「anglo-Saxon」の共起表現(1語左で並び替え) - Weblio英語共起表現検索


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「anglo-Saxon」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)

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Lying between the two villages, is a Anglo-Saxon Hill-fort.
oins and stone carvings, and exhibits about Anglo-Saxon culture, Bede's life and works, the life of
rsisted among men in southern England after Anglo-Saxon settlement; and 2) that the Scots were not
uilt along the east coast to defend against Anglo-Saxon attack.
It is notable among Anglo-Saxon buildings for the many features of the peri
Cwichelm (died circa 636) was an Anglo-Saxon king of the Gewisse, a people in the upper
nt 'ington' indicates that Adlington was an Anglo-Saxon settlement from about A.D. 650, while the f
The remains of an Anglo-Saxon settlement in the parish of Flixborough wer
About 1737 Lye began to work on an Anglo-Saxon and Gothic dictionary, which he despaired o
The Sheffield Cross is an Anglo-Saxon Christian monument, dating from the early n
An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary
Legg's cross is an Anglo-Saxon cross in County Durham, England, about 4 mi
d Basing was first settled around 700 by an Anglo-Saxon tribe known as the Basingas, who give the v
Brent Ditch is generally assumed to be an Anglo-Saxon earthwork in Southern Cambridgeshire, Engla
tr.) Beowulf: An Anglo-Saxon Epic Poem (D. C. Heath, 1897
nly succeed with an English pen name and an Anglo-Saxon protagonist.
onquest of England, Horsford was held by an Anglo-Saxon named Edric but after the conquest William
Mercia was an Anglo-Saxon kingdom.
Mercia: An Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe.
Acca is an Anglo-Saxon settler's forename.
e site of an ancient hill fort, on which an Anglo-Saxon monastery was founded, probably by Ine of W
1040-1080), was an Anglo-Saxon noblewoman who, according to legend, rode n
lso recorded as Mildred and Hildred) was an Anglo-Saxon prelate who served as Bishop of Worcester f
irford Graves: a record of researches in an Anglo-Saxon burial place in Gloucestershire.
Helenstowe Nunnery was an Anglo-Saxon nunnery at Abingdon in the English county o
tural historians now believe that though an Anglo-Saxon church made of timber did exist on the site
Aldwin was an Anglo-Saxon prior.
An Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe, ed.
'He's an Anglo-Saxon Messenger-and those are Anglo-Saxon attitud
. Jr, "The Gesta Herewardi: Transforming an Anglo-Saxon into an Englishman", in Summerfield, T. & B
The churchyard contains an Anglo-Saxon cross shaft.
er, it may also indicate the position of an anglo-saxon minster secondary to those at Barking or Ti
le a pit was being dug for a water tank, an Anglo-Saxon skeleton was discovered.
he had no papers or credentials and was an Anglo-Saxon, a group of people still relatively foreign
episcopal title which was first used by an Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 9th centuries an
Leuthere (or Leutherius) was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester.
ere originally prelates who administered an Anglo-Saxon diocese between the 7th and 9th centuries.
derive from Sceot-hulls-worth, implying an Anglo-Saxon "dwelling-place by the Scout hills".
uit 780), also Hugeburc or Huneberc, was an Anglo-Saxon nun at the Abbey of Heidenheim in Germany.
Ymar of Reculver (died 830) was an Anglo-Saxon saint.
Lam Brook is mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter as forming part of the boundaries o
ved into Old English as a title given to an Anglo-Saxon officer who summoned householders to counci
Wigbert, born in Wessex around 670, was an Anglo-Saxon Benedictine monk from the monastery of Glas
Brihtwine (or Beorhtwine) was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells.
Mary's, Gainford, stands on the site of an Anglo-Saxon monastery built by Bishop Ecgred of Lindisf
ut it is not recorded (Wivel may be from an Anglo-Saxon personal name 'Wifel').
An Anglo-Saxon holy woman, she was thought to have been ma
te of Sheffield Castle found evidence of an Anglo-Saxon building on the site.
Frithestan (or Frithustan) was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester.
