| ANGLOSAXON | A member of any of the West Germanic tribes that settled in Britain from the 5c A.D. (5-5) |
| HUN | Member of various Asiatic nomadic peoples who invaded the Roman Empire in the 4c and 5c A.D. (3) |
| ANGLE | Member of the Germanic tribe that settled in Britain in the post-Roman period (5) |
| PALLADIAN | Architecture style popular in Britain from the 1600s to the 1750s (9) |
| JUTISH | Of the ancient Danish tribe that settled S. Britain in 300AD |
| RATE | 5c a minute, e.g. |
| PICT | A member of any of the peoples who lived in Britain north of the Forth and Clyde between the 1c and 4c (4) |
| BEDOUIN | A member of any of the nomadic Arab tribes inhabiting the deserts of Arabia, Jordan and Syria, as well as parts of the Sahara (7) |
| SAXON | A member of a West Germanic people who settled in parts of southern Britain in the 5th and 6th Centuries (5) |
| ANGLOSAXONS | The invading Germanic tribes in the south and east of Great Britain from the early 5th century AD |
| SEMITE | A member of any of the peoples supposed to be descendants of Shem, son of Noah (old testament), i.e. Jews, Arabs, Assyrians, Phoenicians |
| LIVERY | Uniform of the Queen's footmen, pageboys and other attendants, or that of members of any of the Worshipful Companies of London (6) |
| DERVISH | A member of any of various Muslim ascetics, some of which are noted for a frenzied, whirling dance (7) |
| HUSSAR | A member of any of several light cavalry regiments in European armies, renowned for their elegant dress (6) |
| APACHE | Any member of Athapaskan tribes that migrated to the southwestern desert (from Arizona to Texas and |
| MIDDLEENGLISH | The language of parts of Britain from the Norman Conquest until the late 15th Century (6,7) |
| OSTROGOTH | Member of the East Germanic tribe that invaded Italy in the fifth century |
| EOSTRE | West Germanic spring goddess who is the namesake of the festival of Easter in some languages |
| VANDALS | The Germanic tribe that looted and plundered its way around the Mediterranean in the 5th century |
| RUNES | This writing system may be regarded as the "national" script of the ancient North Germanic tribes. They attributed magic powers to the mysterious symbols scratched on armour, jewels, tombstones, and o |