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Historical immigration to Great Britain

The historical immigration to Great Britain concerns the movement of people, cultural and ethnic groups to the British Isles before Irish independence in 1922. Immigration after Irish independence is dealt with by the article Immigration to the United Kingdom since Irish independence.

Modern humans first arrived in Great Britain during the Palaeolithic era, but until the invasion of the Romans (1st century BC) there was no historical record. With the Fall of the Western Roman Empire, large numbers of Germanic speakers from the continent migrated to the southern parts of the island, becoming known as the Anglo-Saxons and eventually forming England. Beginning at the end of the eighth century, bands of Vikings began to invade and subsequently settle. In 1066, the Normans successfully took control of England. Subsequently, the Plantagenet Dynasty held the Throne of England from 1154 to 1485. These events resulted in a continuous flow of migration from France during this period. Other European migrants included Flemings and French Huguenots.

The Great Famine in Ireland, then part of the United Kingdom, resulted in perhaps a million people migrating to Great Britain.[1] Throughout the 19th century, a small population of 28,644 German immigrants built up in England and Wales. London held around half of this population, and other small communities existed in Manchester, Bradford and elsewhere. The German immigrant community was the largest group until 1891, when it became second to Russian Jews.[2] After 1881, Russian Jews suffered bitter persecutions and 2 million left the Russian Empire by 1914 .Around 120,000 settled permanently in Britain, becoming the largest ethnic minority from outside the British Isles,[3] and by 1938 this population had increased to 370,000.[4] Unable to return to Poland at the end of the Second World War, over 120,000 Polish veterans remained in the UK permanently.[5] After the war, many people immigrated from colonies and former colonies in the Caribbean and Indian subcontinent, as a legacy of empire or driven by labour shortages.[6] In 1841, only 0.25 per cent of the population of England and Wales was born in a foreign country, increasing to 1.5 per cent by 1901,[7] 2.6 per cent by 1931 and 4.4 per cent in 1951.[8]DNA studies have been used to provide a direct record of the effects of immigration on the population.[9]

Antiquity edit

Roman Empire edit

The first Roman invasion of Great Britain was led by Julius Caesar in 55 BC; the second, a year later in 54 BC. The Romans had many supporters among the Celtic tribal leaders, who agreed to pay tribute to Rome in return for Roman protection. The Romans returned in AD 43, led by the Emperor Claudius, this time establishing control, and establishing the province of Britannia. Initially an oppressive rule, gradually the new leaders gained a firmer hold on their new territory which at one point stretched from the south coast of England to Wales and northwards as far as southern Scotland.

During the 367 years of Roman occupation of Britain, many settlers were soldiers garrisoned on the mainland. It was with constant contact with Rome and the rest of Romanised Europe through trade and industry that the elite native Britons themselves adopted Roman culture and customs, such as the Latin language, though the majority in the countryside were little affected.

The capital city of Londinium was an ethnically diverse city with inhabitants from across the Roman Empire, including natives of Britannia, continental Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa.[10] There was also cultural diversity in other Roman-British towns, which were sustained by considerable migration, both within Britannia and from other Roman territories, including North Africa,[11] Roman Syria, the Eastern Mediterranean, and continental Europe.[12] Of Roman Britain's estimated population of three million, the urban population was about 240,000 people,[13] with Londinium having an estimated 60,000 people.[14][15] However, after Britannia ceased to be a functional Roman province, many of the urban areas collapsed and the overall population may have declined by as much as two million.[16]

Irish (medieval) edit

During the 5th century, Irish pirates known as the Scotti started raiding north-western Britain from their base in north-east Ireland. After the Roman withdrawal they established the kingdom of Dál Riata, roughly equivalent to Argyll. This migration is traditionally held to be the means by which Primitive Irish was introduced into what is now Scotland. However, it has been posited that the language may already have been spoken in this region for centuries, having developed as part of a larger Goidelic language zone, and that there was little Irish settlement in this period.[17] Similar proposals have been made for areas of western Wales, where an Irish language presence is evident.[18] Others have argued that the traditional narrative of significant migration, particularly in the case of Dál Riata, is likely correct.[19]

Anglo-Saxons edit

Germanic (Frankish) mercenaries were employed in Gaul by the Roman Empire and it is speculated that in a similar manner, the first Germanic immigrants to Britain arrived at the invitation of the British ruling classes at the end of the Roman period. Though the (probably mythical) landing of Hengist and Horsa in Kent in 449 is traditionally considered to be the start of the Anglo-Saxon migrations, archaeological evidence has shown that significant settlement in East Anglia predated this by nearly half a century.[20]

The key area of large-scale migration was southeastern Britain; in this region, place names of Celtic and Latin origin are extremely few.[21][22][23][24] Genetic and isotope evidence has demonstrated that the settlers included both men and women, many of whom were of a low socioeconomic status, and that migration continued over an extended period, possibly more than two hundred years.[25][26] The varied dialects spoken by the new arrivals eventually coalesced into Old English, the ancestor of the modern English language.

