Danelaw
Yes they are Anglo Saxon are the white race of people who were first up North in Norway, England then through out Europe and then North America and now found world wide.
Anglo Saxon Origins, from the South East of England most likely North Essex.
Because much of North America was discovered and colonized by the "Anglo-saxon" country of Great Britain.
Della Hooke has written: 'Warwickshire Anglo-Saxon charter bounds' -- subject(s): Sources, Anglo-Saxons, Charters, grants, privileges, History 'Anglo-Saxon landscapes of the West Midlands' -- subject(s): History, Anglo-Saxons, Charters, grants, privileges, Landscapes, Landscape 'Pre-conquest charter-bounds of Devon and Cornwall' -- subject(s): Boundaries, Anglo-Saxons, Charters, grants, privileges 'Anglo Saxon Wolverhampton' -- subject(s): History 'The Anglo-Saxon landscape of North Gloucestershire' -- subject(s): History 'The Anglo-Saxon landscape' -- subject(s): History, Ethnology, Hwicce, Anglo-Saxons, Historical geography, Landscape archaeology 'Trees in Anglo-Saxon England' -- subject(s): Trees in literature, Trees, Folklore, History
Carolyn M. Heighway has written: 'Anglo-Saxon Gloucestershire' 'The east and north gates of Gloucester and associated sites' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Archaeology, Excavations (Archaeology), Roman Antiquities, Roman Britain, Romans 'The Golden Minster' -- subject(s): Anglo-Saxon England, Anglo-Saxon priories, Anglo-Saxons, Antiquities, Church architecture, Church buildings, Medieval Archaeology, Medieval Architecture, Priories
The name Buckinghamshire is Anglo-Saxon in origin and means The district (scire) of Bucca's home. Bucca's home refers to Buckingham in the north of the county, and is named after an Anglo-Saxon landowner.
The Anglo Saxon was in Germany"Anglo Saxon" refers specifically to two tribes who lived in what is now Germany and Denmark as well from ancient times until the end of the Roman Empire. The Angles came from a place called Angeln which is on the border between Germany and Denmark in the part of Germany that is now called Schleswig-Holstein. The Saxons came from Saxony (also called Sachsen) which is the area of northern Germany around the city of Hamburg. Sometimes people consider the Jutes to be "Anglo-Saxon" as well. The Jutes are from Jutland which is now in Denmark. The Angles and the Saxons were never in the Roman Empire, they lived outside it, and they used to make their money by being paid to be mercenary soldiers for the Romans and also the governments of parts of the former Roman Empire. In 410AD the Romans left Britain and there were many problems. In 449AD the British Government of the time invited some of the Anglo-Saxons to come to Britain to help them fight the Scots and the Irish who kept invading. The Anglo-Saxons period starts from 449AD. In about 480AD the Angles and the Saxons decided they were not going to do what the British government wanted so they revolted and told their friends to come to Britain to steal things and make it their own land. When they invaded Britain there was already people here - Welsh speaking people - who they killed or forced to leave their homes. Some Welsh people who stayed were made into slaves. Eventually the Anglo-Saxons conquered all of what is now called England, but it was divided into at least seven English speaking kingdoms for a long time. These Anglo-Saxon kingdoms are known as the Heptarchy and were Wessex, Essex, Sussex, East Anglia, Kent, Mercia and Northumbria. The period in English History usually considered the Anglo-Saxon Period started from the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon invasion (449AD) and continues until 1066AD which is when the Norman Conquest occurred and England was invaded and conquered by the Normans.
NO.People with Anglo saxon origins are white people from northern Europe or England. They include white people in the north, the south, and in Europe, depending upon their origins.-------------The Anglo Saxon people were the people inhabiting (and ruling) England from the Viking times up till 1066 with the Norman conquest.The confederate army were combatants in the Americancivil war between 1861 and 1865
Catherine Hills has written: 'The Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham'
John L. O'Sullivan, in his 1845 article for the U.S. Magazine and Democratic Review, used the term "Anglo-Saxon foot" to advocate for the idea of Manifest Destiny, suggesting that the Anglo-Saxon race was destined to expand across North America. This phrase implied a belief in the superiority of Anglo-Saxon culture and governance, framing westward expansion as both a right and a duty. O'Sullivan's rhetoric reflected the prevailing attitudes of the time, intertwining nationalism with racial and cultural superiority.
its North America but in Spanish i think
The term Anglo is used as a prefix to indicate a relation to the Angles, England or the English people, as in the phrases 'Anglo-Saxon', 'Anglo-American', 'Anglo-Celtic', and 'Anglo-Indian'. It is often used alone, somewhat loosely, to refer to a person or people of English ethnicity in the The Americas, Australia and Southern Africa. It is also used, both in English-speaking and non-English-speaking countries, to refer to Anglophone people of other European origins.Anglo is a Late Latin prefix used to denote "English-" in conjunction with another toponym or demonym. The word is derived from Anglia, the Latin name for England, and still the modern name of its eastern region. Anglia and England both mean "Land of the Angles", a Germanic people originating in the north German peninsula of Angeln.Anglo is not a technical term.[citation needed] There are linguistic problems with using the word as an adjective or noun on its own. For example, the 'o' in Anglo means 'and' (Anglo-Saxon means of Angle and Saxon origin), so there is only an apparent parallelism between, for example, "Latino" and "Anglo". However, a semantic change has taken place in many English-speaking regions, so that in informal usage the meanings listed below are valid.Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo