User blog comment:TacoCopper/The UK/@comment-4822327-20120613025734/@comment-4656717-20120613101818

I suppose you could.

The Anglo-Saxons took the parts of Britain taken up by today's England.

The old Britons got pushed into Wales, and parts of southern Scotland.

Cornwall...I think that was old Britons too, but I might be wrong.

But of course, those lines are blurred. In an island as (comparitively) small as Britain, there's got to be heaps of people of mixed "ethnicity". And then there's the Britons who stayed in the Anglo-Saxon areas, and how they did/didn't culturally assimilate.

So if I was to divide present-day Britain along "ethnic" lines, there would be an Anglo-Saxon England, Britannic Wales and south-west Scotland, Gaelic Scotland, and Cornwall in either the Anglo-Saxon or Btirannic bit.

Actually British people, please correct me if I am completely wrong.