Online Encyclopedia

JUTES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 609 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JUTES  , the third of the

Teutonic nations which invaded Britain in the 5th century, called by Bede Iutae or Iuli (see BRITAIN, ANGLO-SAXON) . They settled in Kent and the Isle of Wight together with the adjacent parts of Hampshire . In the latter case the
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national name is said to have survived until Bede's own time, in the New
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Forest indeed apparently very much later . In Kent, however, it seems to have soon passed out of use, though there is good reason for believing that the inhabitants of that
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kingdom were of a different
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nationality from their neighbours (see KENT, KINGDOM OF) . With regard to the origin of the Jutes, Bede only says that Angulus (
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Angel)
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lay between the territories of the
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Saxons and the Iutae—a statement which points to their identity with the futi or Jyder of later times, i.e. the inhabitants of Jutland . Some
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recent writers have preferred to identify the Jutes with a tribe called Eucii mentioned in a letter from Theodberht to Justinian (Mon . Germ . Hist., Epist. iii., p . 132 seq.) and settled apparently in the neighbourhood of the Franks . But these
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people may themselves have come from Jutland . See Bede, Hist .
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Eccles. i .

15, iv . 16 . (H . M .

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