By birth an Anglo-Saxon, he became archbishop in 655 and held the o
To this work he prefixed an Anglo-Saxon grammar.
f Ely) (died c. 699) was the daughter of an Anglo-Saxon king, an abbess and a saint of the Christia
gh bank' at the river mouth mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter.
The present church replaces an Anglo-Saxon building which was the cathedral of the Bis
s if related by a female story-teller in an Anglo-Saxon court, the author feeling it would have bee
This is an Anglo-Saxon name, which means Eoca's Farm.
Bradfield Abbey was an Anglo-Saxon abbey in Berkshire, England.
An Anglo-Saxon cross shaft (late 8th/early 9th century AD)
Cholsey Abbey was an Anglo-Saxon nunnery in Cholsey in the English county of
Dodford is mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter of 944.
Erchinoald introduced Balthild, an Anglo-Saxon slave from East Anglia (later canonised), t
Among Bright's publications was an Anglo-Saxon Reader, whose similarity to the reader publ
Ordgar or Ordgarius is also an Anglo-Saxon masculine personal name (borne for example
An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary is a dictionary of Old English,
e word 'clapper' derives ultimately from an Anglo-Saxon word, cleaca, meaning 'bridging the steppin
assingbourn takes its name from 'Bassa', an Anglo-Saxon who, some 1200 years ago, with his band of
The Way of Wyrd: Tales of an Anglo-Saxon Sorcerer (London: Century, 1983, ISBN 978-0
ing to some, the use of antlers suggests an Anglo-Saxon origin along with other native Anglo-Saxon
Norwich Over the Water was an Anglo-Saxon settlement and major trading area defended
Osburh (or Osburga) was an Anglo-Saxon saint who rested at Coventry Cathedral.
on the saint, and it is presumed he was an Anglo-Saxon hermit.
l of Caer Lwydgoed (Lichfield), defeated an Anglo-Saxon army with bishops under the walls of the to
Listed as a witness in an Anglo-Saxon charter dated 985, which is listed as no.
Shire Court or Shire Moot was an Anglo-Saxon institution dating back to the earliest day
Gyrwe was an Anglo-Saxon name for Jarrow, in North East England.
Esh is an Anglo-Saxon name meaning Ash Tree and the spelling refl
The brook is mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter of ideterminate date.
Bedgebury is first mentioned in an Anglo-Saxon charter in AD 841, the name deriving from t
les (24 km) east of Oxford and grew from an Anglo-Saxon settlement beside the river.
The legend is that she was an Anglo-Saxon princess, and probably also a nun, who was
Leominster abbey was an Anglo-Saxon monastery established at Leominster in the
as originally a prelate who administered an Anglo-Saxon diocese in the 10th and 11th centuries, and
d have been in the ownership of Aelfgar, an Anglo-Saxon who also had interests which included manor
s reinforced by the fact that Meaburn is an Anglo-Saxon name.
King's Meaburn was thought to be an Anglo-Saxon settlement in the 7th and 8th centuries.
s because this term has been viewed from an Anglo-Saxon perspective."
and Zykwell) suggest that its origin is an Anglo-Saxon toponym meaning 'Gicca's spring'.
Sigar (or Sigegar; died circa 996) was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells.
f Brunanburh, which confirmed England as an Anglo-Saxon kingdom.
s once a separate village (with roots as an Anglo-Saxon settlement, separate from the Roman town of
episcopal title which was first used by an Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 11th centuries a
e of the successor fiefs of Northumbria, an Anglo-Saxon Kingdom and later Earldom.
