The "Saxon Shore"
Posted: Tue Sep 25, 2012 2:09 am
In the third and fourth centuries CE, Gallia Belgae North of the road from Boulogne to Cologne were settled by Germanic speaking people as part of a roman policy to defend border provinces. The interesting thing about that road it ran roughly along where the Germanic-Romance linguistic boundary was in the 8th century (since then it has moved north and west somewhat).
The "Saxon Shore" was a line of Roman forts which were built in this period, they ran from Brancaster in present day Norfolk to Portchester in Hampshire. The South-Eastern coast of England only a day or two sailing across the sea from the coast present day Belgium and this got me thinking.
So I am framing hypothesis that in the 3th and 4th centuries, what is now Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent and Sussex was being settled by Germanic tribes in much the same way modern day Flanders and Nord-Pas-de-Calais region were. The Saxon Shore could mean the shore being settled by the Saxons as opposed to being attacked by the Saxons.
Therefore by the time the Roman legions department Britain, already the South-East of what is now England was speaking a Germanic language which would become Old English.
I love to hear what you people think about my hypothesis.
The "Saxon Shore" was a line of Roman forts which were built in this period, they ran from Brancaster in present day Norfolk to Portchester in Hampshire. The South-Eastern coast of England only a day or two sailing across the sea from the coast present day Belgium and this got me thinking.
So I am framing hypothesis that in the 3th and 4th centuries, what is now Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Kent and Sussex was being settled by Germanic tribes in much the same way modern day Flanders and Nord-Pas-de-Calais region were. The Saxon Shore could mean the shore being settled by the Saxons as opposed to being attacked by the Saxons.
Therefore by the time the Roman legions department Britain, already the South-East of what is now England was speaking a Germanic language which would become Old English.
I love to hear what you people think about my hypothesis.