「anglo-Saxon」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)
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as been suggested that this was a secondary | Anglo-Saxon burial, placed at the camp. |
ght to have originated from that of a local | Anglo-Saxon chieftain Duddela an Old English name and ' |
g a blood feud was either to pay a wergild ( | Anglo-Saxon, "man-price") or to be banished. |
is re-interpretation is complete in a later | Anglo-Saxon manuscript on the Marvels of the East, wher |
He wrote a book, | Anglo-Saxon, in 1884. |
nd, which was the site of a seventh-century | Anglo-Saxon archaeology find known as "Finglesham man," |
Kintbury Abbey was a supposed | Anglo-Saxon monastery at Kintbury in the English county |
A large | Anglo-Saxon cemetery, in use from the mid 10th century |
ement (possibly Vertis), establishing a new | Anglo-Saxon settlement of Weorgoran ceaster (modern Wor |
e 8th century in Egmond) was a Northumbrian | Anglo-Saxon missionary. |
t was the successor to Folkestone Abbey, an | Anglo-Saxon nunnery on a different site. |
t of Glastonbury was the head (or abbot) of | Anglo-Saxon and eventually Benedictine house of Glaston |
's population was estimated to be about 50% | Anglo-Saxon, 33% French Canadian, and 16.5% Flemish. |
In 616 AD, the | Anglo-Saxon King Aethelfrith met his end in battle agai |
ere originally prelates who administered an | Anglo-Saxon diocese between the 7th and 9th centuries. |
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 |
enthusiasm for Arthur and his affinity for | Anglo-Saxon language are apparent in the work. |
e formation of a two-party system after the | Anglo-Saxon model." |
ffa as king in 757 created a golden age for | Anglo-Saxon Mercia. |
historians to refer conveniently to all of | Anglo-Saxon England south of the River Humber, and not |
Ordgar or Ordgarius is also an | Anglo-Saxon masculine personal name (borne for example |
It is possible that he was also the | Anglo-Saxon poet Cynewulf, who was known to be alive at |
690 and died about 7 July 705, although the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that he died in 703. |
tially accepted by native-born Americans of | Anglo-Saxon descent as white. |
at is believed to be the site of an earlier | Anglo-Saxon church. |
e Whestone is merely a corruption of an old | Anglo-Saxon name [quote?]. |
me `Wickham` is an indication of an earlier | Anglo-Saxon settlement. |
1092) was an 11th-century | Anglo-Saxon magnate in Northumbria. |
Halton was an important | Anglo-Saxon manor held by Earl Tostig, the brother of K |
Thorpe (1782 - 19 July 1870) was an English | Anglo-Saxon scholar. |
ish and Celts severely defeated an invading | Anglo-Saxon army at the Battle of Mons Badonicus some t |
, and been brought to England with an early | Anglo-Saxon settler. |
nly succeed with an English pen name and an | Anglo-Saxon protagonist. |
He returned from exile in 792, and the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that he was "apprehended |
and is the site of both roman and extensive | anglo-saxon archaeology |
Nunneries and the | Anglo-Saxon Royal Houses. |
in the British kingdom of Bryneich, and its | Anglo-Saxon successor state of Bernicia. |
eotype tourist from Northern Europe and the | Anglo-Saxon sphere was prominent from the 1970s to the |
re the Roman invasion of 43 AD) and through | Anglo-Saxon times, it stretched from Berkshire through |
era the river was crossed by a ford, and in | Anglo-Saxon times formed a boundary between Wessex and |
d to be an amalgamation of "Dearne" and the | Anglo-Saxon word "ton" (meaning 'town'). |
us a grandson of the Emperor Otto I and his | Anglo-Saxon wife Eadgyth (and, through Eadgyth, the gre |
of Allerdale was an 11th- and 12th-century | Anglo-Saxon noble, lord of Allerdale in modern Cumbria. |
It is recorded in the Domesday Book and the | Anglo-Saxon charters of 964-995. |
eaches back to the Roman occupation, and an | Anglo-Saxon village, covering approximately 30 acres (1 |
area first held a bishopric in 680, and the | Anglo-Saxon cathedral was probably located close to (if |
lish bald (meaning "a white patch") and the | Anglo-Saxon moor (meaning "boggy land"). |
acy was primarily Danish in origin, and the | Anglo-Saxon kings exercised a limited amount of power i |
from a combination of the word oak and the | Anglo-Saxon word lea, that means meadow. |
