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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 01, 2012 10:08 UTC (55 seconds ago)

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England during the Middle Ages, commonly accepted to be from about 600 AD-1500 AD (from the 5th century withdrawal of Roman forces from the province of Britannia and the Germanic invasions, until the late Anglo-Saxon period) was fragmented into a number of independent kingdoms. By the High Middle Ages, after the end of the Viking Age and the Norman Conquest, the Kingdom of England came to rule much of the area previously ruled by the Romans; the territory of Roman Britain that did not fall under English rule was held by the Kingdoms of Wales and the Kingdom of Scotland.

The medieval period in England can be dated from the arrival in Kent of Anglo-Saxon troops led by the legendary Hengest and Horsa. Subsequently those Brythonic Celtic kingdoms whose territories lay within the area of modern England were conquered by Jutes, Angles and Saxons Germanic tribes, from the contemporary Angeln and Jutland areas of Northern Germany and mainland Denmark. Political takeover of other areas of England proceeded piecemeal and was not completed until the 10th century.

Similarly, the end of the medieval period is usually dated by the rise of what is often referred to as the "English Renaissance" in the reign of Henry VIII, and the Reformation in Scotland, or else to the establishment of a centralised, bureaucratic monarchy by Henry VII. From a political point of view, the Norman Conquest of England divides medieval Britain in two distinct phases of cultural and political history. From a linguistic point of view the Norman Conquest had only a limited effect, Old English evolving into Middle English, although the Anglo Norman language would remain the language of those that ruled for two centuries at least, before mingling with Middle English.

Britain around the year 802

At the height of pre-Norman medieval English power, a single English king ruled from the border with Scotland to the border with Wales. After the Norman Conquest, Anglo-Norman power intruded into Wales with increasing vigour. Southern England, due to its proximity to Normandy, Flanders and Brittany, had closer relations with them than the other regions.

Contents

Periodisation

List of states

Early Middle Ages

Anglo-Saxon states

See: Heptarchy

Celtic kingdoms

The territories of the following early Brythonic kingdoms were absorbed into Anglo-Saxon and early medieval England:

Viking Age

High Middle Ages

post-1066 states

Late Middle Ages

See also








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