How did Anglo-Saxon & Gaelic/Briton culture survive the onslaught of Frenchification?

How did Anglo-Saxon & Gaelic/Briton culture survive the onslaught of Frenchification?

It did?

>Gaelic culture
>Frenchification
Scotland adopted the feudal system because of French influence but it didn't have any sort of immediate effect on their culture. I have no idea what you meant by that.

British culture was literally so shit and dismal that the artists, writers, actors, and philosophers that normally spread culture wouldn't even visit England.

So while the rest of educated Europeans adopted France's superior culture, England got to keep their blind drunk slags, gutter humor, and peas and mash.

it didn't

Gaul became Breton

>Anglo-Saxon
It didn't survive tho

>Gaelic/Briton
Why would Celts attack other Celts ?

go to bed Margaret

And then we went on to rule the world like no other nation ever before or since.

B-but what about Bede?

Breton is dead
Only reason anglis survived was because they lost the hundred years war

Because the Normans in Ireland liked the irish culture so much tfey became more irish than the irish.

I always had a pet theory that Ireland would have been the Japan of the West given enough time to prepare for Germanic invasions

If the famine hadn't fucked them ureland could ni joke have been a huge threat
They had a massive growing population at the time

Get Ireland and Scotland off of being highlighted.

It didn't lel. French people don't need shit like "regional identities". Gives them bad ideas about "independance".

>What is Common Law?

Something not used in France nor Europe except for England ?

>Anglo-Saxon & Gaelic/Briton culture survive the onslaught of Frenchification?

It didnt. It was buried beneath the Norman's, and the British aristocracy spoke french. England would eventually get a hot steamy injection of Danes though, balancing the frenchness out.

But yeah, anyone who thinks England's culture is Anglo Saxon is deluded

what language are you speaking

Definitely not Anglo-Saxon.

the only non-anglo-saxon word in the 1611 and 1989 version is 'pasture' though

>it didn't lel
T. Pierre

Shhhhh
Don't tell them languages change over time and of course over 1000 years it's going to look extremely different.