Everything about English People totally explained
The
English people (from the adjective in ) are a
nation and
ethnic group native to
England who speak
English. The English identity as a people is of early origin, when they were known in
Old English as the
Anglecynn. The largest single population of English people reside in England, a
constituent country of the
United Kingdom. As an ethnic group, they're normally presumed to be the descendants of historical groups such as the
Brythons (including
Romano-Britons),
Anglo-Saxons,
Danish Vikings and
Normans. As a nation, they include a large minority of more recent migrants and their descendants, from a variety of different countries/regions. They are sometimes referred to as
Anglos, although this can also refer to other English-speaking whites (such as
Germans and
Irish in Australia and the US, for more information see
Anglo-Celtic Australian and
European American).
Definitions
Writing about the "English people" is complicated because England has historically been settled by waves of invaders and immigrants at different periods in history, and has also spread its influence, and its populace, worldwide. Hence, some writers use the term to refer to an English ethnic group that shares a belief in their common descent from a mass migration of Germanic peoples (usually referred to as
Anglo-Saxons) during the sub-Roman period. Historian Catherine Hills describes what she calls the "
national origin myth" of the English:
Others use it more broadly to refer to the 'English nation', which can have various meanings but generally comprises anyone who considers themselves English and are considered English by most other people.
The concept of an 'English nation' is older than that of the 'British nation' and the 1990s witnessed a revival in English self-consciousness. This is linked to the expressions of national self-awareness of the other British nations of Wales and Scotland — which take their most solid form in the new
devolved political arrangements within the United Kingdom — and the waning of a shared British national identity as the British Empire fades into history.
While there can be an ethnic component to expressions of English national identity, most political
English nationalists don't consider Englishness to be genetic. For example, the
English Democrats Party states that "We don't claim Englishness to be purely ethnic or purely cultural, but it's a complex mix of the two. We firmly believe Englishness is a state of mind", while the
Campaign for an English Parliament says, "The people of England includes everyone who considers this ancient land to be their home and future regardless of ethnicity, race, religion or culture". In an article for
The Guardian, novelist
Andrea Levy (born in London to
Jamaican parents) calls England a separate country "without any doubt" and asserts that she's "English. Born and bred, as the saying goes. (As far as I can remember, it's born and bred and not born-and-bred-with-a-very-long-line-of-white-ancestors-directly-descended-from-Anglo-Saxons.)" Arguing that "England has never been an exclusive club, but rather a hybrid nation", she writes that "Englishness must never be allowed to attach itself to ethnicity. The majority of English people are white, but some are not ... Let England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland be nations that are plural and inclusive."
However, this use of the word "English" is complicated by the fact that most non-white people in England identify as British rather than English. In their 2004 Annual Population Survey, the
Office of National Statistics compared the
ethnic identities of British people with their perceived
national identity. They found that while 58% of white people described their nationality as "English", the vast majority of non-white people called themselves "British". For example, "78 per cent of
Bangladeshis said they were British, while only 5 per cent said they were English, Scottish or Welsh", and the largest percentage of non-whites to identify as English were the people who described their ethnicity as "
Mixed" (37%).
English ethnicity
It may be difficult to clearly define English ethnicity, owing to the close interactions between the English and their neighbours in the
British Isles, and the waves of immigration that have added to England's gene pool at different periods. The
Oxford English Dictionary (OED) states that the earliest recorded sense of the word 'English' is "Of or belonging to the group of
Teutonic peoples collectively known as the
Angelcynn [...] comprising the
Angles,
Saxons, and
Jutes, who settled in Britain during the
5th c.". However, the
OED continues that "With the incorporation of the
Celtic and
Scandinavian elements of the population into the ‘English’ people, the
adj. came in the
11th c. to be applied to all natives of ‘England’, whatever their ancestry." The only exception was the period following the
Norman Conquest, when "English" was "for a time restricted to those whose ancestors were settled in England before the Conquest".