In the Post-Roman period the traditional division of the Anglo-Saxons into Angles, Saxons and Jutes is first seen in the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum by Bede; however, historical and archaeological research has shown that a wider range of Germanic peoples from Frisia, Lower Saxony, Jutland and possibly southern Sweden moved to Britain during this period. Scholars have stressed that the adoption of specifically Anglian, Saxon and Jutish identities was the result of a later period of ethnogenesis.[27][28]

Following the settlement period, Anglo-Saxon elites and kingdoms began to emerge; these are traditionally grouped together as the Heptarchy. Their formation has been linked to a second stage of Anglo-Saxon expansion in which the kingdoms of Wessex, Mercia and Northumbria each began periods of conquest of British territory. It is likely that these kingdoms housed significant numbers of Britons, particularly on their western margins.[29] That this was the case is demonstrated by the late seventh century laws of King Ine, which made specific provisions for Britons who lived in Wessex.[30]

Medieval edit

Vikings edit

The earliest date given for a Viking raid of Britain is 789 when, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Portland was attacked. A more exact report dates from 8 June 793, when the cloister at Lindisfarne was pillaged by foreign seafarers. These raiders, whose expeditions extended well into the 9th century, were gradually followed by armies and settlers who brought a new culture and tradition markedly different from that of the prevalent Anglo-Saxon society of southern Britain. The Danelaw, established through the Viking conquest of large parts of the Anglo-Saxon cultural sphere, was formed as a result of the Treaty of Wedmore in the late 9th century, after Alfred the Great had defeated the Viking Guthrum at the Battle of Ethandun. Between 1016 and 1042 England was ruled by Danish kings. Following this, the Anglo-Saxons regained control until 1066.

Though located formally within the Danelaw, counties such as Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire, and Essex do not seem to have experienced much Danish settlement, which was more concentrated in Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire, as demonstrated by toponymic evidence. The Scandinavians who settled along the coast of the Irish sea were mainly of Norwegian origin, though many had arrived via Ireland.[31]

Most of the Vikings arriving in the northern parts of Britain also originated in Norway. Settlement was densest in the Shetland and Orkney islands and Caithness, where Norn, a language descended from Old Norse, was historically spoken, but a Viking presence has also been identified in the Hebrides and the western Scottish Highlands.[32][33]

Normans edit

 
Normans, as portrayed here on the Bayeux Tapestry, were an elite who made up an estimated 2% of England's population.

The Norman conquest of 1066 is normally considered the last successful attempt in history by a foreign army to take control of the Kingdom of England by means of military occupation. From the Norman point of view, William the Conqueror was the legitimate heir to the realm (as explained in the Bayeux Tapestry), and the invasion was required to secure this against the usurpation of Harold Godwinson. William ejected the Anglo-Saxon ruling class, installing his followers in their place. Most of these were from Normandy, but a significant portion were of Breton origin.[34] Artisans and merchants from France also settled in England to take advantage of economic opportunities in the wake of the conquest.[35]

In the years following the invasion to 1204, when Normandy was lost to France, the new nobility maintained close ties with their homelands across the channel. This was in part secured by granting aristocrats lands in both domains, giving an incentive on all levels to maintain the union. The influx of Norman military and ecclesiastical aristocracy changed the nature of the ruling class in England, leading to the creation of an Anglo-Norman population. Some French nobles moved north to Scotland at the invitation of King David I, where they established many of the royal houses that would dominate Scottish politics in the coming centuries. These included the Balliols, the Bruces and the FitzAlans.[36]

Though the Normans formed a powerful elite, they were vastly outnumbered by their English and Scottish subjects. It has been estimated that they made up only 2 percent of the population of England.[37]

Flemings edit

The later middle ages saw substantial Flemish migration to England, Wales and Scotland. The term "Fleming" was used to refer to natives of the Low Countries overall rather than Flanders specifically.[38]

The first wave of Flemings arrived in England following floods in their low-lying homelands during the reign of Henry I. Eventually, the migrants were planted in Pembrokeshire in Wales. According to the Brut y Tywysogyon, the native inhabitants were driven from the area, with the Flemish replacing them. This region, in which Flemish and English were spoken from an early date, came to be known as Little England beyond Wales.[39]

Many of the early Flemish settlers in England were weavers, and established themselves in the larger English towns and cities.[40] In Scotland, Flemish incomers contributed to the burgeoning wool trade in the southeastern part of the country.[41]

Roma in Britain edit

Romani people originated in the Punjab region of North India as a nomadic people. They entered Europe between the 8th and 10th centuries C.E., arriving in Western Europe by the 15th century. They were called "Gypsies", because Europeans mistakenly believed that they came from Egypt. This minority is made up of distinct groups called "tribes" or "nations". Roma spoke dialects of their common language, the Romani language, which is based on Sanskrit (the classical language of India), and is similar to other Indo-Aryan languages.[42]

Roma in Britain have been documented since the early 16th century. The Egyptians Act 1530 was a response to the arrival of Romani Gypsies, known as "Egyptians" at the time, in Britain in the 16th century. The first definite record of Roma in Scotland was in 1505, and in England in 1513 or 1514. They were initially travellers, largely working as hawkers, basket weavers, craftsmen, blacksmiths and other occupations, but also as hostlers, jockeys, horse dealers, and many other occupations that involve working with horses.[43]

Early modern edit

Huguenots edit

The Huguenots, French Protestants facing persecution following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, began to move to England in large numbers around 1670, after King Charles II offered them sanctuary. Most came from regions in western France such as Poitou, and in all some 40–50,000 arrived.[44] Though many towns and cities in England served as destinations for the Huguenot migrants, the largest number settled in the Spitalfields area of London, and, being former silk-weavers, brought new energy to this industry in the area and raised silk to an important fashion item in Britain.[45]

South Asians edit

 
Plaque commemorating Sake Dean Mahomed and Britain's first Indian restaurant that he opened in 1810.

People from the Indian subcontinent have settled in Great Britain since the East India Company (EIC) recruited lascars to replace vacancies in their crews on East Indiamen whilst on voyages in India. Many were then refused passage back, and were marooned in London. There were also some ayahs, domestic servants and nannies of wealthy British families, who accompanied their employers back to "Blighty" when their stay in Asia came to an end.

