「anglo-saxon」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)2ページ目
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Barbara(1990), "Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon England", Routledge. |
Early | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the London area was not on th |
Like most of the early | Anglo-Saxon kings, very little is known about his life. |
or 6th century and may have been of either | Anglo-Saxon or Welsh origin. |
Thorpe (1782 - 19 July 1870) was an English | Anglo-Saxon scholar. |
m on King Edward's Succession (Old English; | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle D, s.a. |
, at a location near an important excavated | Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Boss Hall in Ipswich, was dedic |
1757: Rev. Bryan Faussett begins excavating | Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in Kent, England (continues to 1 |
2010: The Word Exchange: | Anglo-Saxon Poems in Translation (W. |
and is the site of both roman and extensive | anglo-saxon archaeology |
like North Germanic, and to a lesser extent | Anglo-Saxon mythology, the attestation of Continental G |
However, the famous | Anglo-Saxon historian Sir Frank Stenton and his wife, w |
at the continuous flow of time (a favourite | Anglo-Saxon topic) erases all pain (though not necessar |
lin was one of the key figures in the final | Anglo-Saxon conquest of southern Britain. |
t for, took the very savor out of that fine | Anglo-Saxon liberty for which the sages and patriots of |
d became the eighth Bretwalda and the first | Anglo-Saxon king to be styled "ruler over all England". |
rsa who, according to legend, led the first | Anglo-Saxon invaders into England, are said to have fou |
Ecgfrith was the first | Anglo-Saxon king to receive a Christian consecration as |
ffa as king in 757 created a golden age for | Anglo-Saxon Mercia. |
Unusually for | Anglo-Saxon crosses, the stone is not local: "the mediu |
enthusiasm for Arthur and his affinity for | Anglo-Saxon language are apparent in the work. |
Wulfhlem II was the fourth | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells. |
Old Esh as it is sometimes known dates from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Emley dates from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
the common name given to the Swastika from | Anglo-Saxon times ... was Fylfot, said to have been der |
s likely that a watermill existed here from | Anglo-Saxon times, although much of the current structu |
is a listed monument, believed to date from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
The name Horsey comes from | Anglo-Saxon "hors-eg" and means 'horse island' and was |
The name may come from | Anglo-Saxon origins: gilden (or gylden) meaning golden, |
e Hundred, in Suffolk, England, dating from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
ver 1,000 years of religious history - from | Anglo-Saxon carvings on one wall, to medieval wall pain |
Earsham Mill - a watermill dating from | Anglo-Saxon times |
k facing to the north wall of the nave from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Fazakerley takes its name from | Anglo-Saxon root words - all descriptive words pertaini |
The name Siston is believed to derive from | Anglo-Saxon, meaning Sige's Farmstead. |
resent building has sections that date from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
"Eversholt" comes from | Anglo-Saxon meaning "wood of the wild boar". |
The name Willen is probably from | Anglo-Saxon or Old English meaning (at the) 'willows' t |
The name Charlton Kings comes from | Anglo-Saxon times, the word Charlton evolved from the t |
astle was constructed on top of high-status | Anglo-Saxon housing, probably belonging to former house |
She edited his | Anglo-Saxon Northumbria in 1984. |
us a grandson of the Emperor Otto I and his | Anglo-Saxon wife Eadgyth (and, through Eadgyth, the gre |
Halton was an important | Anglo-Saxon manor held by Earl Tostig, the brother of K |
The important | Anglo-Saxon stone Easby Cross of 800-820 is now in the |
Remarkably, there is a second important | Anglo-Saxon building in the village, Odda's Chapel, a S |