Thus, according to the
OED's definition, "English" today simply means anyone born in England. However, this inclusive definition contrasts with the views of those who see important ethnic differences between people with long-standing English ancestry and people whose ancestors arrived much more recently, an attitude expressed succinctly by a character in
Sarah Kane's play
Blasted who boasts "I'm not an import", contrasting himself with the children of immigrants: "they have their kids, call them English, they're not English, born in England don't make you English".
It is unclear how many people in the UK consider themselves ethnically English. In the
2001 UK census, respondents were invited to state their ethnicity, but while there were
tick boxes for '
Irish' and for '
Scottish', there were none for 'English' or '
Welsh', who were subsumed into the general heading 'White British'. Following complaints about this, the 2011 census will "allow respondents to record their English, Welsh, Scottish, Northern Irish, Irish or other identity."
A further complication is England's dominant position within the
United Kingdom, which has resulted in the terms 'English' and 'British' often being used interchangeably. Relatedly, studies of people with English ancestry have shown that they tend not to regard themselves as an ethnic group, even when they live in other countries. Patricia Greenhill studied people in
Canada with English heritage, and found that they didn't think of themselves as "ethnic", but rather as "normal" or "mainstream", an attitude Greenhill attributes to the cultural dominance of the English in Canada. Writer
Paul Johnson has suggested that like most dominant groups, the English have only demonstrated interest in their self-definition when they were feeling oppressed.
Scientists and sociologists have investigated the ethnic distinctiveness of the English, but their complex results have often been simplified in newspaper reports. In
2002, the
BBC used the headline "English and Welsh are races apart" to report a genetic survey of test subjects from
market towns in England and Wales, while in September 2006,
The Sunday Times reported that a survey of first names and surnames in the UK had identified
Ripley as "the 'most English' place in England with 88.58% of residents having an English ethnic background". The
Daily Mail printed an article with the headline "We're all Germans! (and we've been for 1,600 years)". In all these cases, the conclusions of these studies have been exaggerated or misinterpreted, and the language of race and ethnicity used only by the journalists.
History of English identity
Overview
According to the
Oxford English Dictionary, the term "English" wasn't originally used to refer to the earliest inhabitants of England -
Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers,
Celtic
Britons, and
Roman colonists. Instead, it referred to a heritage that began with the arrival of the
Anglo-Saxons in the
5th century, who settled lands already inhabited by
Romano-British tribes. That heritage then comes to include later arrivals, including
Scandinavians,
Normans, as well as those Romano-Britons who still lived in England.
Romano-Britons and Anglo-Saxons
Anglo-Saxons, a group of closely related
Germanic tribes that migrated to England from southern
Denmark and northern
Germany in the
5th century AD after the Romans retreated from Britain. The Anglo-Saxons gave their name to England (Angle-land) and to the English people.
However, the Anglo-Saxons arrived in a land that was already populated by people commonly referred to as the '
Romano-British', the descendants of the native Brythonic-speaking
Celtic population that lived in the area of Britain under Roman rule during the 1st-5th centuries AD. Furthermore, the multi-ethnic nature of the Roman Empire meant that other peoples were also present in England before the Anglo-Saxons arrived: for example,
archaeological discoveries suggest that North Africans may have had a limited presence.
The exact nature of the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons and their relationship with the Romano-British is a matter of debate. Traditionally, it was believed that a mass invasion by various Anglo-Saxon tribes largely displaced the indigenous British population in southern and eastern
Great Britain (modern day England with the exception of
Cornwall). This was supported by the writings of
Gildas, the only contemporary historical account of the period, describing slaughter and starvation of native Britons by invading peoples (
adventus Saxonum). Added to this was the fact that the
English language contains no more than a handful of words borrowed from
Brythonic sources (although the names of some towns, cities, rivers etc do have Brythonic or pre-Brythonic origins, becoming more frequent towards the west of Britain). However, this view has been re-evaluated in recent times with archaeologists and historians finding minimal evidence for mass displacement: archaeologist
Francis Pryor has stated that he "can't see any evidence for
bona fide mass migrations after the
Neolithic." Historian Malcolm Todd writes
» "It is much more likely that a large proportion of the British population remained in place and was progressively dominated by a Germanic aristocracy, in some cases marrying into it and leaving Celtic names in the, admittedly very dubious, early lists of Anglo-Saxon dynasties. But how we identify the surviving Britons in areas of predominantly Anglo-Saxon settlement, either archaeologically or linguistically, is still one of the deepest problems of early English history."