The number of seamen from the East Indies employed on English ships was felt so worrisome at that time that the English tried to restrict their numbers by the Navigation Act 1660, which restricted the employment of overseas sailors to a quarter of the crew on returning East India Company ships. Baptism records in East Greenwich suggest that young Indians from the Malabar Coast were being recruited as servants at the end of the 17th century, and records of the EIC also suggest that Indo-Portuguese cooks from Goa were retained by captains from voyage to voyage.[46] In 1797, thirteen were buried in the parish of St Nicholas at Deptford. By the mid-19th century, there were at least 40,000 Indian seamen, diplomats, scholars, soldiers, officials, tourists, businessmen and students in Great Britain.[47] In 1855 more than 25,000 of these were lascar seamen working on British ships. Lascars were a transitory group who would lodge in British ports in between voyages.[48][49][50]

Beginning in the 17th century, the East India Company brought over thousands of South Asian scholars, lascars, and other workers (who were mostly Bengali and/or Muslim) to England, some of whom settled down and took local European wives, due to a lack of Asian women in the British Isles at the time.[51] Due to the majority of early Asian immigrants being lascars, the earliest Asian communities were found in port towns. Naval cooks also came, many of them from the Sylhet Division of what is now Bangladesh. One of the most famous 18th-century Bengali immigrants to Britain was Sake Dean Mahomed, a captain of the East India Company. In 1810, he founded London's first Indian restaurant, the Hindoostane Coffee House. He is also claimed as the person who introduced shampoo and therapeutic massage to Britain.[52] By the 1930s about 7 to 10 thousand Indians had settled permanently in Britain.[53] [54]

Modern edit

Year Foreign-born population of England and Wales Total population

[55][56][57][58][59]

Irish-born population Percentage of total population born abroad
1901 475,000 32,500,000 425,000 1.5
1911 900,000 32,500,000 375,000 2.5
1921 750,000 37,900,000 365,000 2
1931 1,080,000 40,000,000 380,000 2.7
1951 1,875,000 43,700,000 470,000 4.3
1961 2,290,000 46,000,000 645,000 5.0
1971 3,100,000 48,700,000 585,000 6.4
1981 3,220,000 48,500,000 580,000 6.6
1991 3,625,000 49,900,000 570,000 7.3
2001 4,600,000 52,500,000 475,000 8.8
2011 7,500,000 56,000,000 400,000 13.4
2021 10,000,000 59,600,000 325,000 16.8

Irish (modern) edit

There has been continuous migration from Ireland to Britain since before the Middle Ages, but the number of arrivals increased significantly in the nineteenth century, due to the Great Famine and job opportunities offered by the Industrial Revolution. The Irish communities in west coast cities such as Liverpool and Glasgow were particularly significant.[60][61]

Africans edit

Following the British defeat in the American War of Independence over 1,100 Black Loyalist troops who had fought on the losing side were transported to Britain, but they mostly ended up destitute on London's streets and were viewed as a social problem. The Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor was formed. They distributed relief and helped the men to go overseas, some to what remained of British North America. In 1786, the committee funded an expedition of 280 black men, forty black women and seventy white wives and girlfriends to Sierra Leone. The settlement failed and within two years all but sixty of the migrants had died.[62]

Germans edit

Throughout the 19th century a small population of German immigrants built up in Britain, numbering 28,644 in 1861. London held around half of this population, and other small communities existed in Manchester, Bradford and elsewhere. The German immigrant community was the largest group until 1891, when it became second only to Russian Jews. There was a mixture of classes and religious groupings, and a flourishing culture built up, with the growth of middle and working class clubs. Waiters and clerks were two main occupations, and many who worked in these professions went on to become restaurant owners and businessmen, to a considerable extent.[63] This community maintained its size until the First World War, when public anti-German feeling became very prominent and the Government enacted a policy of forced internment and repatriation. The community in 1911 had reached 53,324, but fell to just over 20,000 after the war.[64]

Russian Jews edit

England has had small Jewish communities for many centuries, subject to occasional expulsions, but British Jews numbered fewer than 10,000 at the start of the 19th century. After 1881 Russian Jews suffered bitter persecutions, and British Jews led fund-raising to enable their Russian co-religionists to emigrate to the United States. However, out of some 2,000,000 who left Russia by 1914, around 120,000 settled permanently in Britain. One of the main concentrations was the same Spitalfields area where Huguenots had earlier congregated. Immigration was reduced by the Aliens Act 1905 and virtually curtailed by the 1914 Aliens Restriction Act.[65] In addition to those Russian Jews who settled permanently in the UK an estimated 500,000 Eastern European Jews transmigrated through British ports between 1881 and 1924.[66] Most were bound for the United States and others migrated to Canada, South Africa, Latin America and the Antipodes.[67]

Estimated number of migrants between 1800 and 1945[68]

Migrant group Migration 1800–1945 (145 years) Migration 1945–2010 (65 years)
Numbers % makeup of period Numbers % makeup of period
Africans 10,000 0.4% 1,000,000 16%
Americans 70,000 3% 250,000 4%
Arabs 10,000 0.4% 290,000 4.6%
Belgians 240,000 10.3% 40,000 0.6%
Chinese 20,000 0.9% 320,000 5.1%
Cypriots 2,000 80,000 1.3%
French 40,000 1.7% 100,000 1.6%
Germans 100,000 4.3% 300,000 4.8%
Hungarians 2,000 38,000 0.6%
Irish 1,500,000 64.1% 700,000 11.2%
Italians 40,000 1.7% 160,000 2.6%
Jews 220,000 9.4% 80,000 1.3%
Poles 5,000 0.2% 500,000 8%
South Asians 20,000 0.9% 1,000,000 16%
West Indians 10,000 0.4% 400,000 6.4%
Others 50,000 2.1% 1,000,000 16%
Total migration 2,339,000 100% 6,231,000 100%
Average migration per year 16,131 95,862

