Before the Anglo-Saxons invaded, England was primarily inhabited by Celtic tribes, often referred to as the Britons. These groups had established various kingdoms and cultures across the region, with influences from earlier settlers, including the Romans, who had occupied Britain from 43 AD until around 410 AD. The Celtic peoples had their own languages, customs, and social structures, which were significantly impacted by subsequent Anglo-Saxon migrations and settlements.
Germany.
The Saxons. When the Saxons invaded England, the English lost, then the Saxons and the English came together to be the Anglo-Saxons.
The Anglo-Saxons' were a tribe. They invaded England, and controlled it after the Roman Army had lest britan in AD 410
Before the Anglo-Saxons conquered England, Britain was ruled by an indigenous people referred to as the Britons. They were a mix of Roman and British blood.
tonbridge,kent,england but they never invaded Scotland ,Wales and cornwall.
The Anglo Saxons invaded as the Romans pulled out.
The Celts or Britons were the people who lived in Britain before the Normans, Anglo-Saxons or Romans invaded; and they are still there.
Anglo-Saxons
The English! Or if you mean before 1066 when William the Conqueror invaded England, then the natives would be referred to as the Anglo-Saxons.
The three major Germanic tribes that invaded England were the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes. They arrived in England in the 5th century AD, collectively known as the Anglo-Saxons, and played a significant role in shaping the culture and language of the region.
The Dutch under Williaam of Orange? The Romans, Anglo Saxons. Danes. Normans.
England was at one time inhabited by a tribe called the Angles, and then England was invaded by a Germanic tribe called the Saxons, and as these two ethnic groups gradually merged, they became the Anglo-Saxons.