「anglo-saxon」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)2ページ目
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. 410 AD and the emergence of the Christian | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms during the 7th century. |
the word formed part of the name of several | Anglo-Saxon kings, e.g. |
us a grandson of the Emperor Otto I and his | Anglo-Saxon wife Eadgyth (and, through Eadgyth, the gre |
Taylor developed an interest in | Anglo-Saxon architecture early in life. |
mbria was a title in the Anglo-Danish, late | Anglo-Saxon, and early Anglo-Norman period in England. |
denote a parish typically formed during the | Anglo-Saxon and early medieval period where their narro |
The important | Anglo-Saxon stone Easby Cross of 800-820 is now in the |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ed. and tr. |
t the urging of King Otto's first wife, the | Anglo-Saxon princess Edith of Wessex. |
onquest of England, Horsford was held by an | Anglo-Saxon named Edric but after the conquest William |
Acton is usually | Anglo-Saxon Old English for "farmstead at the oak tree( |
It has been maintained that the name is | Anglo-Saxon Old English for 'at the oak clearings' or ' |
The name is | Anglo-Saxon Old English 'farmstead of Eadlac's people'. |
known as the Little Avon or the Ingleburn ( | Anglo-Saxon - English river), is a tributary of the Bri |
The word "Ent" was taken from the | Anglo-Saxon (Old English) word ent, meaning "giant". |
right's 4,000 volume teaching collection of | Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, and Early Modern English t |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for the year 449 records th |
Huwal is mentioned only in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for 926, as one of several |
at the continuous flow of time (a favourite | Anglo-Saxon topic) erases all pain (though not necessar |
Leominster abbey was an | Anglo-Saxon monastery established at Leominster in the |
t of Glastonbury was the head (or abbot) of | Anglo-Saxon and eventually Benedictine house of Glaston |
e Staffordshire Hoard, the largest hoard of | Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. |
acy was primarily Danish in origin, and the | Anglo-Saxon kings exercised a limited amount of power i |
he was Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford 1977 |
nd, which was the site of a seventh-century | Anglo-Saxon archaeology find known as "Finglesham man," |
which was a Latinised form of its original | Anglo-Saxon name, Fingreth, meaning 'the stream of the |
The Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon was first appointed in 1795. |
t for, took the very savor out of that fine | Anglo-Saxon liberty for which the sages and patriots of |
him as "king of the West Welsh", the usual | Anglo-Saxon name for the Cornish or southwestern Briton |
It is notable among | Anglo-Saxon buildings for the many features of the peri |
ed after a Danish soldier Blesi and tun the | Anglo-Saxon word for settlement. |
innuis' and whose twelfth victory held back | Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 661 reports that bot |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 737 reports that he |
Gyrwe was an | Anglo-Saxon name for Jarrow, in North East England. |
stune, which may have been derived from the | Anglo-Saxon words for 'water' and 'town', meaning "wet |
Domesday Book as Deepdene, "dene" being an | Anglo-Saxon word for valley. |
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") |
Some have seen its origin in the | Anglo-Saxon name for witchcraft. |
Acca is an | Anglo-Saxon settler's forename. |
st in armoured cavalry over the traditional | Anglo-Saxon war form. |
era the river was crossed by a ford, and in | Anglo-Saxon times formed a boundary between Wessex and |
ons of prehistoric implements and Roman and | Anglo-Saxon antiquities found in Canterbury, Thanet and |
Royal Holloway College, and later an MA in | Anglo-Saxon and Frankish studies at the University of L |
's population was estimated to be about 50% | Anglo-Saxon, 33% French Canadian, and 16.5% Flemish. |
ho lived in, or was closely connected with, | Anglo-Saxon England from 597 to 1042. |
nt 'ington' indicates that Adlington was an | Anglo-Saxon settlement from about A.D. 650, while the f |
Anglo-Saxon sculpture from Medeshamstede: the so-called | |
Erchinoald introduced Balthild, an | Anglo-Saxon slave from East Anglia (later canonised), t |
The name is found in versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle from the year 937. |
Anglo-Saxon Art: From the Seventh Century to the Norman | |
deals with the history of London during the | Anglo-Saxon period, from the ending of the Roman period |
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, |
She married the | Anglo-Saxon nobleman Godwin of Wessex. |
About 1737 Lye began to work on an | Anglo-Saxon and Gothic dictionary, which he despaired o |
s more elegant than simply referring to the | Anglo-Saxon word green. |
he had no papers or credentials and was an | Anglo-Saxon, a group of people still relatively foreign |
Both the Celtic (Irish and Pictish) and | Anglo-Saxon elites had long traditions of metalwork of |
