Page:Origin of the Anglo-Saxon Race.djvu/50

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Origin of the Anglo-Saxon Race.

The Warings, whose name is coupled with the Angles by the early writers, were a people located on the south-west coast of the Baltic. From the first mention of them to the last we find them associated with the Angles, and as these accounts have a difference in date of some centuries, we may feel sure that the connection was a close one. Procopius tells us of Varini who were seated about the shores of the northern ocean, as well as upon the Rhine, so that there appears to have been a migration at an early date.[1] Beddoe has remarked that ‘the limits of confederacies like those of the Franks, Saxons, Frisians, and Angles, who seem sometimes to have included the Warini, varied from time to time, and by no means always coincided with the limits of the dialects.’[2] This is an important consideration, for we find in the Frank confederation Franks who spoke a German tongue and others who did not, and it may have been the same in the confederated Angles and Warings. The Angles were a Teutonic race, and the Warings were probably a mixed one. In one of the Sagas they are mentioned as Wærnas or Wernas.[3] Tacitus, who does not appear, however, to have visited their country, mentions them as a German nation.[4] The Warings were one of the early commercial nations of the Baltic, and traded to Byzantium, going up the rivers of Slavonia in small barks, and carrying them across from river to river. The last mention of them is in 1030. By the early Russians they were known as Warings, their country as Waringia, and the sea near it as the Waring Sea. In Byzantium they called themselves Warings. They were in later centuries much mixed up with the Norsemen, and this infusion became stronger and stronger, until they disappeared as a separate

  1. Pracopius, ‘de Belle Gothico,’ iv. 20; Latham, ‘Germania of Tacitus,’ Epilegomena, cvi.
  2. Beddoe, J., ‘Races in Britain,’ p. 39.
  3. ‘The Soap, or Gleeman’s Tale,’ edited by B. Thorpe.
  4. Latham, R. G., ‘Germania of Tacitus,’ Notes, pp. 143, 144.