To add insult to injury, what they call it, Deutschland, sounds like what we should call Netherlands

  • Skunk@jlai.lu
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    4 days ago

    Also, the saxons never lived in the area of the German federal state of Saxony.

    (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻

    • Deconceptualist@leminal.space
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      3 days ago

      Guess what? The modern state of Saxony (aka Upper Saxony, Obersachsen) is not even contiguous with the state of Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen). They’re separated by nearly 300 km.

      Although to be somewhat fair they are connected by Sachsen-Anhalt. And basically all of northern Germany was at one point called Saxony (“Old Saxony”, Altesachsen), at least by some others in the first millennium.

      Of course history is funny; The lands of Upper Saxony weren’t part of the medieval Duchy of Saxony that followed, despite eventually taking the name (via “Electorate of Saxony” and then “Kingdom of Saxony”).

      But anyway the “Anglo-Saxons” were probably really from Denmark and northern Schleswig-Holstein. The southern parts of their region might’ve been called Saxony at the time.

      (I’m mostly posting this because I wanted to figure it all out)