The Westerne were an Anglo-Saxon tribe, probably in western England.
urst is in a grant of lands by Egeburth, an Anglo-Saxon or Jutish king of Kent, to Diora, Bishop of
, showing some of the characteristics of an Anglo-Saxon territorial boundary.
om the Old English *Frige-hop: Frige was an Anglo-Saxon goddess cognate with the Old Norse goddess
name 'Barnwell' is possibly derived from an anglo-saxon placename meaning children's well; bearn is
l agenda was, that in case of supporting an Anglo-Saxon invasion in the Balkans, the Allied powers
It is also the name of an Anglo-Saxon leader who owned Beorma's Farm, from which
eaches back to the Roman occupation, and an Anglo-Saxon village, covering approximately 30 acres (1
The Basingas were an Anglo-Saxon tribe who settled in the Loddon Valley in a
The name Dodda's Tun probably refers to an Anglo-Saxon leader 'Dodda' establishing a stronghold in
Domesday Book as Deepdene, "dene" being an Anglo-Saxon word for valley.
died in 634 AD; she was the daughter of an Anglo-Saxon king and became a nun at Saint-Amand, Rouen
much older cross, and the upper part of an Anglo-Saxon cross shaft.
t was the successor to Folkestone Abbey, an Anglo-Saxon nunnery on a different site.
It is an Anglo-Saxon bronze brooch of the early tenth century.
St Gregory's Minster is an Anglo-Saxon church with a rare sundial, in Kirkdale nea
the town, and the name Alton comes from an Anglo-Saxon word "aewielltun" meaning "farmstead at the
620 - 26 October 664) was an Anglo-Saxon monk and bishop from Northumbria.
The first part, Barton, is an Anglo-Saxon word meaning Barley Farm, and is a common p
rom "Ulla's Wick", where wick or wich is an Anglo-Saxon corruption of the Roman vicus meaning a pla
An Anglo-Saxon charter also mentions 'the ridgeway' sugges
the site of what is thought to have been an Anglo-Saxon place of worship.
it passes through what was once the ancient Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Mercia.
ings related to Dorset: Wessex; the ancient Anglo-Saxon kingdom, Dorset's agriculture, Dorset's san
holic Church to eradicate earlier Norse and Anglo-Saxon traditions of marriage amongst the nobility
olony in Wirral, to the north and west, and Anglo-Saxon Mercia to the east and south.
h century - July 4, 725) was a Frankish and Anglo-Saxon Abbess of noble blood.
Both the Celtic (Irish and Pictish) and Anglo-Saxon elites had long traditions of metalwork of
the year 900, in Greek, Latin, British and Anglo-Saxon.
historical period per programme: Roman and Anglo-Saxon; Medieval; Tudor; Stuarts; Georgian and Vic
Abbey, Bishop of Sherborne, Latin poet and Anglo-Saxon literature scholar, was born before the mid
ral to the north, centred on Thingwall, and Anglo-Saxon Mercia to the south.
Sicilian ancestry on his father's side, and Anglo-Saxon ancestry on his mother's side.
The basic differences between Mongolian and Anglo-Saxon names, in connection with trying to fit Mon
ame is derived from a mixture of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon (or Old English) words.
ons of prehistoric implements and Roman and Anglo-Saxon antiquities found in Canterbury, Thanet and
surprising new information about Celtic and Anglo-Saxon heritage on the British mainland.
It is now open farmland, but has Roman and Anglo-Saxon connections.
haeological site with evidence of Roman and Anglo-Saxon occupation.
Ideal and reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon society: studies presented to J.M. Wallace-
variant form, in Bald's Leechbook, another Anglo-Saxon medical compendium.
The parish church, parts of which are Anglo-Saxon
Main article: Anglo-Saxon linguistic purism
Main articles: Anglo-Saxon runes and Old English Latin alphabet
torio di Musica Giuseppe Verdi), as well as Anglo-Saxon and Romance Languages and Philosophy at the
ic traditions of Germanic languages such as Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon.
innuis' and whose twelfth victory held back Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years.
Cavenham, which is generally assumed to be Anglo-Saxon, dating to the 6th or 7th century.
kes in Cambridgeshire have been shown to be Anglo-Saxon in their final phase, they often seem to be
idgeshire, England, generally assumed to be Anglo-Saxon of origin.
ld be as you suggest, although it should be Anglo-Saxon London to line up with Category:Anglo-Saxon
ng before its arrival in what was to become Anglo-Saxon Mercia; the ealdorman or head of a tribe or
of the River Tamar as the boundary between Anglo-Saxon Wessex and Celtic Cornwall.
