Modern Angeln, also known as Anglia (German: Angeln, Danish: Angel, Latin: Anglia, English: may follow German or Latin), is a peninsula in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, protruding into the Bay of Kiel. It is separated from the neighbouring peninsula of Schwansen (Danish: Svansø) by the Schlei inlet, and from the Danish island of Als by the Flensburger Förde ("Firth of Flensburg"). Whether ancient Angeln conformed to these borders is uncertain. It may have been somewhat larger; however, the ancient sources mainly concur that it included the territory of modern Angeln.
Angeln has a significance far beyond its current small area and country terrain. It is believed to have been the original home of some Germanic immigrants to the southern part of the largest British Island which was named after them, England, from which the major world language, English, takes its name.
The most common theory is that the name Angeln itself means "hook", e.g. as in angling for fish. Many reputable etymological dictionaries are silent on its root. Julius Pokorny, however (a major Indo-European linguist), derives it from *ang-, "bend". The meaning would be "Anwohner der Holsteiner Bucht." The problem with this derivation is that Grimm's Law does not appear to apply to it.
Modern Engeln does not evidence any landforms resembling a hook. It is situated on the large bight transitioning the Baltic coast to Jutland, which is mainly the Bay of Kiel (Kieler Bucht), but might be seen as "Holsteiner Bucht". This interpretation suggests that when the Anglii received their name, they did in fact populate the entire bend and not just the Angeln of today. There is a parallel in Engern, which once comprised the entire middle Weser and was a major third of Saxony, but today is a small settlement in Westphalia, which absorbed most of its territory (see under Angrivarii).
The words England, English are derived from the people called the Angles, and thus ultimately from the Angeln peninsula. The terms Anglo and Anglo-Saxon also go back to this origin. Pokorny points out the possible use of the same root in other ancient names, such as Hardanger and Angrivarii. The mere use of the name does not necessarily guarantee that the Angles of Angeln are meant.
It had long been suspected from all the Germanic sources that this report is too simple, a suspicion confirmed by the archaeology; namely, the brooches worn by the women. There are essentially two kinds, the saucer brooch and the cruciform brooch. East coastal and northern Britain were settled by women wearing cruciform brooches, which came from coastal Scandinavia, all of Denmark, and Schleswig-Holstein all the way south to the lower Elbe and all the way east to the Oder, as well as a pocket in coastal Friesland, the embarkation point.
South central Britain was settled by women wearing the saucer brooch, which came from Lower Saxony, the south side of the lower Elbe, and pockets among the then Franks up the Rhine and along the coast to the mouth of the Seine.
Eastern Sweden, except in the far north, did not use either brooch, which may indicate that they were not as close culturally to the westward-looking population; i.e., they formed a conservative subculture of their own, the nucleus of a future Sweden. They would have looked adventurously rather to the east, as that is the direction in which the Goths had gone and in which the Vikings who would found Russia were to go.
The most logical conclusion is that the people called "Angles" comprised the population of all of Schleswig-Holstein and the Propommern south to the first big bend in the Elbe. They must have included identities mentioned under other names in the more ancient sources, just as the Angles themselves must have had other names. A more complete presentation is given under Angles.
In subsequent history, Angeln's history is subsumed in that of the larger surrounding region which came to be known as Southern Jutland or Schleswig (Danish: Slesvig). Up until the 19th century, the area primarily belonged to Denmark. However ethnically and linguistically a mixed German/Danish population evolved. Denmark lost Schleswig to Austria and Prussia in 1864 as a result of the second war of Schleswig. In 1920, following Germany's defeat in World War I, a plebiscite was held to determine which areas should return to Danish control. As a result of the plebiscite, much of Schleswig returned to Denmark, but Angeln remained in Germany. See "Schleswig-Holstein Question" for a detailed history.
Anglo-Saxon England | English language | Schleswig-Holstein
Ангелн | Angel | Angeln (Gebiet) | Angeln