Saxonsâwere engaged in consolidating their own |
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