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a reappraisal,' in W. Filmer-Sankey (Ed.), | Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 5, 41-46 |
For the | Anglo-Saxon tribe, see Gaini. |
e Hutch, and re-edited in the 1990s for the | Anglo-Saxon market, by Saban Entertainment. |
For the | Anglo-Saxon saint, see Saint Editha. |
th, above countries, which was made for the | Anglo-Saxon rock, but not for the Latin rock, rock in S |
he name Lewes comes from the plural form of | Anglo-Saxon "Hlaew", which means "hill". |
nity about 600, they laid the foundation of | Anglo-Saxon civilization and the present Great Britain. |
ots; however the modern town was founded in | Anglo-Saxon times. |
een the Roman withdrawl and the founding of | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. |
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. |
Stenton, Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England. |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England; 3rd edition. |
Stenton, Sir Frank M. | Anglo-Saxon England Third Edition. |
h century - July 4, 725) was a Frankish and | Anglo-Saxon Abbess of noble blood. |
Ideal and reality in Frankish and | Anglo-Saxon society: studies presented to J.M. Wallace- |
It dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and is first documented in 1232 AD. |
The name Apsley dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and means aspen wood. |
e for these days, "Ember", derives from the | Anglo-Saxon ymbren, a circuit or revolution (from ymb, |
The name Charing probably comes from the | Anglo-Saxon word cerring, a bend, as it stands on the o |
The name "Wassell" is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon "Weardsetl" meaning a watchplace. |
South Elmham comes from the | Anglo-Saxon " hamlet where elms grew" and is first ment |
Funtley - from the | Anglo-Saxon, "Funtaleg", meaning "Springs", formerly kn |
ame of Bungay is thought to derive from the | Anglo-Saxon title 'Bunincga-haye', signifying the land |
istory of English kings and queens from the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms onward. |
nty and unreliable, mainly derived from the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, written four centuries after his |
ean "hill of the Saxons", deriving from the | Anglo-Saxon words Seis meaning Saxon and Dun meaning hi |
ut it is not recorded (Wivel may be from an | Anglo-Saxon personal name 'Wifel'). |
ttle, including important accounts from the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the writings of Anglo-Norman his |
razeley around 1598 and is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon Griesley meaning grazing land (meadow). |
iest name, Franchtone, was derived from the | anglo-saxon Franca or Franco (the personal name of the |
Coven derives from the | Anglo-Saxon cofum, the dative plural of cofa, which mea |
aning for the name is White Water, from the | Anglo-Saxon hwit (white) and ey (water), and probably r |
rst Friday in March is so called from Lide, | Anglo-Saxon for March. |
Little Ouse River, draws its name from the | Anglo-Saxon Theodford or peoples ford. |
Eynesbury takes its name from the | Anglo-Saxon "Ernulf's Burgh". |
ved that the name Woolwich derives from the | Anglo-Saxon name, "trading place for wool". |
ternatively 'Cripplegate' could be from the | Anglo-Saxon term crepel, meaning a covered way or under |
s Scadflet and Shatfliet - derived from the | Anglo-Saxon fleot, meaning a shallow creek or bay - the |
ns a Wood Pigeon, the second comes from the | Anglo-Saxon for a small valley. |
e word 'clapper' derives ultimately from an | Anglo-Saxon word, cleaca, meaning 'bridging the steppin |
few surviving poetic compilations from the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
cated to St. Dubricius which dates from the | Anglo-Saxon times. |
The name comes from the | Anglo-Saxon dear (deer) and geard (fold). |
he schiltron is directly descended from the | Anglo-Saxon shield wall, and still others give evidence |
m- and introductory formulae known from the | Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon traditions (manno miltisto, d |
les (24 km) east of Oxford and grew from an | Anglo-Saxon settlement beside the river. |
The word "Ent" was taken from the | Anglo-Saxon (Old English) word ent, meaning "giant". |
dence on the site, possibly dating from the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
ame of the village could have come from the | Anglo-Saxon word 'sole' or 'sol' meaning a 'muddy sloug |
The English term king is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon cyning, which in turn is derived from the C |
s because this term has been viewed from an | Anglo-Saxon perspective." |
The name Evington comes from the | Anglo-Saxon name Aefa's Tun. |
name 'Barnwell' is possibly derived from an | anglo-saxon placename meaning children's well; bearn is |
The modern name of the town dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period when weirs were built to stop the in |
Spellings from the | Anglo-Saxon period include Lig(e)an in 880 and Lygan in |
stune, which may have been derived from the | Anglo-Saxon words for 'water' and 'town', meaning "wet |
sometimes simply called a bourne, from the | Anglo-Saxon for a stream flowing from a spring, althoug |
Burley, whose name may be derived from the | Anglo-Saxon bury which means a 'fortified place' |
Tur Langton (derived from the | Anglo-Saxon word for an enclosure, meaning "long town") |
East Langton (derived from the | Anglo-Saxon word for an enclosure, meaning "long town") |
near the meeting of the streams", from the | Anglo-Saxon mutha meaning mouth of a river. |
rm of local government in its area from the | Anglo-Saxon times to the nineteenth century. |
the town, and the name Alton comes from an | Anglo-Saxon word "aewielltun" meaning "farmstead at the |
ne) is derived from 'Wulfa's Tun', from the | Anglo-Saxon personal name Wulfa and the Old English tun |
