History of the English People, Volume I (of 8) eBook

John Richard Green
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 317 pages of information about History of the English People, Volume I (of 8).

History of the English People, Volume I (of 8) eBook

John Richard Green
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 317 pages of information about History of the English People, Volume I (of 8).

Of the three English tribes the Saxons lay nearest to the Empire, and they were naturally the first to touch the Roman world; at the close of the third century indeed their boats appeared in such force in the English Channel as to call for a special fleet to resist them.  The piracy of our fathers had thus brought them to the shores of a land which, dear as it is now to Englishmen, had not as yet been trodden by English feet.  This land was Britain.  When the Saxon boats touched its coast the island was the westernmost province of the Roman Empire.  In the fifty-fifth year before Christ a descent of Julius Caesar revealed it to the Roman world; and a century after Caesar’s landing the Emperor Claudius undertook its conquest.  The work was swiftly carried out.  Before thirty years were over the bulk of the island had passed beneath the Roman sway and the Roman frontier had been carried to the Firths of Forth and of Clyde.  The work of civilization followed fast on the work of the sword.  To the last indeed the distance of the island from the seat of empire left her less Romanized than any other province of the west.  The bulk of the population scattered over the country seem in spite of imperial edicts to have clung to their old law as to their old language, and to have retained some traditional allegiance to their native chiefs.  But Roman civilization rested mainly on city life, and in Britain as elsewhere the city was thoroughly Roman.  In towns such as Lincoln or York, governed by their own municipal officers, guarded by massive walls, and linked together by a network of magnificent roads which reached from one end of the island to the other, manners, language, political life, all were of Rome.

For three hundred years the Roman sword secured order and peace without Britain and within, and with peace and order came a wide and rapid prosperity.  Commerce sprang up in ports amongst which London held the first rank; agriculture flourished till Britain became one of the corn-exporting countries of the world; the mineral resources of the province were explored in the tin mines of Cornwall, the lead mines of Somerset or Northumberland, and the iron mines of the Forest of Dean.  But evils which sapped the strength of the whole Empire told at last on the province of Britain.  Wealth and population alike declined under a crushing system of taxation, under restrictions which fettered industry, under a despotism which crushed out all local independence.  And with decay within came danger from without.  For centuries past the Roman frontier had held back the barbaric world beyond it, the Parthian of the Euphrates, the Numidian of the African desert, the German of the Danube or the Rhine.  In Britain a wall drawn from Newcastle to Carlisle bridled the British tribes, the Picts as they were called, who had been sheltered from Roman conquest by the fastnesses of the Highlands.  It was this mass of savage barbarism which broke upon the Empire as it sank into decay.  In its western dominions the triumph of these assailants was complete.  The Franks conquered and colonized Gaul.  The West-Goths conquered and colonized Spain.  The Vandals founded a kingdom in Africa.  The Burgundians encamped in the border-land between Italy and the Rhone.  The East-Goths ruled at last in Italy itself.

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History of the English People, Volume I (of 8) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.