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The Romans came to the region of England known as Lincolnshire in 48 AD. The Romans conquered this region at this time. The Romans had a settlement there up until 407 AD.
The Saxons (from modern Germany), along with Angles and Jutes, invaded or migrated to Britain around the time of the collapse of the Roman Era in the 5th Century AD (400-500 AD). The Vikings of Scandinavia first began invading England in 793 AD. ---- There are links below.
The first known landing of the Romans in Britain is in 55 BC under Julius Caesar. He had to withdraw, made another attempt in 54 BC, but conditions were still unfavorable and he left. Claudius officially annexed Britain in 43 AD. But, bear in mind, that between 54 BC and 43 AD there was a Roman presence in Britain. The future emperor Vespasian had successfully secured territory before Claudius even got there and no doubt there were trading colonies also.
Because France did not exist at that time. England did not exist neither.Those two lands were populated by different tribes.
Historians commonly refer to England in this time period as Prehistoric Britain, as there was no designated name for the area in that time. Sub-periods of the time were named according to common prehistoric ages, but instead have the "Britain" namesake in them (Stone Age Britain, Bronze Age Britain, etc.), eventually reaching the period known as Roman Britain.
its not for England people
The Romans came to the region of England known as Lincolnshire in 48 AD. The Romans conquered this region at this time. The Romans had a settlement there up until 407 AD.
The Celts did not conquer England; they were already living in the British Isles when the Romans invaded in AD 43. The Romans then ruled over England for several centuries.
The Saxons (from modern Germany), along with Angles and Jutes, invaded or migrated to Britain around the time of the collapse of the Roman Era in the 5th Century AD (400-500 AD). The Vikings of Scandinavia first began invading England in 793 AD. ---- There are links below.
The first known landing of the Romans in Britain is in 55 BC under Julius Caesar. He had to withdraw, made another attempt in 54 BC, but conditions were still unfavorable and he left. Claudius officially annexed Britain in 43 AD. But, bear in mind, that between 54 BC and 43 AD there was a Roman presence in Britain. The future emperor Vespasian had successfully secured territory before Claudius even got there and no doubt there were trading colonies also.
London was founded by the Romans between AD 43 and 50.But it was not the capital city of England at the time. During the Roman occupation, the capital of England was Colchester.Scattered Brythonic elements have been found in the area of London from as early as 4500 BC. The first major settlement was the Romans in 43 AD
The romans went to England because when they had the war with queen Boadicea, the Celtic queen. In that time the Celtic people lived in what is now called England. In the end the romans won because of their advantages such as their spears, the roman cavalry, and the formation of the roman foot soldiers. Also the romans built buildings and roads such as the huge wall they built across northern England.
Slavery probably first came with the Romans who kept slaves. The Irish slave trade began in about 1625. (By "Irish slave trade" I mean the English enslaved the Irish.) The British had slaves already when they colonised countries so slavery would have been brought with them at the same time.
People in England will have to wait for advertisements to come out in England. How are people in a different country suppose to know that?
Because France did not exist at that time. England did not exist neither.Those two lands were populated by different tribes.
Historians commonly refer to England in this time period as Prehistoric Britain, as there was no designated name for the area in that time. Sub-periods of the time were named according to common prehistoric ages, but instead have the "Britain" namesake in them (Stone Age Britain, Bronze Age Britain, etc.), eventually reaching the period known as Roman Britain.
No but the majority of flights do come that way. Aerlingus (our national Airline) is more likely to come direct to Ireland nearly all of the time, so try them for flights first if you want to skip England.