Severans, as well as some other Slavic tribes and tribal groups, descended to the Pannonian plain as vassals of the Avars. In the centuries after the arrival of the Magyars and the establishment of the Hungarian medieval state, majority of Severans were absorbed into the Hungarian ethnical corpus with only some insulated pockets managing to preserve their original identity. These melted with the infux of Serbs and Croats from the south of Danube later in the 14th century, contributing to the origin of the today's Slavic population of the Voivodina (a northern province of Serbia), south-eastern Hungary and south-western Romania (Romanian part of Banat).
JOHN SEVERANS (1609-1682) John Severans was born in 1609, possibly in in Powick, Worcester, England, and possibly the son of John Severans and Mary Langley.
SEVERANS, the towns attorney, made Aug. 31, 1663, concerning judgment granted to said Ring by the Salisbury court in 1663, against the town, for not laying out to him his division of salt marsh in the first higledee pigledee lots, nor performing the award of the arbitrators, that is, Mr.
John Severans was one of the original proprietors of Salisbury in 1637; added to his estate that of John Coles in 1640; was a commissioned officer in the militia in 1671and an Inn Holder in 1660.