ing that is known about anyone who lived in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Taylor developed an interest in | Anglo-Saxon architecture early in life. |
dale, the English teacher who spoke only in | Anglo-Saxon, in two series of Steven Moffat's school-si |
In | Anglo-Saxon times the fort was given the name "Stutfall |
enerally listed along with "Real estate" in | Anglo-Saxon classifications. |
Recent Excavations in | Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk (1 |
Essays in | Anglo-Saxon History. |
Her name is how she is known in | Anglo-Saxon, apparently a corruption of the British Aud |
Suffolk in | Anglo-Saxon Times. |
Wyrd and Providence in | Anglo-Saxon Thought (1928, reprinted in Interpretations |
Life in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
ith implications of freeman and nobleman in | Anglo-Saxon society). |
In | Anglo-Saxon times, Thame was in the Diocese of Dorchest |
yed more success in Latin countries than in | Anglo-Saxon countries. |
Studies in | Anglo-Saxon Institutions (1905) |
The Weorgoran were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
in eight languages and became a pioneer in | Anglo-Saxon studies, an unprecedented achievement for a |
ristianizing Kinship: Ritual Sponsorship in | Anglo-Saxon England, Cornell University Press (1998), I |
He was lecturer in | Anglo-Saxon History at Cambridge from 1978, reader in A |
Other names are sometimes used: in | Anglo-Saxon art Kendrick preferred "Helmet" and "Ribbon |
The first church was probably built in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Frank Stenton in | Anglo-Saxon England, and Ann Williams in her DNB articl |
It seems that in | Anglo-Saxon societies the position of a hostage from on |
In | Anglo-Saxon times the neighbouring villages of Hemingfo |
In | Anglo-Saxon law, the regular freeman is known as a two- |
icance: peace was effectively maintained in | Anglo-Saxon times by the frith-guild, an early manifest |
era the river was crossed by a ford, and in | Anglo-Saxon times formed a boundary between Wessex and |
In | Anglo-Saxon, a ceorl was an independent peasant landown |
S. Plunkett, Suffolk in | Anglo-Saxon Times (Tempus, Stroud 2005). |
ge and an author and editor specializing in | Anglo-Saxon and medieval literature, science fiction an |
The Importance of Women in | Anglo-Saxon Times, the Cultus of St. Peter and St. Paul |
S. Plunkett, Suffolk in | Anglo-Saxon Times (Stroud 2005). |
ots; however the modern town was founded in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Saints and Relics in | Anglo-Saxon England, (1989) |
London was essentially refounded in | Anglo-Saxon times with an Old English version of the na |
There was a church here in | Anglo-Saxon times |
Bloodfeud: Murder and Revenge in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
ssels Cross and its two-line inscription in | Anglo-Saxon verse were first brought to public attentio |
, from Old English) were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early administ |
This was a known practice in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
In | Anglo-Saxon times the settlement was called Cuneceastra |
Most of the motifs have counterparts in | Anglo-Saxon art and Ottonian art. |
ving an overview of the past year's work in | Anglo-Saxon studies. |
from the nearby hamlet of Thrupe, which in | Anglo-Saxon meant dairy farm. |
e village as 'Nortune', noting that even in | Anglo-Saxon England immediately before the Norman Conqu |
istian site, as 'ecclesia' was not taken in | Anglo-Saxon vocabulary, other than in inherited place n |
The Husmerae were a tribe or clan in | Anglo-Saxon England, possibly forming an early settleme |
age is a list of territorial assessments in | Anglo-Saxon England which lists regions and the number |
Wyrd is a concept in | Anglo-Saxon culture roughly corresponding to fate or pe |
William A. Chaney, The Cult of Kingship in | Anglo-Saxon England: The Transition from Paganism to Ch |
of the Isle of Wight and last pagan king in | Anglo-Saxon England until the Vikings in the 9th centur |
Later in | Anglo-Saxon England it was a unit used for assessing la |
r, Martin (1992) "The Liudhard Medalet", in | Anglo-Saxon England, Volume 20, eds. |
atfield Chase near Doncaster, Yorkshire, in | Anglo-Saxon England between the Northumbrians under Edw |
