black magic specialist amil baba pakistan no 1 Black magic contact number rea...
Anglo Saxons
1. The Anglo, Saxons and Jutes in Britain Was there any resistance to the Anglo Saxons advance? By: Dennis Delgado and Carlos Gonzales, Brigitte Zambrano, Lourdes Menezes, Claudia Loyola, Lucciana Gonzales, Romina Ávila, Luz Alejandra Llano, Natalia Larraín, Carolina Vargas.
12. The Romans Leave ... Why did they come? The Romans ruled Britain for over 350 years, from AD 250 onwards, the Romans began to have problems keeping Britain safe. Worst of all were the angles and Saxons who came from across the north sea to destroy and steal. Their empire was huge: it needed an army of at least 500 000 men too guard it. By the end of 4 th century, over half of the soldiers were barbarians, not Roman. As time passed, more and more soldiers from far corners of the empire were called home to help keep these attackers out. Life became more dangerous so the rich stayed in their country villas, the towns began to crumble. It was the troubles elsewhere which finally ended Roman rule in Britain. One cold night, in December AD 460, 15 000 barbarians walked across the frozen river Rhine into Gaul . The year was AD 410 and, in that year, Rome itself was attacked. No one defended it. People simply fled to the hills.
13. ... and the Anglo-Saxons arrive The Anglo-Saxons arrive (tribes called angles and Saxons) to Rome to conquer and stay but they also come in roman times to raid. The Romans called them Barbarians because they look them as savages. The Anglo-Saxons were farming folk and thought that the Romans towns must have been built by giants, so they usually rowed past and made their homes on rich farmland in the valleys, where they could grow their crops. The Anglo-Saxons were good warriors, most of the time they won the battle they fight, they controlled most of England. Anglo-Saxon is the term usually used to describe the peoples living in the south and east of Great Britain from the early 5 th century AD to the Norman conquest of 1066.
14. The history of Anglo-Saxon England broadly covers early medieval England from the end of Roman rule and the establishment of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in the 5th century until the Conquest by the Normans in 1066. The history of Anglo-Saxon England