Germanic people (see Germans),
first mentioned in the 2d cent. by Ptolemy as inhabiting the southern part
of the Cimbric Peninsula (Southern Jutland). Holding the area at the mouth
of the Elbe River and some of the nearby islands, they gradually extended
their territory southward across the Weser River. A politically unified
people, the Saxons were ruled by princes or chieftains. Their assemblies,
in which all classes except slaves were represented, were consulted on
all issues of war and peace. In the 3d and 4th cent. the Saxons were active
in raiding expeditions along the coasts of the North Sea. The European
coast from the Loire to the Scheldt rivers and the southeastern coast of
Britain, where defenses were erected against their piratical raids, were
known to the Romans as litora Saxonica [Saxon shores]. By the 5th
cent. Saxons had established settlements along the north shore of Gaul,
especially at the mouth of the Loire, and eventually these Saxons came
under Frankish domination. As the Roman
occupation of Britain weakened, the Saxons increased their marauding attacks
and also began (c.450) to make settlements there, resisting all efforts
to drive them off. By the end of the 6th cent. they and their neighbors
the Angles were firmly established in the island, laying the foundations
of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms (see Anglo-Saxons).
Wessex, the kingdom of the West Saxons, became dominant. After the migration
to Britain, the Saxons on the Continent came to be identified by historians
as the Old Saxons. By virtue of their conquest (531) of Thuringia, they
occupied NW Germany. In 566 they were subjugated by the Franks and forced
to pay tribute. The Old Saxons waged intermittent war with the Franks until
the end of the 8th cent., when they were conquered by Charlemagne
and absorbed into his empire. After this conquest they were forcibly converted
to Christianity. In the division of the empire by the Treaty of Verdun
(843), the lands of the Saxons were included in the section that formed
the basis for modern Germany.
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