The end of empire in the island of Great Britain was both more abrupt
and more complete than in any of the other European Roman provinces.
When the fog clears and Britain re-enters the historical record, it is,
unlike other former European provinces of the Western Empire, dominated
by a new culture that speaks a language that is neither Roman nor
indigenous British Brythonic and with a pagan religion that owes nothing
to Romanitas or native British practices.
Other ex-Roman provinces of the Western Empire in Europe showed two
consistent features conspicuously absent from the lowlands of Britain:
the dominant language was derived from the local Vulgar Latin and the
dominant religion was a Christianity that looked towards Rome. This
leads naturally to the question: 'what was different about Britannia?' A
further anomaly in our understanding lies in the significant dating
mismatch between historical and archaeological data of the Germanic
migrations, and the latest genetic evidence. The answer to England's
unique early history may lie in resolving this paradox.
John Lambshead summarizes the latest data gathered by historians,
archaeologists, climatologists and biologists and synthesizes it all
into a fresh new explanation.