Between Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Bedfordshi
Between Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Norfolk wa
Between Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Huntingdon
orate for his work on the relations between Anglo-Saxon and Nordic art in Viking times.
Between Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century the Englis
and R. I. Moore (1985), 193-206 · J. Blair, Anglo-Saxon Oxfordshire (1994), 52-4, 181-3 · VCH Oxfor
He wrote a book, Anglo-Saxon, in 1884.
1011 - 1068) was a landowner in both Anglo-Saxon and post-Conquest England.
British, Anglo-Saxon and also Dutch students have developed a mu
Kent, what is now England was populated by Anglo-Saxon pagans, and the new rulers did not think of
She was operated by Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co.
llingford which is bordered on two sides by Anglo-Saxon burh defences built in the 9th century.
the surrounding areas had been populated by Anglo-Saxon settlers.
the fifth century settlement of Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlers, in this area mainly Angles, but i
Evidence from the eighth century Anglo-Saxon historian, Bede points to the Picts also be
c. 1113 x 1124) is an early 12th century Anglo-Saxon noble associated with Roxburghshire, a cult
Benna (bishop), a 9th century Anglo-Saxon bishop of Hereford
The Taplow burial, a 7th century Anglo-Saxon burial mound, is in the grounds of the hous
on a hedge.The glass vase was a 6th century Anglo-Saxon "claw beaker" which had been buried beside
There is an 8th century Anglo-Saxon church, and nearby Ledston Hall.
r Northamptonshire Helmet) is a 7th century Anglo-Saxon boar-crested helm found by archaeologists f
d (died 1079 x 1086) was a mid-11th century Anglo-Saxon thegn and sheriff in Worcestershire, Englan
For the 9th century Anglo-Saxon bishop of Hereford, see Benna (bishop).
Suffolk) is the site of two 6th-7th century Anglo-Saxon cemeteries, where it is believed that membe
an the Cantor (c.960 - early 11th century), Anglo-Saxon monk
the Domesday Book but the name is certainly Anglo-Saxon: local history books claim that Shepshed ha
. 410 AD and the emergence of the Christian Anglo-Saxon kingdoms during the 7th century.
yle of religious art, a style that combined Anglo-Saxon and Celtic themes, what is now called Hiber
emands included the abolition of compulsory Anglo-Saxon, new optional papers in women's writing and
ice of his death occurs in the contemporary Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Cubitt Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 13
Cubitt Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 42
the largest and most elaborately decorated Anglo-Saxon crosses to have survived mostly intact, and
and also contains an amount of distinctive Anglo-Saxon rune types.
me one of the earliest scholars to document Anglo-Saxon historical manuscripts in the Cottonian col
Ladies' straw, was used as a red dye during Anglo-Saxon times in England.
at is believed to be the site of an earlier Anglo-Saxon church.
me `Wickham` is an indication of an earlier Anglo-Saxon settlement.
a grave in Canterbury, and is the earliest Anglo-Saxon coin, though it may not have been used as m
ar the most successful of the various early Anglo-Saxon peoples until the later ninth century", and
The early Anglo-Saxon village consisted of a few structures, main
gned it in 1868 to "a late Celtic, or early Anglo-Saxon period".
Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon English.
ll aware that the Snape burial was of early Anglo-Saxon, not of Viking age date, and this was part
Placename evidence suggests a fairly early Anglo-Saxon origin.
Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England.
end of the Roman period and into the early Anglo-Saxon period.
o stronger archaeological evidence of early Anglo-Saxon activity in the area around Dorchester-on-T
The largest Early Anglo-Saxon burial site ever excavated, it contains wit
Recorded by Bede as the nemesis of early Anglo-Saxon Northumbria, King Penda was responsible for
"The Council of Whitby: A Study in Early Anglo-Saxon Politics", in Journal of British Studies, 2
re for many years puzzled as to where early Anglo-Saxon London was located, as they could find litt
3) “The Council of Whitby: a study in early Anglo-Saxon politics”, in: The Journal of British Studi
, and been brought to England with an early Anglo-Saxon settler.
ents of an amber glass claw beaker of early Anglo-Saxon manufacture and a gold ring with filigree o
                                                                                                   


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