was a 7th-century king of East Anglia, the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom that today includes the English cou |
mbria was a title in the Anglo-Danish, late | Anglo-Saxon, and early Anglo-Norman period in England. |
Television's mini-series of Angus Wilson's | Anglo-Saxon Attitudes. |
can be coterminous with another significant | Anglo-Saxon root-word, sib (from which the word 'siblin |
ated known textual history of any surviving | Anglo-Saxon poem. |
Irish law corresponding approximately with | Anglo-Saxon wergild. |
Finn and Hengest are two | Anglo-Saxon heroes appearing in the Old English epic po |
ative history the principal sources are the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Irish annals. |
poetry in a way Olrik defines as typically | Anglo-Saxon. |
mented by other, later sources, such as the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), a British leader named Vortiger |
As the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the devastation of neighb |
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 |
Aspects of | Anglo-Saxon Archaeology: Sutton Hoo and other discoveri |
age is a list of territorial assessments in | Anglo-Saxon England which lists regions and the number |
n Translating Beowulf" looks at translating | Anglo-Saxon. |
He was the author of | Anglo-Saxon England, a volume of the Oxford History of |
accomplished Hebraist, and an authority on | Anglo-Saxon with valuable editions of new texts to his |
emy for his work as a "a world authority on | Anglo-Saxon literature". |
Parts of the church date back to | Anglo-Saxon times. |
The village itself can be dated back to | Anglo-Saxon times; it takes its name from one of the mo |
The origins of Worrall go back to | Anglo-Saxon times, it had its roots in farming and was |
The village dates back to | Anglo-Saxon times, the parish church being founded by S |
Erchinoald introduced Balthild, an | Anglo-Saxon slave from East Anglia (later canonised), t |
s as the spoken language, a hybrid based on | Anglo-Saxon. |
m Scotland, was the scene of two battles in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
the parish of Rochdale is believed to be of | Anglo-Saxon origin, as evidenced by historical document |
Brent Ditch is generally assumed to be an | Anglo-Saxon earthwork in Southern Cambridgeshire, Engla |
Although the church is said to be of | Anglo-Saxon origin, these sections have been lost over |
King's Meaburn was thought to be an | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the 7th and 8th centuries. |
the site of what is thought to have been an | Anglo-Saxon place of worship. |
he Brigantes, a Brythonic tribe, before the | Anglo-Saxon invasion. |
1757: Rev. Bryan Faussett begins excavating | Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in Kent, England (continues to 1 |
St. George's Day celebrations for being too | Anglo-Saxon and demanded that the day should celebrate |
Domesday Book as Deepdene, "dene" being an | Anglo-Saxon word for valley. |
tr.) Beowulf: An | Anglo-Saxon Epic Poem (D. C. Heath, 1897 |
Meers Brook marked the boundary between the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Deira (later Northumbria) and M |
River Sheaf formed the boundary between the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Northumbria and Mercia. |
o have been fought here in 642, between the | Anglo-Saxon kings Penda and Oswald. |
fought on August 5, 641 or 642, between the | Anglo-Saxon kings Oswald of Northumbria and Penda of Me |
By birth an | Anglo-Saxon, he became archbishop in 655 and held the o |
probably means the settlement of Bleath (an | Anglo-Saxon). |
of the River Tamar as the boundary between | Anglo-Saxon Wessex and Celtic Cornwall. |
Bradley, S.A.J. | Anglo-Saxon Poetry. |
The name Bredbury is | Anglo-Saxon and probably dates from the first permanent |
f the transition from post-Roman Britain to | Anglo-Saxon England; a certainty that would be the more |
the fifth century settlement of Britain by | Anglo-Saxon settlers, in this area mainly Angles, but i |
the year 900, in Greek, Latin, British and | Anglo-Saxon. |
The first church was probably built in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
It may be the site of the burials of | Anglo-Saxon King Anna and his son Jurmin. |
