(1) We should gather from Widsith that the Jutes were concerned in the Finnsburg business. For in that poem generally (though not always) tribes connected in story are grouped together; and the Jutes and Frisians are so coupled:

Ȳtum [weold] Gefwulf

Fin Folcwalding Frēsna cynne.

(2) There is another passage in Beowulf in which Eotenas is possibly used in the sense of "Jutes."

We have seen above[[461]] that according to a Scandinavian tradition Lotherus was exiled in Jutiam: and Heremod, who has been held to be the counterpart of Lotherus

mid Eotenum wearð

on fēonda geweald forð forlācen.

But the identification of Lotherus and Heremod is too hypothetical to carry the weight of much argument.

(3) Finn comes into many Old English pedigrees, which have doubtless borrowed from one another. But the earliest in which we find him, and the only one in which we find his father Folcwald, is that of the Jutish kings of Kent[[462]]. Here, too, the name Hengest meets us.