Geneticists have explored the relationship between Anglo-Saxons and Britons by studying the
Y-chromosomes of men in present day English towns. In
2002, a study by Weale
et al found genetic differences between test subjects from
market towns in central England and Wales, and that the English subjects were, on average closer genetically to the
Frisians of the
Netherlands than they were to their Welsh neighbours. This study hypothesised that an Anglo-Saxon invasion had replaced 50-100% of "indigenous" men. A 2006 study led by Mark Thomas used computer simulations to find a possible reason for the divergence between these finds and the archaeological record, which doesn't show evidence of mass immigration. They postulate that a small Anglo-Saxon elite could have operated an
apartheid-like system, preventing intermarriage between male Britons and female Anglo-Saxons (therefore increasing the proportion of "Anglo-Saxon" Y chromosomes in certain regions), depriving indigenous Britons of essential resources (leading to higher population growth rates for the elite), and asserting political dominance. Eventually the dominant group would have grown too large to be an effective elite, and the "indigenous" group would have been assimilated.
Other geneticists tell a different story. A more comprehensive follow-up study to Weale
et al in
2003 by Christian Capelli
et al, which analyzed
Y chromosome samples across a wider range of the British Isles, complicated the picture and indicated that different parts of England may have received different levels of intrusion: they theorise that while
central and
eastern England experienced a high level of intrusion from
continental Europe (the study couldn't significantly distinguish Germans of
Schleswig-Holstein from Danes or Frisians although Frisians were slightly closer to the British samples), southern and western England did not, and the population there appears to be largely descended from the indigenous Britons (the scientists acknowledge that this conclusion is "startling"). The 2003 study also noted that the transition between England and Wales is more gradual than the earlier study suggested.
In
The Origins of the British,
Stephen Oppenheimer suggests, based on a
meta-analysis of the data collected during both the 2002 and 2003 studies, and data from other sources, that the majority of English people, much like the other populations within the
British Isles, have some genetic relationship to the original hunter-gatherers who settled Britain between 15,000 and 7,500 years ago, after the last
Ice Age. He also suggests that the relatively high levels of northern European Y chromosomes (mainly
I1a and
R1a, "Anglo-Saxon" and "Viking" markers) detected in eastern Great Britain (both Scotland and England) have a far older signature than they'd have if they'd been introduced during an "Anglo-Saxon" invasion, they appear to have been in Great Britain much longer. He concludes that there may have been ongoing migrations between North Sea regions (eastern Great Britain, Norway, Denmark, Northern Germany) as far back as the palaeolithic, and that it isn't conclusive that all Y chromosome types usually associated with Anglo-Saxon invasions actually derive from colonisation during this period, since many may have come to Great Britain during the initial colonisation of the land after the Last Glacial Maximum. Thus he theorises that there's no necessity to postulate either a mass "Anglo-Saxon" migration or an "apartheid-like" system to explain the differences between the far east and far west of Great Britain, the differences in Y chromosome frequencies vary gradually and are not clearly defined, he concludes that they've always been there. Oppenheimer also postulates that the arrival of
Germanic languages in England may be considerably earlier than previously thought, and that both mainland and English
Belgae (from
Gaul) may have been Germanic-speaking peoples and represented closely related ethnic groups (or a single cross channel ethnic group). Oxford geneticist
Bryan Sykes has argued from DNA evidence that English genetic heritage is derived mainly from the
Iberian Peninsula; according to him, the
Anglo-Saxons played a rather insignificant role in English genetic composition.
