beneficii wrote:
Here are the relevant quotes, as posted in the OP article.
This is the classic description of the origins of the Anglo-Saxons given by Bede, which gives their origin as derived from the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes:
->"At that time the race of the Angles or Saxons, invited by Vortigern, came to Britain... They came from three very powerful Germanic tribes, the Saxons, Angles and Jutes."
This seems to exclude the Huns.
OK. I thought I had posted the other Bede quote, but apparently not (I was having lots of problems with that drat CAPTCHA, which really interferes with your ability to have a conversation and forces you to split your posts so it looks like you're quadruple-posting up the wazoo).
Anyway, here is where Bede writes in another part of his seminal work
The Ecclesiastical History of the English People on the origins of the Anglo-Saxons, as quoted in the OP article:
Quote:
He knew that there were very many peoples in Germany from whom the Angles and the Saxons, who now live in Britain, derive their origin... Now these people are the Frisians, Rugians, Danes, Huns, Old Saxons, and Boruhtware (Bructeri); there are also many other nations in the same land who are still practising heathen rites to whom the soldier of Christ proposed to go...
This is more complex than the previous list, but it's possible that the previous list was something of a simplification. The interpretation of this passage is controversial, with some authors arguing that this was just a list of people the missionary Egbert wanted to preach to, but others argue that Bede writes what he means and that these are the peoples from whom the Anglo-Saxons descended. This list includes the Huns.
The other controversy is what is meant by Huns, with some authors arguing that it meant in general any Asiatic group, like the Avars, but others arguing that he means the 4th-5th century Huns.
Either way, this passage gives historians a lot of problems!
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