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The Coming of the Teutons to England
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The Coming of the Teutons to England
T
he
Celts, as has been said before, left their old home in Asia in
very early times and moved slowly across Europe. At
length they came to the ocean. The tribes behind were pressing
upon them, and the Celts were not to be stopped by so narrow a
body of water as the English Channel. Many of them crossed to
Britain. There they lived in small huts made of
poles fastened together at the top. They knew how to make
boats with planks and nails, but oftener they made them by
covering wicker frameworks with skins. Their priests were
called Druids, and it is thought that the great stones
at Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain, are the
remains of rude temples in which sacrifices were offered.
These Celts, or Britons, painted their bodies blue,
for they thought this would make them seem more terrible to
their enemies. Rough as they were, they were fond of pretty
things, and they made themselves bracelets and necklaces of gold.
Those who lived inland were savage, but those who dwelt nearest
to the Continent were somewhat civilized. They raised
wheat and barley and kept many cattle. They had no towns, but
gathered in little villages.
Stonehenge.
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This is the way the Britons lived when the Romans came upon
them. The Romans were always ready to
conquer a new country;
and they meant to subdue Britain, or Albion, as it was then
called. They obliged
the Britons in the greater part of England to obey them; but
they were unable to subdue the savage tribes of the
northern part of the island; and finally, to keep them from
raiding the land which they ruled,
they built two great walls with watchtowers and strongholds
across the country. Some of the Teutons on the
Continent were also troublesome, and therefore the Romans erected
a line of forts around the south-eastern shore of England.
These Romans were famous road-makers, and they built excellent
highways, some of which exist to this day. They made
settlements; they erected handsome town houses and country houses
with statues and vases and pavements of many-colored marble,
and they built many of their famous baths. The Romans were
the rulers, and the Britons had to obey. It is probable
that
many of the Britons were
obliged to enter the Roman army, and that many of those who
did not become soldiers were treated as slaves.
Landing of the Romans in Britain.
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The Romans could have conquered the troublesome northern tribes,
but as we have seen, the Goths were pressing
upon the boundaries of their empire, and Alaric had invaded
Italy and plundered Rome itself. Every soldier in the Roman
army was now needed to help protect the empire, and so officers
and men sailed away from the
British shores and left the people to take care of
themselves.
Roman Baths (At Bath, an English watering-place noted for its hot springs.)
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The Britons were better able to do this before the
coming
of the Romans. They were excellent fighters,
but they had become so used to being led by Roman officers
that when left alone they were helpless. The
savages were coming down upon them from the north, and the three
tribes of Teutons, the Saxons, Angles, and
Jutes, were threatening them from the region between
the Baltic and the North Sea. The Britons could not
protect themselves, and they sent a pitiful appeal to the
Roman commander Aëtius to come and help them. "The
barbarians," it said, "drive us to the sea, and the sea
drives us back to the barbarians; and between them we are either
slain or drowned." Aëtius, however, was too busy trying to
keep other barbarians from Rome to help people so far away as
England, and he could do nothing for them. The Britons believed
that of all their enemies the Teutons were the
strongest; and they decided to ask them to come to Britain and
help drive away the others. They might have
the island of
Thanet for their home, the Britons promised.
Ancient Jutish Boat.
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The Jutes came first, under the two brothers, Hengist
and Horsa, it is said; and they were followed by
the Angles and Saxons. These Teutons helped to drive away the
other tribes, according to the bargain; but soon they
found Thanet too small for them, and so, just as one tribe had
been driving another to the westward for centuries, they
drove the Britons to the westward. Some Britons were killed,
some became slaves, and some hid away in the mountains of
Western England. The Teutons called these Wealh, or
Welsh, that is, strangers or foreigners; and it is from this
that the country of Wales takes its name.
The Britons were not conquered all at once by any means, for
they fought most courageously, and it was many
years before
the Teutons became masters of the entire country. The Angles scattered
so widely throughout the land that it took its name from
them and became known as the land of the Angles, or Angle-land,
and finally England. The Saxons, however, were
strongest of the three peoples, and therefore their name is
generally given to all the invaders. Their descendants take
both names and are known as Anglo-Saxons.
Saint Gregory and the English Slave Children.
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The Britons had become Christians long before the coming of
the Saxons, but the Saxons were heathen. After these savage
invaders had been in England about a century, some young people
of their race were sold in Rome as slaves. They had
golden hair and blue eyes, and to a saintly monk named
Gregory who was passing through the market-place they
seemed exceedingly beautiful. "Who are they?" he asked. The
answer was, "Angli," that is, Angles. He declared
that they
would be not Angles but angels, if they were
Christians. Gregory never lost his interest in the Angles,
and if he had been permitted, he would gladly have gone to
England as a missionary. After some years
he became Pope Gregory the Great, and then, although he himself
could not go, he sent Saint Augustine to preach
to them. The king of Kent had a Christian wife, and therefore
Saint Augustine went first to him and asked if he might
tell him about the religion of Christ. The king was willing to
hear him, but not in a house, for if there was any magic
about this new faith, he thought the evil spirits would have
far less power in the open air. He listened closely, and
then he went home to think over what he had heard. After a
while he told Saint Augustine that he believed the Christian
faith was true. This teaching spread over England, and soon
the country was no longer heathen.
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