Danish Vikings
From about
AD 800 waves of
Danish Viking assaults on the coastlines of the
British Isles were gradually followed by a succession of Danish settlers in England. At first, the Vikings were very much considered a separate people from the English. This separation was enshrined when
Alfred the Great signed the
Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum to establish the
Danelaw, a division of England between English and Danish rule, with the Danes occupying northern and eastern England. However, Alfred's successors subsequently won military victories against the Danes, incorporating much of the Danelaw into the nascent kingdom of England. Danish invasions continued into the
11th century, and there were both English and Danish kings in the period following the unification of England (for example,
Ethelred the Unready was English but
Canute the Great was Danish).
Gradually, the Danes in England came to be seen as 'English'. They had a noticeable impact on the
English language: many English words, such as
dream are of
Old Norse origin, and place names that end in
-thwaite and
-by are Scandinavian in origin.
The unification of England
The English population wasn't politically unified until the
10th century. Before then, it consisted of a number of
petty kingdoms which gradually coalesced into a
Heptarchy of seven powerful states, the most powerful of which were
Mercia and
Wessex. The English
nation state began to form when the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms united against Danish Viking invasions, which began around
800 AD. Over the following century and a half England was for the most part a politically unified entity, and remained permanently so after
959.
The
nation of England was formed in
937 by
Athelstan of
Wessex after the
Battle of Brunanburh, as Wessex grew from a relatively small kingdom in the South West to become the founder of the Kingdom of the English, incorporating all
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and the
Danelaw.
Normans and Angevins
The
Norman Conquest of
1066 brought Anglo-Saxon and Danish rule of England to an end, as the new
Norman elite almost universally replaced the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy and church leaders. After the conquest, the term "English people" normally included all natives of England, whether they were of Anglo-Saxon, Scandinavian or Celtic ancestry, to distinguish them from the Norman invaders, who were regarded as "French" even if born in England, for a generation or two after the Conquest. The Norman dynasty ruled England for 87 years until the death of
King Stephen in 1154, when the succession passed to
Henry II, of the French
House of Plantagenet, and England became part of the
Angevin Empire until
1399.
The Norman aristocracy used
Anglo-Norman as the language of the court, law and administration. It continued to be used by the Plantagenet kings until
Edward I came to the throne. Over time the English language became more important even in the court, and the French were gradually assimilated into the English people, until, by the 14th Century, both rulers and subjects regarded themselves as English and spoke the English language.
Despite the assimilation of the French, the distinction between 'English' and 'French' survived in official documents long after it had fallen out of common use, in particular in the legal phrase
Presentment of Englishry (a rule by which a
hundred had to prove an unidentified murdered body found on their soil to be that of an Englishman, rather than a Norman, if they wanted to avoid a fine). This law was abolished in 1340.
The English and Britain
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Since the
16th century, England has been one part of a wider political entity covering all or part of the
British Isles, which is today called the
United Kingdom.
Wales was
annexed by England by the
Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542, which incorporated Wales into the English state. A new British identity was subsequently developed when
James VI of Scotland became
James I of England as well and expressed the desire to be known as the monarch of Britain. In 1707, England formed a union with
Scotland by the passage of the
Acts of Union 1707 in both the
Scottish and
English parliaments, creating the
Kingdom of Great Britain. In 1801 another
Act of Union formed a union between the Kingdom of Great Britain and the
Kingdom of Ireland creating the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. About two thirds of Irish population, (those who lived in 26 of the 34 counties of Ireland) left the United Kingdom in 1922 to form the
Irish Free State, and the remainder became the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Throughout the history of the UK, the English have been dominant in terms of population and political weight. As a consequence, notions of 'Englishness' and 'Britishness' are often very similar. At the same time, after the 1707 Union, the English, along with the other peoples of the British Isles, have been encouraged to think of themselves as British rather than identifying themselves by the smaller constituent nations.
Later migrants
» See also: Historical immigration to Great Britain, Immigration to the United Kingdom (1922-present day), Demographics of England, British Asian, Black British.