In | Anglo-Saxon times, Hallamshire was the most southerly s |
South Elmham comes from the | Anglo-Saxon " hamlet where elms grew" and is first ment |
cholars who have viewed the poem within the | Anglo-Saxon tradition have therefore seen it primarily |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was betrayed by King Harthacn |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he became king the same year as |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was beheaded. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he began his reign in 591, but i |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he died on 30 September, but the |
hen Vortigern fled into Wales to escape the | Anglo-Saxon invaders, he chose this lofty hillfort as t |
Halton was an important | Anglo-Saxon manor held by Earl Tostig, the brother of K |
r Northamptonshire Helmet) is a 7th century | Anglo-Saxon boar-crested helm found by archaeologists f |
one of the nine plants invoked in the pagan | Anglo-Saxon Nine Herbs Charm, recorded in the 10th cent |
written a number of leading articles on the | Anglo-Saxon economy, his second area of interest. |
the Domesday Book but the name is certainly | Anglo-Saxon: local history books claim that Shepshed ha |
Nunneries and the | Anglo-Saxon Royal Houses. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, gives the year of his d |
g, but became king soon after Hatfield; the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, says that he became kin |
Its name is a corruption of the | Anglo-Saxon "Edenham", i.e. the town on Eden Water. |
n that year the citadel was captured by the | Anglo-Saxon ruler Ida of Bernicia (Beornice) and became |
e village as 'Nortune', noting that even in | Anglo-Saxon England immediately before the Norman Conqu |
The remains of an | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the parish of Flixborough wer |
Recent Excavations in | Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk (1 |
Legg's cross is an | Anglo-Saxon cross in County Durham, England, about 4 mi |
Ladies' straw, was used as a red dye during | Anglo-Saxon times in England. |
Brent Ditch is generally assumed to be an | Anglo-Saxon earthwork in Southern Cambridgeshire, Engla |
at Burrow Hill, Butley, Suffolk 1978-1981, | Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 3, 35-54 |
Mercia: An | Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe. |
It was recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 796 as Thyrefeld. |
An | Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe, ed. |
r as "one of the most precious survivals of | Anglo-Saxon architecture in England". |
Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History: Boundar | |
She edited his | Anglo-Saxon Northumbria in 1984. |
Noricum, Pannonia, Dalmatia and Dacia), the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in Sub-Roman Britain and finally t |
1092) was an 11th-century | Anglo-Saxon magnate in Northumbria. |
2010: The Word Exchange: | Anglo-Saxon Poems in Translation (W. |
e majority of the latter kingdom fell under | Anglo-Saxon control in the 8th century. |
Bradfield Abbey was an | Anglo-Saxon abbey in Berkshire, England. |
Cholsey Abbey was an | Anglo-Saxon nunnery in Cholsey in the English county of |
ic value of the cult of royal saints in the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, in 695 she organised the translat |
The | Anglo-Saxon landholders in the area were dispossessed a |
The basic differences between Mongolian and | Anglo-Saxon names, in connection with trying to fit Mon |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, in 1065 Earl Harold of Wessex, h |
a reappraisal,' in W. Filmer-Sankey (Ed.), | Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 5, 41-46 |
tribe, which is known to have resisted the | Anglo-Saxon advance in southeastern Britain long after |
o stronger archaeological evidence of early | Anglo-Saxon activity in the area around Dorchester-on-T |
he pre-Reformation Church of England in the | Anglo-Saxon period, in charge of the Diocese of Dorches |
ed one of the two major writers of the late | Anglo-Saxon period in England. |
"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 |
as originally a prelate who administered an | Anglo-Saxon diocese in the 10th and 11th centuries, and |
ea: a 7th century gold cross found in 1967; | Anglo-Saxon graves in 1913; and the remains of Roman ho |
It was also one of the largest | Anglo-Saxon settlements in the area. |
King's Meaburn was thought to be an | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the 7th and 8th centuries. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, in 875 as the Danes ravaged Lin |
avations in Kentish barrows, chiefly of the | Anglo-Saxon period, in 1757 at Tremworth Down, Crundale |
l agenda was, that in case of supporting an | Anglo-Saxon invasion in the Balkans, the Allied powers |
chronology of the process, see Timeline of | Anglo-Saxon settlement in Britain. |
the fifth century settlement of Britain by | Anglo-Saxon settlers, in this area mainly Angles, but i |
Early | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the London area was not on th |