d Basing was first settled around 700 by an | Anglo-Saxon tribe known as the Basingas, who give the v |
onquest of England, Horsford was held by an | Anglo-Saxon named Edric but after the conquest William |
ia, and was called King of the Welsh by the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ng across the river valley, replaced by the | Anglo-Saxon crossing of the River Stort some 600 metres |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 9th centuries an |
irst monastery was founded in 657 AD by the | Anglo-Saxon era King of Northumbria, Oswy (Oswiu) as St |
n that year the citadel was captured by the | Anglo-Saxon ruler Ida of Bernicia (Beornice) and became |
between the 10th and 11th centuries by the | Anglo-Saxon Bishops of Ramsbury. |
e existence of the saint is attested by the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which for the year 798 records t |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 11th centuries a |
ist II (also Christ B), poem written by the | Anglo-Saxon poet Cynewulf on Christ's Ascension. |
ame is derived from a mixture of Celtic and | Anglo-Saxon (or Old English) words. |
surprising new information about Celtic and | Anglo-Saxon heritage on the British mainland. |
During the 11th century, six | Anglo-Saxon charters were copied into the gospel-book, |
owever, the earliest source for Cerdic, the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, was put together in the late nin |
The Empire In Solution With Chapters On | Anglo-Saxon Civilization (1931) |
to dominate western Christendom, including | Anglo-Saxon and medieval England, from the time of Char |
The Coming of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
led to the introduction of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
be rebuilt as Cholsey parish church, where | Anglo-Saxon masonry survives in the tower. |
The Weorgoran were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
, from Old English) were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early administ |
The Husmerae were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
The Stoppingas was a tribe or clan of | Anglo-Saxon England, based around Wootton Wawen and the |
right's 4,000 volume teaching collection of | Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, and Early Modern English t |
The Anglian collection is a collection of | Anglo-Saxon royal genealogies and regnal lists. |
The name may come from | Anglo-Saxon origins: gilden (or gylden) meaning golden, |
The name Horsey comes from | Anglo-Saxon "hors-eg" and means 'horse island' and was |
"Eversholt" comes from | Anglo-Saxon meaning "wood of the wild boar". |
The name Charlton Kings comes from | Anglo-Saxon times, the word Charlton evolved from the t |
Wyrd is a concept in | Anglo-Saxon culture roughly corresponding to fate or pe |
She conducted tenth-century | Anglo-Saxon manuscript research as a Fulbright Scholar. |
ho lived in, or was closely connected with, | Anglo-Saxon England from 597 to 1042. |
nown but it has undeniable connections with | Anglo-Saxon pagan ritual. |
The churchyard contains an | Anglo-Saxon cross shaft. |
a symbol associated with the continuance of | Anglo-Saxon paganism. |
lomon and Saturn is a work in the corpus of | Anglo-Saxon literature. |
Most of the motifs have counterparts in | Anglo-Saxon art and Ottonian art. |
urse involving translation and criticism of | Anglo-Saxon and Middle English texts) and English Liter |
Noricum, Pannonia, Dalmatia and Dacia), the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in Sub-Roman Britain and finally t |
is a listed monument, believed to date from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
resent building has sections that date from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Old Esh as it is sometimes known dates from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Emley dates from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
e Hundred, in Suffolk, England, dating from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Earsham Mill - a watermill dating from | Anglo-Saxon times |
l of Caer Lwydgoed (Lichfield), defeated an | Anglo-Saxon army with bishops under the walls of the to |
uilt along the east coast to defend against | Anglo-Saxon attack. |
, the battle marked the effective demise of | Anglo-Saxon paganism; Charles Plummer, in 1896, describ |
