|
Eventually though, the adaptations became ever more makeshift, the fabric of Roman life increasingly threadbare, until it did indeed fall apart altogether. The island was now divided into three utterly different realms. The remains of Britannia hung on in the west. North of the abandoned walls and forts the Scottish tribes for the most part, stayed pagan. And England, the realm of the AngloSaxons and Jutes, was planted in the east, all the way from Kent to the kingdom of Bernicia in Northumbria. The Saxon chiefs often built their settlements on the ruined remains of old Roman British towns, not least of course London. Like many invaders, they hankered after what they had destroyed. |
|
rán ér, yǎn biàn zhōng huì jìn rù qí zuì zhōng zhāng. luó mǎ shì shēng huó wǎn ruò yī jiàn pò yī, yǐ lán lǚ bù kān, zhí dào zuì zhōng cán piàn yě xiāo shī dài jìn. cǐ shí de dǎo yǔ bèi huà fēn wéi sān ge quán rán bù tóng de qū yù, bù liè diān ní yà de cán bù jiān shǒu zài xī bù. běi bù bèi yí qì de duàn bì cán yuán, sū gé lán dà duō bù luò liú zài yì jiào qū, yīng gé lán dǎo shàng, shēng huó zhe àng gé lǔ sā kè xùn rén yǔ zhū tè rén, zhā gēn yú dōng bù, zì kěn tè àng gé lǔ suǒ jiàn wáng guó yí lù yán shēn zhì nuò sēn bù lǐ yà de bó ní xī yà wáng guó. sā kè xùn shǒu lǐng cháng huì xuǎn zé zài luó mǎ bù liè diān chéng zhèn de cán yú shàng jiàn shè jiā yuán, lún dūn biàn shì gè zhōng qiáo chǔ. yǔ duō shù rù qīn zhě xiāng tóng, tā men huì qù zhuī qiú zì jǐ yī shǒu huǐ miè zhī wù. |