What is the old name for England?

The old name for England was Engla land, meaning "land of the Angles," from Old English, which eventually contracted to England. Before the Anglo-Saxon settlement, the island was known by the Latin name Britannia, derived from Greek terms for the inhabitants, and earlier still, the Greeks called it Albion.
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What is the old name of England?

The name Engla land became England by haplology during the Middle English period (Engle-land, Engelond). The Latin name was Anglia or Anglorum terra, the Old French and Anglo-Norman one Engleterre.
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What was Britain's original name?

From Britannica.com, Albion is the earliest-known name for the island of Britain. It was used by ancient Greek geographers from the 4th-century BC and even earlier, who distinguished Albion from Ierne (Ireland) and from smaller members of the British Isles.
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Why is England called Lloegr?

It is said that Lloegr derives from the Welsh medieval word Lloegyr which was for the south and south east of England. As the country became bigger, the name was adopted for all of England. Saesneg itself comes from an old Celtic word which itself derived from Latin.
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What was England called in 1788?

Great Britain, officially the Kingdom of Great Britain, was a sovereign state in Western Europe from 1707 to the end of 1800.
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British country names explained

What did the Romans call England?

An image first used by the Romans in classical antiquity, the Latin Britannia was the name variously applied to the British Isles, Great Britain, and the Roman province of Britain during the Roman Empire.
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What was the UK called before 1066?

The Anglo-Saxon period spans the time after the Romans left England in 410 and before the Norman Conquest of 1066. England was not a united country. It was divided up into separate kingdoms. The best-known Saxon king was Alfred the Great, who ruled Wessex from 871-886 and all of England from 886-899.
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What did Vikings call England?

(which is what England is called in both English and old Norse or at least 13th century Icelandic. England was called "Englaland" until Old English was replaced by Middle English.
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What did the Irish call the British?

Brit. Brit is a commonly used term in the United States, the Republic of Ireland and elsewhere, shortened from "Briton" or "Britisher".
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Why is it GB in the Olympics and not England?

A Legal and Historical Agreement That Defines Everything

Because of this long-standing agreement — and because the nations under the British Crown are unified under a single sovereign framework — they cannot compete at the Olympics under their individual country names.
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What were British people called in Roman times?

The Britons (*Pritanī, Latin: Britanni, Welsh: Brythoniaid), also known as Celtic Britons or ancient Britons, were the Celtic people who inhabited Great Britain from at least the British Iron Age until the High Middle Ages, at which point they diverged into the Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons (among others).
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What did Saxons call England?

It was "Anglalond" in Saxon times, "the land of the Angles." Anglalond morphed into Englaland, as vowels shifted, and thence England. Well England in most of the country is said as "Ingland" and in Middle English is often spelt that way.
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Who gave Britain its name?

Etymology. "Britain" comes from Latin: Britannia~Brittania, via Old French Bretaigne and Middle English Breteyne, possibly influenced by Old English Bryten(lond), probably also from Latin Brittania, ultimately an adaptation of the Common Brittonic name for the island, *Pritanī.
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Who first lived in England?

Homo heidelbergensis

Tall and imposing, this early human species is the first for whom we have fossil evidence in Britain: a leg bone and two teeth found at Boxgrove in West Sussex. Living here about 500,000 years ago these people skilfully butchered large animals, leaving behind many horse, deer and rhinoceros bones.
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What is the blackest place in the UK?

47.8% of the total Black British population live in London.
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Why are brummies called yam yams?

People living in Birmingham often refer to Black Country folk as Yam Yams because they say 'yow am' or 'yow'm' instead of 'you are', whereas the term 'Brummie', used to refer to people from Birmingham, is derived from 'Brummagem' – traditional Black Country speak for Birmingham.
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Does Viking Bloodline still exist?

Descendants of Vikings live today across Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland) and in areas they settled, like the UK, Ireland, Normandy (France), and Russia, with significant genetic traces in Scotland (up to 16%), England (around 6%), and Ireland, showing a widespread but diluted Norse heritage. Their legacy is seen in genetics, place names (ending in -by, -thorpe), surnames (Anderson, Johnson), and cultural influences, though Viking identity was more about cultural integration and exploration than strict genetic purity.
 
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What were the English called in 1066?

In 1066 Anglo-Saxon England had been a single kingdom for nearly 150 years. Its people were a mixture of Anglo-Saxons and descendants of Viking settlers, who mostly lived in the north. The Anglo-Saxon King Alfred and his successors had halted the first Viking invasions.
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Who gave England its name and when?

It takes its name from the Angles, a Germanic tribe who settled during the 5th and 6th centuries.
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Who are Brits genetically closest to?

They estimated that the ancestry of the present-day English ranges between 25% and 47% Continental North European (similar to historical northern Germans and Danish), 11% to 57% similar to the British Late Iron Age, and 14% to 43% IA-like (similar to France, Belgium and neighbouring parts of Germany).
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Who was the real first king of England?

Athelstan (c. 894–939) is widely regarded by modern historians as the first true King of England, uniting the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and conquering the last Viking stronghold (York) in 927, becoming the first ruler of the whole country, building upon the foundations laid by his grandfather, Alfred the Great, and establishing effective governance, laws, and administration.
 
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What language did the British originally speak?

The Germanic settlers in the British Isles initially spoke several different dialects, which developed into a language that came to be called Anglo-Saxon. It displaced the indigenous Brittonic Celtic, and the Latin of the former Roman rulers, in parts of the areas of Britain that later formed the Kingdom of England.
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