Immigration since 1945 edit

Genetic history edit

Genetic studies have been used to calculate the impact of various historical migrations on the population of the British Isles. The most recent work, carried out using data collected from ancient skeletons, has suggested that the migration events which most drastically influenced the genetic makeup of the current British population were the arrival of the Bell Beaker people around 2500 BC, and the influx of the Anglo-Saxons following the Roman withdrawal.[69][70][71]

Studies of DNA suggest that the biological influence on Britain of immigration from the Norman conquests up until the 20th century was small; The native population's genetics was marked more by stability than change.[72][73]

Y Chromosome analysis edit

From Genetic analysis section, Sub-Roman Britain

Modern genetic evidence, based on analysis of the Y chromosomes of men currently living in Britain, the Western Isles, Orkney, Shetland, Friesland, Denmark, North Germany, Ireland, Norway and the Basque Country, is consistent with the presence of some indigenous component in all British regions.[74] For the sake of this study samples from the Basque Country were considered indigenous (a putative paleolithic Y chromosome). These studies cannot significantly distinguish between Danish, Frisian and German (Schleswig-Holstein) Y chromosomes although the Frisians were slightly closer to the indigenous samples. Areas with the highest concentration of Germanic (Danish-Viking/Anglo-Saxon) Y chromosomes occurred in areas associated with the Danelaw and Danish-Viking settlement, especially York and Norfolk. In these areas, about 60% of Y chromosomes are of Germanic origin.[74]

This indicates an exclusively male component. The extent of Danish/Anglo-Saxon contribution to the entire gene pool of these areas is also dependent on the migration of women. For example, if it is assumed that few or no Germanic women settled in these areas, then the Germanic contribution to the gene pool is halved to 30%, and in turn if greater numbers of women did settle, the contribution could be even higher than 60%.

Current estimates on the initial contribution of Anglo-Saxon migrants range from less than 10,000 to as many as 200,000, although some recent Y-chromosome studies posit a considerably large continental (Germanic) contribution to the current English gene pool (50–100%). A recent study by a team from the Department of Biology at University College London based on computer simulations indicate that an apartheid-like social structure in early Anglo-Saxon England provides a plausible explanation for a high-degree of continental male-line ancestry in England.[75]

Mitochondrial DNA analysis edit

This indicates that a majority of maternal lines in the population go back to the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic periods. The lines tend to be similar in all parts of Britain, though with Norse input in the Northern and Western Isles of Scotland. The source of many of the other lines is thought to be the Iberian Peninsula, but there has been some input from the Germanic areas into the east coast of England.[76]