m Scotland, was the scene of two battles in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
ching and Hnabi to that of Hoc and Hnaef in | Anglo-Saxon tradition. |
er are rooted in Germanic heroic poetry, in | Anglo-Saxon tradition recited and cultivated by scops. |
Royal Holloway College, and later an MA in | Anglo-Saxon and Frankish studies at the University of L |
As the manor of Enfield had been held in | Anglo-Saxon times by Asgar, Master of the Stud to Edwar |
s from “Canna's Farm” or “Canna's Place” in | Anglo-Saxon), but there was a significant villa here in |
In | Anglo-Saxon times, Hallamshire was the most southerly s |
transcript of B.M. Cotton Otho B. xi." in: | Anglo-Saxon England; 3 (1973); pp. |
to dominate western Christendom, including | Anglo-Saxon and medieval England, from the time of Char |
known as the Little Avon or the Ingleburn ( | Anglo-Saxon - English river), is a tributary of the Bri |
ish and Celts severely defeated an invading | Anglo-Saxon army at the Battle of Mons Badonicus some t |
The name is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and a derivation of "Shepherd's C |
cient name still in use is lydgate which is | Anglo-Saxon for a hanging gate. |
The meticulous hand is | Anglo-Saxon square minuscule. |
The toponym Eaton is | Anglo-Saxon, and "Water Eaton" means "farm by a river", |
It has been maintained that the name is | Anglo-Saxon Old English for 'at the oak clearings' or ' |
The name Helpston is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and means the farmstead (tun) fir |
The name is | Anglo-Saxon Old English 'farmstead of Eadlac's people'. |
akes its name though the name 'Luffield' is | Anglo-Saxon and means 'Lufa's field'. |
The word "clipping" is | Anglo-Saxon in origin, and is derived from the word "cl |
The term is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and was in use for more than thre |
The village name is | Anglo-Saxon in origin, and means 'cottage where pitch i |
The name is | Anglo-Saxon in origin, and relates to bees. |
The hamlet name is | Anglo-Saxon and means farm by a brook. |
The village is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and is a much dispersed parish, w |
The name Bredbury is | Anglo-Saxon and probably dates from the first permanent |
it sits in a steep sided valley ("dean" is | Anglo-Saxon for valley) on the extreme north-east of th |
The name of Williton is | Anglo-Saxon and means "estate on the Willet" (river), b |
in the British kingdom of Bryneich, and its | Anglo-Saxon successor state of Bernicia. |
The church, with its | Anglo-Saxon features, is of major importance to our und |
Its | Anglo-Saxon name means 'Horsa's burial mound'. |
also known as Kenaz ("torch"), based on its | Anglo-Saxon name. |
Latin component of English rather than its | Anglo-Saxon aspect." |
Old English language, | Anglo-Saxon, the ancestor of modern English |
A large | Anglo-Saxon cemetery, in use from the mid 10th century |
It was also one of the largest | Anglo-Saxon settlements in the area. |
hn the Evangelist, Milborne Port is of late | Anglo-Saxon date, and parts may well span the Norman co |
the bishops of East Anglia during the late | Anglo-Saxon period until 1075. |
mbria was a title in the Anglo-Danish, late | Anglo-Saxon, and early Anglo-Norman period in England. |
s worked in Cuthbert's name during the late | Anglo-Saxon period were particularly flamboyant, and th |
ed one of the two major writers of the late | Anglo-Saxon period in England. |
ieve England was a nation-state during late | Anglo-Saxon times. |
Church of St John the Evangelist is of late | Anglo-Saxon date and parts may well span the Norman con |
In the late | Anglo-Saxon period Little Faringdon was part of a large |
a place of considerable importance in later | Anglo-Saxon times, and the evidence of coins shows that |
is re-interpretation is complete in a later | Anglo-Saxon manuscript on the Marvels of the East, wher |
ea of the valley of the River Tame in later | Anglo-Saxon charters and formed one of the core groupin |
This is probably what inspired the later | Anglo-Saxon inhabitants of the area to name it after th |
will frequently comment on early legendary | Anglo-Saxon saints. |
