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Location: Domrèmy la Pucelle Lorraine France

The Kentish coastline is part of what …

Years: 428 - 428

The Kentish coastline is part of what is known in Late Roman times as the litus saxonicum or Saxon Shore.

After the evacuation of the last Roman legions from Britain, the local tradition reported much later that a number of Jutish ships made landfall in Britain.

The British ruling council offered them payment in return for foederati service defending the realm in the north from the incursions of Picts and Scots.

According to legend, they were promised provisions and offered the island of Ruoihm (as originally spelt by Nennius)—now known as the Isle of Thanet—in perpetuity to use as a base for their operations.

It is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles that their leader, Hengist advised: Take my advice and you will never fear conquest from any man or any people, for my people are strong. I will invite my son and his cousin to fight against the Irish [the Scoti], for they are fine warriors.

The Jutes appear to have assaulted the enemy and brought much needed relief to the beleaguered Romano-British communities of the north.

The British king Vortigern according to Geoffrey of Monmouth's fanciful Historia Regum Britanniae married Rowena, the daughter of Hengist, with the civitas of the Cantiaci (Kent) as the bride-gift.

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