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historical, immigration, great, britain, historical, immigration, great, britain, concerns, movement, people, cultural, ethnic, groups, british, isles, before, irish, independence, 1922, immigration, after, irish, independence, dealt, with, article, immigratio. The historical immigration to Great Britain concerns the movement of people cultural and ethnic groups to the British Isles before Irish independence in 1922 Immigration after Irish independence is dealt with by the article Immigration to the United Kingdom since Irish independence Modern humans first arrived in Great Britain during the Palaeolithic era but until the invasion of the Romans 1st century BC there was no historical record With the Fall of the Western Roman Empire large numbers of Germanic speakers from the continent migrated to the southern parts of the island becoming known as the Anglo Saxons and eventually forming England Beginning at the end of the eighth century bands of Vikings began to invade and subsequently settle In 1066 the Normans successfully took control of England Subsequently the Plantagenet Dynasty held the Throne of England from 1154 to 1485 These events resulted in a continuous flow of migration from France during this period Other European migrants included Flemings and French Huguenots The Great Famine in Ireland then part of the United Kingdom resulted in perhaps a million people migrating to Great Britain 1 Throughout the 19th century a small population of 28 644 German immigrants built up in England and Wales London held around half of this population and other small communities existed in Manchester Bradford and elsewhere The German immigrant community was the largest group until 1891 when it became second to Russian Jews 2 After 1881 Russian Jews suffered bitter persecutions and 2 million left the Russian Empire by 1914 Around 120 000 settled permanently in Britain becoming the largest ethnic minority from outside the British Isles 3 and by 1938 this population had increased to 370 000 4 Unable to return to Poland at the end of the Second World War over 120 000 Polish veterans remained in the UK permanently 5 After the war many people immigrated from colonies and former colonies in the Caribbean and Indian subcontinent as a legacy of empire or driven by labour shortages 6 In 1841 only 0 25 per cent of the population of England and Wales was born in a foreign country increasing to 1 5 per cent by 1901 7 2 6 per cent by 1931 and 4 4 per cent in 1951 8 DNA studies have been used to provide a direct record of the effects of immigration on the population 9 Contents 1 Antiquity 1 1 Roman Empire 1 2 Irish medieval 1 3 Anglo Saxons 2 Medieval 2 1 Vikings 2 2 Normans 2 3 Flemings 3 Roma in Britain 4 Early modern 4 1 Huguenots 4 2 South Asians 5 Modern 5 1 Irish modern 5 2 Africans 5 3 Germans 5 4 Russian Jews 5 5 Immigration since 1945 6 Genetic history 6 1 Y Chromosome analysis 6 2 Mitochondrial DNA analysis 7 ReferencesAntiquity editSee also Prehistoric Britain and Prehistoric Ireland Roman Empire edit Main article Roman Britain The first Roman invasion of Great Britain was led by Julius Caesar in 55 BC the second a year later in 54 BC The Romans had many supporters among the Celtic tribal leaders who agreed to pay tribute to Rome in return for Roman protection The Romans returned in AD 43 led by the Emperor Claudius this time establishing control and establishing the province of Britannia Initially an oppressive rule gradually the new leaders gained a firmer hold on their new territory which at one point stretched from the south coast of England to Wales and northwards as far as southern Scotland During the 367 years of Roman occupation of Britain many settlers were soldiers garrisoned on the mainland It was with constant contact with Rome and the rest of Romanised Europe through trade and industry that the elite native Britons themselves adopted Roman culture and customs such as the Latin language though the majority in the countryside were little affected The capital city of Londinium was an ethnically diverse city with inhabitants from across the Roman Empire including natives of Britannia continental Europe the Middle East and North Africa 10 There was also cultural diversity in other Roman British towns which were sustained by considerable migration both within Britannia and from other Roman territories including North Africa 11 Roman Syria the Eastern Mediterranean and continental Europe 12 Of Roman Britain s estimated population of three million the urban population was about 240 000 people 13 with Londinium having an estimated 60 000 people 14 15 However after Britannia ceased to be a functional Roman province many of the urban areas collapsed and the overall population may have declined by as much as two million 16 Irish medieval edit Main article Irish migration to Great Britain During the 5th century Irish pirates known as the Scotti started raiding north western Britain from their base in north east Ireland After the Roman withdrawal they established the kingdom of Dal Riata roughly equivalent to Argyll This migration is traditionally held to be the means by which Primitive Irish was introduced into what is now Scotland However it has been posited that the language may already have been spoken in this region for centuries having developed as part of a larger Goidelic language zone and that there was little Irish settlement in this period 17 Similar proposals have been made for areas of western Wales where an Irish language presence is evident 18 Others have argued that the traditional narrative of significant migration particularly in the case of Dal Riata is likely correct 19 Anglo Saxons edit Main article Anglo Saxon settlement of Britain Germanic Frankish mercenaries were employed in Gaul by the Roman Empire and it is speculated that in a similar manner the first Germanic immigrants to Britain arrived at the invitation of the British ruling classes at the end of the Roman period Though the probably mythical landing of Hengist and Horsa in Kent in 449 is traditionally considered to be the start of the Anglo Saxon migrations archaeological evidence has shown that significant settlement in East Anglia predated this by nearly half a century 20 The key area of large scale migration was southeastern Britain in this region place names of Celtic and Latin origin are extremely few 21 22 23 24 Genetic and isotope evidence has demonstrated that the settlers included both men and women many of whom were of a low socioeconomic status and that migration continued over an extended period possibly more than two hundred years 25 26 The varied dialects spoken by the new arrivals eventually coalesced into Old English the ancestor of the modern English language In the Post Roman period the traditional division of the Anglo Saxons into Angles Saxons and Jutes is first seen in the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum by Bede however historical and archaeological research has shown that a wider range of Germanic peoples from Frisia Lower Saxony Jutland and possibly southern Sweden moved to Britain during this period Scholars have stressed that the adoption of specifically Anglian Saxon and Jutish identities was the result of a later period of ethnogenesis 27 28 Following the settlement period