rst Friday in March is so called from Lide, | Anglo-Saxon for March. |
factresses Wulviva and (Lady) Godiva, local | Anglo-Saxon landowners before the Norman takeover of th |
ght to have originated from that of a local | Anglo-Saxon chieftain Duddela an Old English name and ' |
Stenton, Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England; 3rd edition. |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England Third Edition. |
ation at Clopton and a 30-acre (120,000 m2) | Anglo-Saxon village was in place by the 10th century. |
on Vitellius A. xv is one of the four major | Anglo-Saxon literature codices. |
uscript of Oxford) is one of the four major | Anglo-Saxon literature codices. |
It is likely that the battle, like many | Anglo-Saxon battles, took place on the nearby neolithic |
ns of St Helen's Bishopsgate (from Minicen, | Anglo-Saxon for a nun; minchery, a nunnery). |
Remedies') is a collection of miscellaneous | Anglo-Saxon medical texts and prayers, written mainly i |
This rune was inscribed on more | Anglo-Saxon cremation urns than any other symbol. |
d he changed his name from Gold to the more | Anglo-Saxon Gould. |
Cynewulf is one of the two only named | Anglo-Saxon poets. |
stianize the Anglo-Saxons from their native | Anglo-Saxon paganism, although the date of his arrival |
tiainize the Anglo-Saxons from their native | Anglo-Saxon paganism, although when he arrived in Engla |
ench-speaking conquerors, though the native | Anglo-Saxon population was unable to pronounce such a f |
repeatedly into conflict with neighbouring | Anglo-Saxon Wessex. |
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. |
The Norwich | Anglo-Saxon is an ancient preserved skeleton of the age |
the parish of Rochdale is believed to be of | Anglo-Saxon origin, as evidenced by historical document |
omilies” from The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England (1992). . |
morial Lectures 8. Cambridge: Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 1997-98. |
Offa was one of the great rulers of | Anglo-Saxon times, though his reign is often overlooked |
He was the author of | Anglo-Saxon England, a volume of the Oxford History of |
he name Lewes comes from the plural form of | Anglo-Saxon "Hlaew", which means "hill". |
history of the Anglo-Saxons, see History of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
The Study of | Anglo-Saxon |
lomon and Saturn is a work in the corpus of | Anglo-Saxon literature. |
the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of | Anglo-Saxon (the name having been changed in 1916). |
The church, probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin is, not surprisingly, close to the v |
Ceawlin was king of | Anglo-Saxon Wessex. |
See also: History of | Anglo-Saxon England |
rom 1885 and also Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon since 1903. |
Somerford is a name of | Anglo-Saxon origin and the interpretation is obvious: " |
he ‘Kingston Brooch', an important piece of | Anglo-Saxon jewelry dating from the 7th Century, was di |
The Blackwell Encyclopedia of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Edgworth is of | Anglo-Saxon origin, denoting a village in the hills and |
current Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, an |
right's 4,000 volume teaching collection of | Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, and Early Modern English t |
The Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of | Anglo-Saxon, until 1916 known as the Rawlinsonian Profe |
on, wrote a preface to the third edition of | Anglo-Saxon England, published after his death, and edi |
n 1858 became the Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University: the post was renamed |
ence Nowell, one of the founding fathers of | Anglo-Saxon studies. |
a symbol associated with the continuance of | Anglo-Saxon paganism. |
r as "one of the most precious survivals of | Anglo-Saxon architecture in England". |
tially accepted by native-born Americans of | Anglo-Saxon descent as white. |
rs about Tolkien's career as a professor of | Anglo-Saxon |
e vicar of Batheaston, and was Professor of | Anglo-Saxon (1808-1812), and afterwards Professor of Po |
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