The Romans in Britain
In 55BC and again in 54BC. Julius Caesar made two abortive landings in Britain. The fierce Celtic tribes of the South-East, riding their war chariots out into the sea repelled him. It was not until over 100 years later that the Romans, under the rule of Claudius managed to get a foothold into Britain and eventually conquer most of the island.
Contrary to multi-racial teaching, the Romans at this time were a purely Aryan people. The original Romans had been part of another wave of Aryans who had pushed down into Italy and after overthrowing the Etruscans had established a city state which became one of the greatest empires the world has ever known.
It was not until much later when the original Roman yeoman stock had been diluted by inter-breeding, that Rome became soft and flabby. The original Roman legions were made up of true Roman citizens, many of them farmers called to the colours in times of crisis.
Later, Rome because of slavery and a lax policy of granting Roman citizenship to practically all the peoples within its jurisdiction that Rome became a multi-racial entity and therefore doomed to fall.
However at the time of the Roman invasion of Britain, the Romans were a virile and healthy people, expanding as our forefathers always have, and conquering. After much fighting, especially the great revolt of the Iceni under their warrior queen, Boadecia, the Celts fell under the relatively mild Roman yoke, and Britain as far north as the Antonine Wall in Scotland, became Romanised. Beyond the wall, the Celtic Picts and Scottii retained their fierce independence.
Roman Britain was for the most part a peaceful place, and Roman and Celt soon blended together, being close to each other racially. Celts settled in Roman towns and around Roman villas. Great roads such as Watling Street spanned the country and the legions kept peace and order.
In the fourth and fifth centuries Rome itself came under heavy pressure from fresh and new waves of Aryans - notably the Goths and Germans - and little by little the legions were withdrawn and Britain - Roman-Celtic Britain, left to fend for itself.
Many in the legions returning to Rome were British, or Romans married to Britons and they did not wish to leave Britain unprotected. This snippet of poetry by Kipling reflects the mood of some legionaries:-
"Legate! I come
to you in tears,
my Legion
ordered home,
I've served
in Britain forty years,
What can
I do in Rome"
Eventually the Legions had gone and the invasion by new waves of White Europeans began. The Picts and Scots swarmed over Hadrian's Wall and ravaged the North. Angles, Saxons and Jutes landed and settled, fighting a vicious war against the Britons who were pushed back.
A hero arose, whether purely mythological or not we do not know. A Romano-Britain called Artorius, or Arthur led the Western Britons into counter attacks against the Anglo-Saxons and defeated them in many battles. There still remains the great old legend that when Britain is facing its worst crisis - as it is today - a sleeping Arthur will rise again to save his people - the modern British - from destruction.
The Britons retreated into Wales and the South West and the Angles and Saxons - Germanic-Nordic folk established new kingdoms in the island.