Anglo Saxon elites and kingdoms began to emerge these are traditionally grouped together as the Heptarchy Their formation has been linked to a second stage of Anglo Saxon expansion in which the kingdoms of Wessex Mercia and Northumbria each began periods of conquest of British territory It is likely that these kingdoms housed significant numbers of Britons particularly on their western margins 29 That this was the case is demonstrated by the late seventh century laws of King Ine which made specific provisions for Britons who lived in Wessex 30 Medieval editVikings edit Further information Nordic migration to Britain The earliest date given for a Viking raid of Britain is 789 when according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle Portland was attacked A more exact report dates from 8 June 793 when the cloister at Lindisfarne was pillaged by foreign seafarers These raiders whose expeditions extended well into the 9th century were gradually followed by armies and settlers who brought a new culture and tradition markedly different from that of the prevalent Anglo Saxon society of southern Britain The Danelaw established through the Viking conquest of large parts of the Anglo Saxon cultural sphere was formed as a result of the Treaty of Wedmore in the late 9th century after Alfred the Great had defeated the Viking Guthrum at the Battle of Ethandun Between 1016 and 1042 England was ruled by Danish kings Following this the Anglo Saxons regained control until 1066 Though located formally within the Danelaw counties such as Hertfordshire Bedfordshire and Essex do not seem to have experienced much Danish settlement which was more concentrated in Yorkshire Lincolnshire Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire as demonstrated by toponymic evidence The Scandinavians who settled along the coast of the Irish sea were mainly of Norwegian origin though many had arrived via Ireland 31 Most of the Vikings arriving in the northern parts of Britain also originated in Norway Settlement was densest in the Shetland and Orkney islands and Caithness where Norn a language descended from Old Norse was historically spoken but a Viking presence has also been identified in the Hebrides and the western Scottish Highlands 32 33 Normans edit nbsp Normans as portrayed here on the Bayeux Tapestry were an elite who made up an estimated 2 of England s population The Norman conquest of 1066 is normally considered the last successful attempt in history by a foreign army to take control of the Kingdom of England by means of military occupation From the Norman point of view William the Conqueror was the legitimate heir to the realm as explained in the Bayeux Tapestry and the invasion was required to secure this against the usurpation of Harold Godwinson William ejected the Anglo Saxon ruling class installing his followers in their place Most of these were from Normandy but a significant portion were of Breton origin 34 Artisans and merchants from France also settled in England to take advantage of economic opportunities in the wake of the conquest 35 In the years following the invasion to 1204 when Normandy was lost to France the new nobility maintained close ties with their homelands across the channel This was in part secured by granting aristocrats lands in both domains giving an incentive on all levels to maintain the union The influx of Norman military and ecclesiastical aristocracy changed the nature of the ruling class in England leading to the creation of an Anglo Norman population Some French nobles moved north to Scotland at the invitation of King David I where they established many of the royal houses that would dominate Scottish politics in the coming centuries These included the Balliols the Bruces and the FitzAlans 36 Though the Normans formed a powerful elite they were vastly outnumbered by their English and Scottish subjects It has been estimated that they made up only 2 percent of the population of England 37 Flemings edit The later middle ages saw substantial Flemish migration to England Wales and Scotland The term Fleming was used to refer to natives of the Low Countries overall rather than Flanders specifically 38 The first wave of Flemings arrived in England following floods in their low lying homelands during the reign of Henry I Eventually the migrants were planted in Pembrokeshire in Wales According to the Brut y Tywysogyon the native inhabitants were driven from the area with the Flemish replacing them This region in which Flemish and English were spoken from an early date came to be known as Little England beyond Wales 39 Many of the early Flemish settlers in England were weavers and established themselves in the larger English towns and cities 40 In Scotland Flemish incomers contributed to the burgeoning wool trade in the southeastern part of the country 41 Roma in Britain editFurther information Romanichal Romani people originated in the Punjab region of North India as a nomadic people They entered Europe between the 8th and 10th centuries C E arriving in Western Europe by the 15th century They were called Gypsies because Europeans mistakenly believed that they came from Egypt This minority is made up of distinct groups called tribes or nations Roma spoke dialects of their common language the Romani language which is based on Sanskrit the classical language of India and is similar to other Indo Aryan languages 42 Roma in Britain have been documented since the early 16th century The Egyptians Act 1530 was a response to the arrival of Romani Gypsies known as Egyptians at the time in Britain in the 16th century The first definite record of Roma in Scotland was in 1505 and in England in 1513 or 1514 They were initially travellers largely working as hawkers basket weavers craftsmen blacksmiths and other occupations but also as hostlers jockeys horse dealers and many other occupations that involve working with horses 43 Early modern editHuguenots edit The Huguenots French Protestants facing persecution following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes began to move to England in large numbers around 1670 after King Charles II offered them sanctuary Most came from regions in western France such as Poitou and in all some 40 50 000 arrived 44 Though many towns and cities in England served as destinations for the Huguenot migrants the largest number settled in the Spitalfields area of London and being former silk weavers brought new energy to this industry in the area and raised silk to an important fashion item in Britain 45 South Asians edit See also British Asian Lascar and Anglo Indian nbsp Plaque commemorating Sake Dean Mahomed and Britain s first Indian restaurant that he opened in 1810 People from the Indian subcontinent have settled in Great Britain since the East India Company EIC recruited lascars to replace vacancies in their crews on East Indiamen whilst on voyages in India Many were then refused passage back and were marooned in London There were also some ayahs domestic servants and nannies of wealthy British families who accompanied their employers back to Blighty when their stay in Asia came to an end The number of seamen from the East Indies employed on English ships was felt so worrisome at that time that the English tried to restrict their numbers by the Navigation Act 1660 which restricted the employment of