morial Lectures 8. Cambridge: Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 1997-98. |
The Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic (ASNC) is one of the cons |
1999-2006 he was Head of the Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic. |
The name Siston is believed to derive from | Anglo-Saxon, meaning Sige's Farmstead. |
major influence on the later development of | Anglo-Saxon art. |
ne with older reverences, disregarding some | Anglo-Saxon relics and tombs, and allowing the incorpor |
n which the Kingdom of Mercia dominated the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
During the | Anglo-Saxon Christian period (from 600 AD) there was a |
plied to the Kingdom of Cornwall during the | Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain and the period of the H |
n tribe that settled in the area during the | Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain. |
Britons migrated westwards during the | Anglo-Saxon invasion |
own to have travelled in Cumbria during the | Anglo-Saxon period and have given many words to the loc |
denote a parish typically formed during the | Anglo-Saxon and early medieval period where their narro |
sheriff, or shire reeve, evolved during the | Anglo-Saxon period of English history; the reeve was th |
leading family settling the area during the | Anglo-Saxon colonisation of England. |
deals with the history of London during the | Anglo-Saxon period, from the ending of the Roman period |
Berkshire, England that existed during the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
ieve England was a nation-state during late | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Ladies' straw, was used as a red dye during | Anglo-Saxon times in England. |
will frequently comment on early legendary | Anglo-Saxon saints. |
The toponym Eaton is | Anglo-Saxon, and "Water Eaton" means "farm by a river", |
She edited his | Anglo-Saxon Northumbria in 1984. |
on, wrote a preface to the third edition of | Anglo-Saxon England, published after his death, and edi |
urst is in a grant of lands by Egeburth, an | Anglo-Saxon or Jutish king of Kent, to Diora, Bishop of |
Evidence from the eighth century | Anglo-Saxon historian, Bede points to the Picts also be |
the largest and most elaborately decorated | Anglo-Saxon crosses to have survived mostly intact, and |
omilies” from The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England (1992). . |
The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
rsisted among men in southern England after | Anglo-Saxon settlement; and 2) that the Scots were not |
Old English language, | Anglo-Saxon, the ancestor of modern English |
6 he got his first opportunity to enter the | Anglo-Saxon market with a starring role in the Lifetime |
a compilation of epigrams and epigraphs on | Anglo-Saxon churchmen, some of whom are known only from |
hen Vortigern fled into Wales to escape the | Anglo-Saxon invaders, he chose this lofty hillfort as t |
Essays in | Anglo-Saxon History. |
time, 200 years after the establishment of | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, although Bertram Colgrave in the |
enerally listed along with "Real estate" in | Anglo-Saxon classifications. |
e village as 'Nortune', noting that even in | Anglo-Saxon England immediately before the Norman Conqu |
constitutes one of the primary examples of | Anglo-Saxon literature. |
Recent Excavations in | Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk (1 |
oins and stone carvings, and exhibits about | Anglo-Saxon culture, Bede's life and works, the life of |
blished Jewish community, explicitly wanted | Anglo-Saxon immigrants, and New Orleans, a thriving urb |
tings to a wide readership and explored the | Anglo-Saxon history of Suffolk. |
Facsimiles of | Anglo-Saxon Charters, 1991; The Liber Vitae of the New |
Placename evidence suggests a fairly early | Anglo-Saxon origin. |
riet H, The Battle of Hastings: The Fall of | Anglo-Saxon England Atlandtic Books, London 2008 |
ence Nowell, one of the founding fathers of | Anglo-Saxon studies. |
with stylized niello animals, a feature of | Anglo-Saxon art which has since become known as 'Trewhi |
illustrate landscape features, particularly | Anglo-Saxon place-names. |
e majority of the latter kingdom fell under | Anglo-Saxon control in the 8th century. |
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