Angeln

Angeln

Modern Angeln, also known as Anglia (German: "Angeln", Danish: "Angel", Latin: "Anglia", English: may follow German or Latin; direct translation from Latin: "England"), is a peninsula in Southern Schleswig in the northern Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, protruding into the Bay of Kiel. It is separated from the neighbouring peninsula of Schwansen (Danish: "Svans" or "Svansø") by the Schlei inlet, and from the Danish island of Als by the Flensburger Förde ("Firth of Flensburg"). Whether ancient Angeln conformed to these borders is uncertain. It may have been somewhat larger; however, the ancient sources mainly concur that it included the territory of modern Angeln.

Angeln has a significance far beyond its current small area and country terrain, in that it is believed to have been the original home of the Angles, Germanic immigrants to central and northern England, and East Anglia. This migration led to their new homeland being named after them, from which the name "England" derives. English, a major language of the modern world, derives its name from the Angles and Angeln.

Name

In one theory the name of the Angles came from Germanic words for "narrow" (compare German "eng" = "narrow"), and meant "the people who live beside the Narrow [Water] ", i.e. beside the Schlei estuary. The root would be [http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE18.html *angh-] , "tight".

The word "Angeln" in German means "Angles", but is used as a way to designate the area they occupied ("Anglia"). The most common theory is that the name "Angeln" itself etymologically means "hook", as in angling for fish. Many reputable etymological dictionaries are silent on its root. Julius Pokorny, a major Indo-European linguist, derives it from [http://www.indoeuropean.nl/cgi-bin/response.cgi?flags=endnnnn&root=leiden&basename=/data/ie/pokorny&first=1&text_lemma=ang-&method_lemma=substring *ang-] , "bend". The meaning would be "Anwohner der Holsteiner Bucht", "residents at the Bay of Holstein". The problem with this derivation is that Grimm's Law does not appear to apply to it. The theory that "Angeln" refers to a landform resembling a hook would have required advanced mapmaking abilities by its people, and is thus misleading.Fact|date=January 2008Angeln is situated on the large bight linking the Baltic coast to Jutland, which is mainly the Bay of Kiel ("Kieler Bucht"), but might be seen as "Holsteiner Bucht".

The Angles were part of the Federation of the Ingaevones, with their mystic ancestor and god of fertility Yngvi, and both terms might well share the same root (inglish -> anglish), say as the origin of the federation. Pokorny points out the possible use of this etymological root in other ancient names, such as Hardanger and Angrivarii.

Early history

The region was home to the Germanic people, the Angles, who, together with Saxons, left their home to migrate to Britain in the 5th-6th centuries. For the years 449-455, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes how king Vortigern (a British king) invited the Angles to come and receive land among them if they would help to defend them against the Picts. Those successful Angles sent word back that good land was available and that the British were worthless (presumably as soldiers). Then:

:"From Anglia, which has ever since remained waste between the Jutes and the Saxons, came the East Angles, the Middle Angles, the Mercians, and all of those north of the Humber." ( [http://omacl.org/Anglo/part1.html Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 449 AD] )

The phrase "north of the Humber" refers to the northern kingdom of Northumbria which includes what is now north and north eastern England and part of southern Scotland. Mercia was located in central England and broadly corresponds to what is now known as the English Midlands.

It had long been suspected from all the Germanic sources that this report is too simple, a suspicion confirmed by the archaeology; namely, the "fibulae", or brooches, worn by the women. There are essentially two kinds, the saucer brooch and the cruciform brooch. East coastal and northern Britain were settled by women wearing cruciform brooches, which came from coastal Scandinavia, all of Denmark, and Schleswig-Holstein all the way south to the lower Elbe and all the way east to the Oder, as well as a pocket in coastal Friesland, the embarkation point.

South central Britain was settled by women wearing the saucer brooch, which came from Lower Saxony, the south side of the lower Elbe, and pockets among the then Franks up the Rhine and along the coast to the mouth of the Seine.

Eastern Sweden, except in the far north, did not use either brooch, which may indicate that they were not as close culturally to the westward-looking population; i.e., they formed a conservative subculture of their own, the nucleus of a future Sweden. They would have looked adventurously rather to the east, where the Goths had gone and where the Vikings who would found Russia were to go.

The most logical conclusion is that the people called "Angles" comprised the population of all of Schleswig-Holstein and the Propommern south to the first big bend in the Elbe. They must have included identities mentioned under other names in the more ancient sources, just as the Angles themselves must have had other names. A more complete presentation is given under Angles.

Later history

After the Angles departed from Anglia, by the 8th century the region was occupied by Danish Vikings. This is reflected in the large number of place names ending in "-by" (meaning "-city") in the region today. In the Viking period, the chronicler Æthelweard reports that the most important town in Angeln was Hedeby.