overseas sailors to a quarter of the crew on returning East India Company ships Baptism records in East Greenwich suggest that young Indians from the Malabar Coast were being recruited as servants at the end of the 17th century and records of the EIC also suggest that Indo Portuguese cooks from Goa were retained by captains from voyage to voyage 46 In 1797 thirteen were buried in the parish of St Nicholas at Deptford By the mid 19th century there were at least 40 000 Indian seamen diplomats scholars soldiers officials tourists businessmen and students in Great Britain 47 In 1855 more than 25 000 of these were lascar seamen working on British ships Lascars were a transitory group who would lodge in British ports in between voyages 48 49 50 Beginning in the 17th century the East India Company brought over thousands of South Asian scholars lascars and other workers who were mostly Bengali and or Muslim to England some of whom settled down and took local European wives due to a lack of Asian women in the British Isles at the time 51 Due to the majority of early Asian immigrants being lascars the earliest Asian communities were found in port towns Naval cooks also came many of them from the Sylhet Division of what is now Bangladesh One of the most famous 18th century Bengali immigrants to Britain was Sake Dean Mahomed a captain of the East India Company In 1810 he founded London s first Indian restaurant the Hindoostane Coffee House He is also claimed as the person who introduced shampoo and therapeutic massage to Britain 52 By the 1930s about 7 to 10 thousand Indians had settled permanently in Britain 53 54 Modern editYear Foreign born population of England and Wales Total population 55 56 57 58 59 Irish born population Percentage of total population born abroad1901 475 000 32 500 000 425 000 1 51911 900 000 32 500 000 375 000 2 51921 750 000 37 900 000 365 000 21931 1 080 000 40 000 000 380 000 2 71951 1 875 000 43 700 000 470 000 4 31961 2 290 000 46 000 000 645 000 5 01971 3 100 000 48 700 000 585 000 6 41981 3 220 000 48 500 000 580 000 6 61991 3 625 000 49 900 000 570 000 7 32001 4 600 000 52 500 000 475 000 8 82011 7 500 000 56 000 000 400 000 13 42021 10 000 000 59 600 000 325 000 16 8Irish modern edit There has been continuous migration from Ireland to Britain since before the Middle Ages but the number of arrivals increased significantly in the nineteenth century due to the Great Famine and job opportunities offered by the Industrial Revolution The Irish communities in west coast cities such as Liverpool and Glasgow were particularly significant 60 61 Africans edit See also History of African presence in London Following the British defeat in the American War of Independence over 1 100 Black Loyalist troops who had fought on the losing side were transported to Britain but they mostly ended up destitute on London s streets and were viewed as a social problem The Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor was formed They distributed relief and helped the men to go overseas some to what remained of British North America In 1786 the committee funded an expedition of 280 black men forty black women and seventy white wives and girlfriends to Sierra Leone The settlement failed and within two years all but sixty of the migrants had died 62 Germans edit See also German migration to the United Kingdom Throughout the 19th century a small population of German immigrants built up in Britain numbering 28 644 in 1861 London held around half of this population and other small communities existed in Manchester Bradford and elsewhere The German immigrant community was the largest group until 1891 when it became second only to Russian Jews There was a mixture of classes and religious groupings and a flourishing culture built up with the growth of middle and working class clubs Waiters and clerks were two main occupations and many who worked in these professions went on to become restaurant owners and businessmen to a considerable extent 63 This community maintained its size until the First World War when public anti German feeling became very prominent and the Government enacted a policy of forced internment and repatriation The community in 1911 had reached 53 324 but fell to just over 20 000 after the war 64 Russian Jews edit England has had small Jewish communities for many centuries subject to occasional expulsions but British Jews numbered fewer than 10 000 at the start of the 19th century After 1881 Russian Jews suffered bitter persecutions and British Jews led fund raising to enable their Russian co religionists to emigrate to the United States However out of some 2 000 000 who left Russia by 1914 around 120 000 settled permanently in Britain One of the main concentrations was the same Spitalfields area where Huguenots had earlier congregated Immigration was reduced by the Aliens Act 1905 and virtually curtailed by the 1914 Aliens Restriction Act 65 In addition to those Russian Jews who settled permanently in the UK an estimated 500 000 Eastern European Jews transmigrated through British ports between 1881 and 1924 66 Most were bound for the United States and others migrated to Canada South Africa Latin America and the Antipodes 67 Estimated number of migrants between 1800 and 1945 68 Migrant group Migration 1800 1945 145 years Migration 1945 2010 65 years Numbers makeup of period Numbers makeup of periodAfricans 10 000 0 4 1 000 000 16 Americans 70 000 3 250 000 4 Arabs 10 000 0 4 290 000 4 6 Belgians 240 000 10 3 40 000 0 6 Chinese 20 000 0 9 320 000 5 1 Cypriots 2 000 80 000 1 3 French 40 000 1 7 100 000 1 6 Germans 100 000 4 3 300 000 4 8 Hungarians 2 000 38 000 0 6 Irish 1 500 000 64 1 700 000 11 2 Italians 40 000 1 7 160 000 2 6 Jews 220 000 9 4 80 000 1 3 Poles 5 000 0 2 500 000 8 South Asians 20 000 0 9 1 000 000 16 West Indians 10 000 0 4 400 000 6 4 Others 50 000 2 1 1 000 000 16 Total migration 2 339 000 100 6 231 000 100 Average migration per year 16 131 95 862 Immigration since 1945 edit Main article Modern immigration to the United KingdomGenetic history editMain article Genetic history of the British Isles Genetic studies have been used to calculate the impact of various historical migrations on the population of the British Isles The most recent work carried out using data collected from ancient skeletons has suggested that the migration events which most drastically influenced the genetic makeup of the current British population were the arrival of the Bell Beaker people around 2500 BC and the influx of the Anglo Saxons following the Roman withdrawal 69 70 71 Studies of DNA suggest that the biological influence on Britain of immigration from the Norman conquests up until the 20th century was small The native population s genetics was marked more by stability than change 72 73 Y Chromosome analysis edit From Genetic analysis section Sub Roman BritainModern genetic evidence based on analysis of the Y chromosomes of men currently living in Britain the Western Isles Orkney Shetland Friesland Denmark North Germany Ireland Norway and the Basque Country is consistent with the presence of some indigenous component in all British regions 74 For the sake of this study samples from the Basque Country were considered indigenous a putative paleolithic Y chromosome These studies cannot significantly distinguish between Danish Frisian and