Jutes$530281$ - ترجمة إلى الهولندية
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Jutes$530281$ - ترجمة إلى الهولندية

GERMANIC PEOPLE
Eudoses; Euthiones; The Jutes; Jute Danish; Jótar
  • The early migrations of Germanic peoples from coastal regions of northern Europe to areas of modern-day England. The settlement regions correspond roughly to later dialect divisions of Old English.
  • A map of Jutish settlements in Britain ''circa'' 575
  • The [[Jutland Peninsula]], possible homeland of the Jutes

Jutes      
n. Jutten, een derde van de Germaanse staten die Engeland in de 5-de Eeuw binnenviel

تعريف

Jutes
·noun ·pl Jutlanders; one of the Low German tribes, a portion of which settled in Kent, England, in the 5th century.

ويكيبيديا

Jutes

The Jutes (), Iuti, or Iutæ (Danish: Jyder, Old Norse: Jótar, Old English: Ēotas) were one of the Germanic tribes who settled in Great Britain after the departure of the Romans. According to Bede, they were one of the three most powerful Germanic nations, along with the Angles and the Saxons:

Those who came over were of the three most powerful nations of Germany—Saxons, Angles, and Jutes. From the Jutes are descended the people of Kent, and of the Isle of Wight, and those also in the province of the West Saxons who are to this day called Jutes, seated opposite to the Isle of Wight.

There is no consensus amongst historians on the origins of the Jutes. However, there is some archaeological evidence to support a theory that they originated from the eponymous Jutland Peninsula (then called Iutum in Latin) and to have populated parts of the North Frisian coast. Based on contemporary sources, it appears that they were a tribe of admixed Gutones, Cimbri, Teutons and Charudes, also called Eudoses, Eotenas, Iutae and Euthiones.

The Jutes invaded and settled in southern Britain in the later fifth century during the Migration Period, as part of a larger wave of Germanic settlement into Britain.