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Anglo-Saxon
(redirected from Anglosaxon)

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.06 sec.

Anglo-Saxon

One of several groups of Germanic invaders (including Angles, Saxons, and Jutes) that conquered much of Britain between the 5th and 7th centuries. Initially they established conquest kingdoms, commonly referred to as the Heptarchy; these were united in the early 9th century under the overlordship of Wessex. The Norman invasion in 1066 brought Anglo-Saxon rule to an end.

The Jutes probably came from the Rhineland and not, as was formerly believed, from Jutland. The Angles and Saxons came from Schleswig–Holstein, and may have united before invading. There was probably considerable intermarriage with the Romanized Celts of Ancient Britain, although the latter's language and civilization almost disappeared. The English-speaking peoples of Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the US are often referred to today as Anglo-Saxons, but the term is inaccurate, since the Welsh, Scots, and Irish are mainly of Celtic or Norse descent, and by the 1980s fewer than 15% of US citizens were of British descent.



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The role with which they [darky entertainers] are identified is not, despite its "blackness," Negro American (indeed, Negroes are repelled by it); it does not find its popularity among Negroes but among whites; and although it resembles the role of the clown familiar to Negro variety-house audiences, it derives not from the Negro but from the AngloSaxon branch of American folklore.
, Deuteronomy, 21; Isaiah, 13:16; Lamentations, 5:11; Zechariah, 14:2), in AngloSaxon and Chinese chronicles (Littlewood, 1997), in Medieval European warfare (Meron, 1993), during the crusades (Brownmiller, 1975, p.
Personally, I am very glad to be part of a province of the Christian church (the anglosaxon world in general, and perhaps North America in particular) that has always placed a high premium on Christian pragmatism.
 
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