Old English
The dialects of Old English Writing and sounds in Old English Introductions to this period For literature on Old English please consult the relevant section of the Reference Guide The Germanic settlers, who according to the Venerable Bede arrived in England in 449, brought with them dialects of West Germanic which developed further in England into varieties which were later written down as dialects of Old English (from about 600 onwards). However, it is known that before that date there were incursions made by Germanic tribes along southern shore of England known as the Saxon Shore.
Old English arose from the set of varieties of West Germanic which the early settlers spoke. The three main groups of settlers were Angles, Saxons and Jutes. By and large, the Angles settled in the middle and north of England, the Saxon in the south and the Jutes in the area of present-day Kent.