Although England hasn't been successfully conquered since the Norman conquest or extensively settled since prior to that, it has been the destination of varied numbers of migrants at different periods from the seventeenth century. While some members of these groups maintain a separate ethnic identity, others have
assimilated and
intermarried with the English. Since
Oliver Cromwell's
resettlement of the Jews in
1656, there have been waves of
Jewish immigration from persecution in Russia in the nineteenth century and from Germany in the twentieth. After the French king
Louis XIV declared
Protestantism illegal in
1685 with the
Edict of Fontainebleau, an estimated 50,000 Protestant
Huguenots fled to England. Due to sustained and sometimes mass emigration from
Ireland, current estimates indicate that around 6 million people in the UK have at least one grandparent born in the
Republic of Ireland.
There has been a
black presence in England since at least the 16th century due to the
slave trade and an Indian presence since the mid 19th century because of the
British Raj.
Black and
Asian proportions have grown in England as immigration from the British Empire and the subsequent
Commonwealth of Nations was encouraged due to labour shortages during post-war rebuilding. While one result of this immigration has been incidents of
racial tension and/or hatred, such as the
Brixton and
Bradford riots, there has also been considerable
intermarriage; the 2001 census recorded that 1.31% of England's population call themselves "Mixed", and
The Sunday Times reported in
2007 that
mixed race people are likely to be the largest
ethnic minority in the UK by
2020.
Resurgent English nationalism
The late 1990s saw a resurgence of English national identity, spurred by
devolution in the
1990s of some powers to the
Scottish Parliament,
National Assembly for Wales,
Northern Ireland Assembly and the
Mayor of London and
London Assembly. As England lacks its own devolved parliament, its laws are created only in the UK parliament, giving rise to the "
West Lothian question", a hypothetical situation in which a law affecting only England could be voted for or against by a Scottish MP. Consequently, groups such as the
Campaign for an English Parliament are calling for the creation of a
devolved English Parliament, claiming that there's now a discriminative democratic deficit against the English. A rise in English self-consciousness has resulted, with increased use of the
English flag.
The English nationalist movement has had mixed results. When given a
referendum on devolution in Northern England the electorate overwhelmingly rejected it. However, opinion polls show support for a devolved English parliament from about two thirds of the residents of England as well as support from both Welsh and Scottish nationalists. Conversely, the
English Democrats gained just 14,506 votes in the
2005 UK general election.
Geographic distribution
From the earliest times English people have left England to settle in other parts of the
British Isles, but it isn't possible to identify their numbers, as British censuses have historically not invited respondents to identify themselves as English. However, the census does record place of birth, revealing that 8.08% of Scotland's population, 3.66% of the population of
Northern Ireland and 20% of the Welsh population were born in England. Similarly, the census of the
Republic of Ireland doesn't collect information on ethnicity, but it does record that there are over 200,000 people living in Ireland who were born in
England and Wales.
(External Link
)
English emigrant and descent communities are found across the world, and in some places, settled in significant numbers. In the
2000 United States Census, 24,509,692 Americans described their
ancestry as wholly or partly English. In addition, the 1,035,133 who recorded British ancestry and the 20,188,305 who simply called themselves 'American' doubtless contain many people with English ancestry.
In the
2006 Canadian Census, 'English' was the commonest ancestry recorded by respondents; 5,202,890 people described themselves as wholly or partly English, 16% of the population.
In
Australia, the
2006 Australian Census recorded 6,298,945 people who described their ancestry as 'English'. 1,425,559 of these people recorded that both their parents were born overseas.
Other countries with significant numbers of people of English
ancestry or
ethnic origin include
South Africa and
New Zealand.
Since the 1980s there have been increasingly large numbers of English people, estimated at over 3 million, permanently or semi-permanently living in
Spain and
France, drawn there by the climate and cheaper house prices.
Culture
The culture of England is sometimes difficult to separate clearly from the culture of the United Kingdom, so influential has English culture been on the cultures of the British Isles and, on the other hand, given the extent to which other cultures have influenced life in England.
Further Information
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