Wessex, Northumbria and Mercia
Great Britain had itself been formed in 1707 by the union of the formerly separate kingdoms of England and Scotland.
No. After the Roman troops left Britain, the British had almost no army. As a result the Angles and the Saxons moved from North Germany to the eastern part of England. They conquered part of the British people. The rest moved to Cornwall, Wales, and Scotland. Then the Anglo Saxons would be conquered in turn by the Normans.
Modern English comes (mostly) from a mix of Anglo-Saxon (spoken by the Britons and the Gaels, the 2 tribes that formed Britain and Ireland), Latin (spoken by Christian missionaries), and Norman French (spoken by William the Conqueror who took over Britain in 1066).
His generals split up the empire and formed their own kingdoms (today we call them the Hellenistic Kingdoms).
By the amalgamation of other smaller Kingdoms about 1000 years ago.
The Anglo-Saxons who took over Britain formed several kingdoms. This led to war and power struggles between the various knigdoms.
Great Britain had itself been formed in 1707 by the union of the formerly separate kingdoms of England and Scotland.
The Anglo Saxons formed England after invading in the 5th century
Judea and Israel
No. After the Roman troops left Britain, the British had almost no army. As a result the Angles and the Saxons moved from North Germany to the eastern part of England. They conquered part of the British people. The rest moved to Cornwall, Wales, and Scotland. Then the Anglo Saxons would be conquered in turn by the Normans.
The peoples that formed new kingdoms in eastern and central Europe were the Poles, Czechs, Hungarians, Moravians, Croats, Serbs, and the Bulgarians.
Modern English comes (mostly) from a mix of Anglo-Saxon (spoken by the Britons and the Gaels, the 2 tribes that formed Britain and Ireland), Latin (spoken by Christian missionaries), and Norman French (spoken by William the Conqueror who took over Britain in 1066).
His generals split up the empire and formed their own kingdoms (today we call them the Hellenistic Kingdoms).
By the amalgamation of other smaller Kingdoms about 1000 years ago.
The "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland" was the full title from 1801 until 1922 when it became the "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland" when the Irish Free State was formed (now Eire or Ireland). The UK refers to all four countries (England Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland). The term was derived from the merging of the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland in 1801. It is sometimes thought that Kingdom of Great Britain formed from the Kingdoms of England and Scotland (in 1707 politically and 1603 under the Crowns) was called the United Kingdom but this is not the case.
Amongst his generals who took parts of it and formed what we call the Hellenistic Kingdoms.
formed in upper Canada