German Schleswig Holstein Y chromosomes although the Frisians were slightly closer to the indigenous samples Areas with the highest concentration of Germanic Danish Viking Anglo Saxon Y chromosomes occurred in areas associated with the Danelaw and Danish Viking settlement especially York and Norfolk In these areas about 60 of Y chromosomes are of Germanic origin 74 This indicates an exclusively male component The extent of Danish Anglo Saxon contribution to the entire gene pool of these areas is also dependent on the migration of women For example if it is assumed that few or no Germanic women settled in these areas then the Germanic contribution to the gene pool is halved to 30 and in turn if greater numbers of women did settle the contribution could be even higher than 60 Current estimates on the initial contribution of Anglo Saxon migrants range from less than 10 000 to as many as 200 000 although some recent Y chromosome studies posit a considerably large continental Germanic contribution to the current English gene pool 50 100 A recent study by a team from the Department of Biology at University College London based on computer simulations indicate that an apartheid like social structure in early Anglo Saxon England provides a plausible explanation for a high degree of continental male line ancestry in England 75 Mitochondrial DNA analysis edit This indicates that a majority of maternal lines in the population go back to the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic periods The lines tend to be similar in all parts of Britain though with Norse input in the Northern and Western Isles of Scotland The source of many of the other lines is thought to be the Iberian Peninsula but there has been some input from the Germanic areas into the east coast of England 76 References edit Richards Eric 2004 Britannia s children Emigration from England Scotland Wales and Ireland since 1600 London Hambledon p 143 ISBN 978 1 85285 441 6 P Panayi 1906 P Panayi German Immigrants in Britain 1815 1914 in Germans in Britain since 1500 ed P Panayi London Hambledon Press 1996 pp 73 112 ISBN 978 0 8264 2038 1 Panayi Panikos 1996 Germans in Britain Since 1500 ISBN 978 0 8264 2038 1 East End Jews BBC Jews in Britain Origin and Growth of Anglo Jewry p 7 A summary history of immigration to Britain Migrationwatch UK The Jews Victoria County History London 1969 via British History Online Gibney Matthew J Hansen Randall 2005 Immigration and asylum from 1900 to the present ABC CLIO p 630 ISBN 978 1 57607 796 2 Short History of Immigration BBC News 2005 Retrieved 28 August 2010 Green Lord Andrew A summary history of immigration to Britain Migration Watch UK Coleman David 17 April 2013 Immigration Population and Ethnicity The UK in International Perspective The Migration Observatory University of Oxford Retrieved 8 March 2015 Coop G Pickrell JK Novembre J Kudaravalli S Li J Absher D Myers RM Cavalli Sforza LL Feldman MW Pritchard JK 2009 The role of geography in human adaptation PLoS Genetics 5 e1000500 PDF DNA study finds London was ethnically diverse from start BBC 23 November 2015 Ray Laurence 2012 Roman Archaeology for Historians page 121 Routledge David Shotter 2012 Roman Britain page 37 Routledge Joan P Alcock A Brief History of Roman Britain page 260 Hachette UK Will Durant 7 June 2011 Caesar and Christ The Story of Civilization Simon and Schuster pp 468 ISBN 978 1 4516 4760 0 Anne Lancashire 2002 London Civic Theatre City Drama and Pageantry from Roman Times to 1558 Cambridge University Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 5216 3278 2 Harke Heinrich 2011 Anglo Saxon immigration and ethnogenesis Campbell Ewan 2001 Were the Scots Irish Dark Ken R 2003 Large scale population movements into and from Britain south of Hadrian s Wall in the fourth to sixth centuries AD PDF Cormac McSparron and Brian Williams and they won land among the Picts by friendly treaty or the sword How a re examination of early historical sources and an analysis of early PHGLHYDO VHWWOHPHQW LQ QRUWK amp R QWULP FRQAUPV WKH YDOLGLW RI WUDGLWLRQDO accounts of Dal Riatic migration to Scotland from Ulster 2011 Catherine Hills The Anglo Saxon Migration An Archaeological Case Study of Disruption in Migrations and 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October 2018 The Goan community of London Port communities Port Cities www portcities org uk Fisher Michael H 2007 Excluding and Including Natives of India Early Nineteenth Century British Indian Race Relations in Britain Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East 27 2 303 314 304 5 doi 10 1215 1089201x 2007 007 The Lascars Lot The Hindu 5 January 2003 Archived from the original on 7 November 2015 Fisher Michael Herbert 2006 Counterflows to Colonialism Indian Traveller and Settler in Britain 1600 1857 Orient Blackswan pp 140 154 6 160 8 172 ISBN 978 81 7824 154 8 Ansari Humayun 2004 The Infidel Within The History of Muslims in Britain 1800 to the Present C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 35 ISBN 978 1 85065 685 2 Fisher Michael Herbert 2006 Counterflows to Colonialism Indian Traveller and Settler in Britain 1600 1857 Orient Blackswan pp 111 9 129 30 140 154 6 160 8 172 181 ISBN 978 81 7824 154 8 Curry house founder is honoured BBC News 29 September 2005 Retrieved 9 October 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History of Britain Multicultural Racism Since 1800 ISBN 9781317864233 Rincon Paul 2018 Ancient Britons replaced by newcomers BBC News Schiffels S Haak W Paajanen P et al Iron Age and Anglo Saxon genomes from East England reveal British migration history Nat Commun 7 10408 2016 https doi org 10 1038 ncomms10408 Martiniano R Caffell A Holst M et al Genomic signals of migration and continuity in Britain before the Anglo Saxons Nat Commun 7 10326 2016 https doi org 10 1038 ncomms10326 Lopez Herraez David Bauchet Marc Tang Kun Theunert Christoph Pugach Irina Li Jing Nandineni Madhusudan R Gross Arnd Scholz Markus Stoneking Mark 2009 Genetic Variation and Recent Positive Selection in Worldwide Human Populations Evidence From Nearly 1 Million SNPs PLoS ONE PLOS ONE 4 11 e7888 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0007888 PMC 2775638 PMID 19924308 Li J Z Absher D M Tang H Southwick A M Casto A M Ramachandran S Cann H M Barsh G S Feldman M Cavalli Sforza L L Myers R M 2008 Worldwide Human Relationships Inferred from Genome Wide Patterns of Variation Science Science 319 5866 1100 1104 doi 10 1126 science 1153717 PMID 18292342 S2CID 53541133 a b A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles Cristian Capelli Nicola Redhead Julia K Abernethy Fiona Gratrix James F Wilson Torolf Moen Tor Hervig Martin Richards Michael P H Stumpf Peter A Underhill Paul Bradshaw Alom Shaha Mark G Thomas Neal Bradman and David B Goldstein Current Biology Volume 13 Issue 11 Pages 979 984 2003 Retrieved 6 December 2005 Evidence for an Apartheid Like Social Structure in Early Anglo Saxon England PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2006 Retrieved 12 December 2006 Bryan Sykes Blood of the Isles and Stephen Oppenheimer The Origins of the British Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historical immigration to Great Britain amp oldid 1186535344, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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