Later Angeln's history is subsumed in that of the larger surrounding region, which came to be known as Southern Jutland or Schleswig (Danish: "Slesvig"). Until the 19th century, the area primarily belonged to Denmark. But ethnically and linguistically a mixed German/Danish population evolved. Denmark lost Schleswig to Austria and Prussia in 1864 as a result of the second war of Schleswig. In 1920, following Germany's defeat in World War I, a plebiscite was held to determine which areas should return to Danish control. As a result of the plebiscite, much of Schleswig returned to Denmark, but Angeln remained in Germany. See Schleswig-Holstein Question for a detailed history.

ee also

* Angles
* List of Germanic peoples
* Anglo-Saxons
* Thorsberg moor

References

* "The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles: Translated and collated by Anne Savage", Dorset Press, 1983, ISBN 0-88029-061-7
* Malcom Falkus and John Gillingham, "Historical Atlas of Britain", Crescent Books, 1987, ISBN 0-517-63382-5

External links

* [http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/cattle/angeln/index.htm Angeln cattle]
* [http://www.germany-tourism.de/ENG/infocenter/german_tourist_boards_dummy.htm?site=search&STYPE=ORT&LAN=EN&REGION=Angeln%20(Ostsee) Tourism in Angeln]
* [http://www.uni-kiel.de/cinarchea/prod/unewatt-e.htm Cinarchea (Archaeological films of Schleswig-Holstein)]
* [http://www.1uptravel.com/flag/flags/de-sh-.html#ang County and Municipal Flags (Schleswig-Holstein, Germany)]
* [http://www.genealogy-sh.com/ Genealogy in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany]


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  • angeln — angeln …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Angeln — steht für eine Sportart, siehe Angeln (Fischfang) eine Landschaft in Schleswig Holstein, siehe Angeln (Gebiet) ein Volk, siehe Angeln (Volk) die Tätigkeit eines Tonassistenten beim Film Siehe auch: Angel  Wiktionary: Angeln –… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Angeln — Angeln, verb. reg. act. mit der Angel fischen. Fische angeln, oder nach Fischen angeln. Ich angelte mit Fröhlichkeit Nach dir, du bissest an, Gleim. Figürlich, nach etwas angeln, mühsam darnach trachten, oder streben. Vergebens angelst du nach… …   Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der Hochdeutschen Mundart

  • angeln — V. (Mittelstufe) Fische mit der Angel fangen Beispiel: Jeden Monat fahre ich mit meinen Bekannten angeln. Kollokation: Forellen angeln angeln V. (Aufbaustufe) ugs.: etw., das nicht in unmittelbarer Reichweite liegt, zu fassen suchen Beispiel: Er… …   Extremes Deutsch

  • Angeln [2] — Angeln, Landschaft im preuß. Regbez. Schleswig, zwischen dem Flensburger Busen und der Schlei, ein durch Fruchtbarkeit ausgezeichnetes Hügelland, angeblich die Heimat der um 450 nach England ausgewanderten Angeln (s. d.). Hauptort ist Kappeln …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Angeln — [Wichtig (Rating 3200 5600)] Auch: • Fischen Bsp.: • Es ist ein Reit , Angel und Wildwasserlager. • Pauls Hobby ist Angeln …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Angeln [1] — Angeln (Fischerei), s. u. Angel …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Angeln [2] — Angeln, 1) (Angli, a. u. m. Geogr.), germanisches Volk an den Ufern der Niederelbe, zogen später nördlich nach Schleswig, wo sie zwischen Jüten u. Sachsen saßen; mit Letzteren verbunden, eroberten sie England, daher ihr gemeinschaftlicher Name… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Angeln [1] — Angeln (Anglii oder Angili), german. Volk, ursprünglich (nach Zeuß) um die untere Saale längs der Elbe bis über die Ohre hinab, später in der noch jetzt nach ihnen benannten Gegend an der Ostsee zwischen Schleswig und Flensburg wohnhaft,… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Angeln — Angeln, Landschaft im preuß. Reg. Bez. Schleswig, zwischen Schlei, Ostsee und der Flensburger Föhrde, 830 qkm, etwa 45.000 E.; Hauptort Kappeln …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Angeln [2] — Angeln, german. Volk, zur Zeit des Tacitus im heutigen Schleswig, zogen mit den Sachsen (Angelsachsen) im 5. Jahrh. nach England, gründeten das. im N. die Königr. Ostangeln, Northumbrien und Mercia. – Vgl. Weiland (1889), Erdmann (1891) …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

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