Germanic and Teutonic Anglo-Saxonism of the era sought to emphasize Britain's cultural and racial ties with Germany, frequently referring to
Teutonic peoples as a source of strength and similarity. Contemporary historian
Robert Boyce notes that many British politicians of the 19th century promoted these Germanic links, such as
Henry Bulwer, 1st Baron Dalling and Bulwer who said that it was "in the free forests of Germany that the infant genius of our liberty was nursed", and
Thomas Arnold who claimed that "Our English race is the German race; for though our
Norman fathers had learned to speak a stranger's language, yet in blood, as we know, they were the
Saxon's brethren both alike belonging to the Teutonic or German stock".
Norman and Celtic Anglo-Saxonists in the 19th century often sought to downplay, or outright denigrate, the significance of both Norman and Celtic racial and cultural influence in Britain. Less frequently however, some form of solidarity was expressed by some Anglo-Saxonists, who conveyed that Anglo-Saxonism was simply "the best-known term to denote that mix of
Celtic,
Saxon,
Norse, and
Norman blood which now flows in the united stream in the veins of the Anglo-Saxon peoples". Although a staunch Anglo-Saxonist,
Thomas Carlyle had even disparagingly described the United States as a kind of "formless" Saxon tribal order, and claimed that
Normans had given Anglo-Saxons and their descendants a greater sense of order for national structure, and that this was particularly evident in England.
Northern European Edward Augustus Freeman, a leading Anglo-Saxonist of the era, promoted a larger
Northern European identity, favorably comparing civilizational roots from "German forest" or "Scandinavian rock" with the cultural legacy of ancient Greece and Rome. American scholar
Mary Dockray-Miller expands on this concept to suggest that pre-
World War I Anglo-Saxonism ideology helped establish the "primacy of northern European ancestry in United States culture at large".
Lowland Scottish During the 19th century in particular, Scottish people living in Lowland Scotland, near the
Anglo-Scottish border, "increasingly identified themselves with the
Teutonic world destiny of Anglo-Saxonism", and sought to separate their identity from that of
Highland Scots, or the "inhabitants of Romantic Scotland". With some considering themselves "Anglo-Saxon Lowlanders", public opinion of Lowland Scots turned on Gaels within the context of the
Highland Famine, with suggestions of deportations to British colonies for Highlanders of the "'inferior Celtic race". Amongst others,
Goldwin Smith, a devout Anglo-Saxonist, believed the Anglo-Saxon "race" included Lowland Scots and should not be exclusively defined by English ancestry within the context of the United Kingdom's greater empire.
Thomas Carlyle, himself a Scot, was one of the earliest notable people to express a "belief in Anglo-Saxon racial superiority". Historian
Richard J. Finlay has suggested that the
Scots National League, which campaigned for Scotland to separate from the United Kingdom, was a response or opposition to the history of "Anglo-Saxon teutonism" embedded in some Scottish culture. ==Mythology and religions==