ther theory is that the name comes from the | Anglo-Saxon words "wealh" (meaning forigners and used f |
settlements and villages on the Fylde were | Anglo-Saxon settlements. |
factresses Wulviva and (Lady) Godiva, local | Anglo-Saxon landowners before the Norman takeover of th |
British Museum Guide to | Anglo-Saxon Antiquities. |
The meticulous hand is | Anglo-Saxon square minuscule. |
g, but became king soon after Hatfield; the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, says that he became kin |
innuis' and whose twelfth victory held back | Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years. |
As the manor of Enfield had been held in | Anglo-Saxon times by Asgar, Master of the Stud to Edwar |
The name Helpston is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and means the farmstead (tun) fir |
s likely that a watermill existed here from | Anglo-Saxon times, although much of the current structu |
There was a church here in | Anglo-Saxon times |
ca a deep current of Hispanophobia pervades | Anglo-Saxon culture. |
ember 1967) was a 20th century historian of | Anglo-Saxon England, and president of the Royal Histori |
history of the Anglo-Saxons, see History of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
See also: History of | Anglo-Saxon England |
ching and Hnabi to that of Hoc and Hnaef in | Anglo-Saxon tradition. |
e Staffordshire Hoard, the largest hoard of | Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. |
Sutton Hoo - | Anglo-Saxon burial site near Woodbridge, Suffolk, Engla |
n power by 633 (and possibly by 626, if the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is correct). |
derive from Sceot-hulls-worth, implying an | Anglo-Saxon "dwelling-place by the Scout hills". |
, at a location near an important excavated | Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Boss Hall in Ipswich, was dedic |
th battle and campaign are described in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
Little is said of his reign in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle other than the bare facts that he |
Mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, it seems that it was a staging p |
e early to mid-10th century recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
in Scandinavian tradition, and also in the | Anglo-Saxon poems Beowulf and Widsith. |
The first authentic mention of it is in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it is stated that Aethelfl |
igin who is mentioned on lines 93-96 in the | Anglo-Saxon poem Widsith. |
ry similar to midsummer celebrations in the | Anglo-Saxon. |
r whose placename is first mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (ASC) of 895AD, is supposedly nam |
It was recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 796 as Thyrefeld. |
en to a period of cultural flowering in the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria, broadly speaking fr |
it was not necessarily 901 as stated in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
irford Graves: a record of researches in an | Anglo-Saxon burial place in Gloucestershire. |
itta and the grandfather of Wihtgils in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Historia Brittonum, the P |
me was recorded in 915 as Cyricbyrig in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and means "the fort with a churc |
In the | Anglo-Saxon system of frankpledge, or frith-borh, the h |
Lam Brook is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter as forming part of the boundaries o |
strete (great made-road), mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon bounds of Wolverley. |
a place of considerable importance in later | Anglo-Saxon times, and the evidence of coins shows that |
He is not mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ded, but royal genealogies preserved in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Anglian collection agree |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle at the time of King Edward the Co |
Although Birmingham's origins lie in the | Anglo-Saxon period and the manor of Birmingham definite |
Accounts of the symbel are preserved in the | Anglo-Saxon Beowulf (lines 489-675 and 1491-1500), Drea |
gh bank' at the river mouth mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter. |
s if related by a female story-teller in an | Anglo-Saxon court, the author feeling it would have bee |
AD 450, but the site was reoccupied in the | Anglo-Saxon era and a West Saxon charter drawn up betwe |
e causeway may have been first built in the | Anglo-Saxon era, and rebuilt in the late 11th century b |
Bishop Milred's death is recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
The battle is also mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ic value of the cult of royal saints in the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, in 695 she organised the translat |
Dodford is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter of 944. |
In the | Anglo-Saxon period the area was originally in the terri |
ea of the valley of the River Tame in later | Anglo-Saxon charters and formed one of the core groupin |
as the Brondings who are referred to in the | Anglo-Saxon poems Beowulf and Widsith. |
at Prestbury ("priest's enclosure") in the | Anglo-Saxon era. |
he pre-Reformation Church of England in the | Anglo-Saxon period, in charge of the Diocese of Dorches |
Godwine Porthund was listed in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the public hangman for Shrewsb |
Listed as a witness in an | Anglo-Saxon charter dated 985, which is listed as no. |
he term "Great Heathen Army" is used in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
The brook is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter of ideterminate date. |
"The Council of Whitby: A Study in Early | Anglo-Saxon Politics", in Journal of British Studies, 2 |
Bedgebury is first mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter in AD 841, the name deriving from t |
In the | Anglo-Saxon version of the same work hid or hiwan is us |
ea: a 7th century gold cross found in 1967; | Anglo-Saxon graves in 1913; and the remains of Roman ho |
3) “The Council of Whitby: a study in early | Anglo-Saxon politics”, in: The Journal of British Studi |
Battle of Peonnum in 658, mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ble about him is written principally in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
As in other | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, the many small monasteries allowe |
longer than those of other kingdoms in the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
f Roman stonework can also be seen in other | Anglo-Saxon buildings. |
e term is sometimes used by scholars in the | Anglo-Saxon tradition who wish to emphasize the somewha |
est written reference to the town is in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it is spelled Rumcofan, li |
Huwal is mentioned only in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for 926, as one of several |
Known as Weolingtun in the | Anglo-Saxon period, its name had changed to Walintone b |
troper can be found on "Christmas in Royal | Anglo-Saxon Winchester" on the Herald AV Publications l |
thwestern England which are reported in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
location associated with the battle in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) with Thingwall on Merseyside, fu |
uthern dialect of Old English spoken in the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Kent. |
1011 - 1068) was a landowner in both | Anglo-Saxon and post-Conquest England. |
Some have seen its origin in the | Anglo-Saxon name for witchcraft. |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 969 the village was recorded a |
Place names indicate the | Anglo-Saxon settlement of the Littleborough area, for e |
ssels Cross and its two-line inscription in | Anglo-Saxon verse were first brought to public attentio |
Taylor developed an interest in | Anglo-Saxon architecture early in life. |
ish population may have lived here into the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
It continued in use into the | Anglo-Saxon period when the town became known as 'Isca- |
An Introduction to | Anglo-Saxon England (Second ed.). |
h students and faculty, and invent original | Anglo-Saxon songs. |
The Sheffield Cross is an | Anglo-Saxon Christian monument, dating from the early n |
Legg's cross is an | Anglo-Saxon cross in County Durham, England, about 4 mi |
Acca is an | Anglo-Saxon settler's forename. |
Edgworth is of | Anglo-Saxon origin, denoting a village in the hills and |
Acton is usually | Anglo-Saxon Old English for "farmstead at the oak tree( |
the Domesday Book but the name is certainly | Anglo-Saxon: local history books claim that Shepshed ha |
This is an | Anglo-Saxon name, which means Eoca's Farm. |
e name include the fact that "legge" is the | Anglo-Saxon word meaning "boundary." |
Walsden's name is of | Anglo-Saxon origin meaning "Valley of Foreigner" or "Va |
Esh is an | Anglo-Saxon name meaning Ash Tree and the spelling refl |
Lying between the two villages, is a | Anglo-Saxon Hill-fort. |
s reinforced by the fact that Meaburn is an | Anglo-Saxon name. |
and Zykwell) suggest that its origin is an | Anglo-Saxon toponym meaning 'Gicca's spring'. |
derivation for the word 'guildhall' is the | Anglo-Saxon 'gild', meaning payment, with a "gild-hall" |
His name is the | Anglo-Saxon form of the Gothic Totila. |
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 |
, but the stoke in the village's name is of | Anglo-Saxon origin. |
The consensus view is that | Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian traditions describe the sa |
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 |
, a feature of Frisian law that links it to | Anglo-Saxon law, and stands apart from all other German |
which was a Latinised form of its original | Anglo-Saxon name, Fingreth, meaning 'the stream of the |
and R. I. Moore (1985), 193-206 · J. Blair, | Anglo-Saxon Oxfordshire (1994), 52-4, 181-3 · VCH Oxfor |
North Petherton, where the Alfred Jewel (an | Anglo-Saxon ornament dating from the late 9th century) |
T. D. Kendrick - | Anglo-Saxon Art to A.D. 900. |
Ceawlin was king of | Anglo-Saxon Wessex. |
Oswald was a brother of Osric, King of | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Hwicce, a sub-kingdom of Mercia |
of the Isle of Wight and last pagan king in | Anglo-Saxon England until the Vikings in the 9th centur |
William A. Chaney, The Cult of Kingship in | Anglo-Saxon England: The Transition from Paganism to Ch |
Elder; it demonstrated Rider's knowledge of | Anglo-Saxon, Welsh and German but could not compete wit |
Her name is how she is known in | Anglo-Saxon, apparently a corruption of the British Aud |
The Gosforth Cross is a large stone | Anglo-Saxon high cross in the churchyard at Gosforth in |
The largest Early | Anglo-Saxon burial site ever excavated, it contains wit |
Later in | Anglo-Saxon England it was a unit used for assessing la |
He was lecturer in | Anglo-Saxon History at Cambridge from 1978, reader in A |
ogenitors of the English nation who led the | Anglo-Saxon migration to southern Britain in the 5th Ce |
variant form, in Bald's Leechbook, another | Anglo-Saxon medical compendium. |
like North Germanic, and to a lesser extent | Anglo-Saxon mythology, the attestation of Continental G |
Life in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
It is likely that the battle, like many | Anglo-Saxon battles, took place on the nearby neolithic |
s, while the Anglo Saxon Rune Poem lists 26 | Anglo-Saxon runes. |
ing that is known about anyone who lived in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
F. M. Stenton, | Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd ed. |
Royal Holloway College, and later an MA in | Anglo-Saxon and Frankish studies at the University of L |
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