In Theodism or | Anglo-Saxon neopaganism in particular, the symbel has a |
A large | Anglo-Saxon cemetery, in use from the mid 10th century |
Remarkably, there is a second important | Anglo-Saxon building in the village, Odda's Chapel, a S |
During the earliest years of the | Anglo-Saxon rule in England the word was probably used |
1757: Rev. Bryan Faussett begins excavating | Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in Kent, England (continues to 1 |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 969 the village was recorded a |
3) “The Council of Whitby: a study in early | Anglo-Saxon politics”, in: The Journal of British Studi |
Spellings from the | Anglo-Saxon period include Lig(e)an in 880 and Lygan in |
rsa who, according to legend, led the first | Anglo-Saxon invaders into England, are said to have fou |
Mary's Priory Church, Deerhurst, one of the | Anglo-Saxon buildings investigated by Taylor |
n power by 633 (and possibly by 626, if the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is correct). |
The church, with its | Anglo-Saxon features, is of major importance to our und |
riory was built on the site of the original | Anglo-Saxon monastery is not clear. |
The town's | Anglo-Saxon origin is shown by its appearance in the Do |
An | Anglo-Saxon Dictionary is a dictionary of Old English, |
Anglo-Saxon England is an annual peer-reviewed academic | |
The first Viking raid on | Anglo-Saxon England, is thought to have been between AD |
town, in Mercia and near London, where the | Anglo-Saxon Church is recorded as holding the important |
The church, probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin is, not surprisingly, close to the v |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, it was given to him "because of |
Mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, it seems that it was a staging p |
re the Roman invasion of 43 AD) and through | Anglo-Saxon times, it stretched from Berkshire through |
The village itself can be dated back to | Anglo-Saxon times; it takes its name from one of the mo |
Of | Anglo-Saxon origins, it was constructed somewhere betwe |
Later in | Anglo-Saxon England it was a unit used for assessing la |
As rune of the | Anglo-Saxon futhorc, it is called is. |
The origins of Worrall go back to | Anglo-Saxon times, it had its roots in farming and was |
Known as Weolingtun in the | Anglo-Saxon period, its name had changed to Walintone b |
ainst Geraint of Dumnonia, according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; John of Worcester states that Ge |
nd phrases into Old English (English of the | Anglo-Saxon period), just as the Common Speech is trans |
urst is in a grant of lands by Egeburth, an | Anglo-Saxon or Jutish king of Kent, to Diora, Bishop of |
Other names are sometimes used: in | Anglo-Saxon art Kendrick preferred "Helmet" and "Ribbon |
irst monastery was founded in 657 AD by the | Anglo-Saxon era King of Northumbria, Oswy (Oswiu) as St |
Recorded by Bede as the nemesis of early | Anglo-Saxon Northumbria, King Penda was responsible for |
which was followed by postgraduate work on | Anglo-Saxon at King's College, Cambridge, gaining a PhD |
d Basing was first settled around 700 by an | Anglo-Saxon tribe known as the Basingas, who give the v |
Stowe manuscripts are a collection of 1085 | Anglo-Saxon and later medieval manuscripts, now in the |
from a combination of the word oak and the | Anglo-Saxon word lea, that means meadow. |
entry for 827 in the [C] manuscript of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, listing the eight bretwaldas |
entry for 827 in the [C] manuscript of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, listing the eight bretwaldas. |
In the late | Anglo-Saxon period Little Faringdon was part of a large |
of Allerdale was an 11th- and 12th-century | Anglo-Saxon noble, lord of Allerdale in modern Cumbria. |
tural historians now believe that though an | Anglo-Saxon church made of timber did exist on the site |
me one of the earliest scholars to document | Anglo-Saxon historical manuscripts in the Cottonian col |
rst Friday in March is so called from Lide, | Anglo-Saxon for March. |
The name "Wassell" is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon "Weardsetl" meaning a watchplace. |
Funtley - from the | Anglo-Saxon, "Funtaleg", meaning "Springs", formerly kn |
kelda is in fact simply a corruption of the | Anglo-Saxon haligkelda, meaning healing spring. |
razeley around 1598 and is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon Griesley meaning grazing land (meadow). |
e name include the fact that "legge" is the | Anglo-Saxon word meaning "boundary." |
s Scadflet and Shatfliet - derived from the | Anglo-Saxon fleot, meaning a shallow creek or bay - the |
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 |
and Zykwell) suggest that its origin is an | Anglo-Saxon toponym meaning 'Gicca's spring'. |
name 'Barnwell' is possibly derived from an | anglo-saxon placename meaning children's well; bearn is |
derivation for the word 'guildhall' is the | Anglo-Saxon 'gild', meaning payment, with a "gild-hall" |
near the meeting of the streams", from the | Anglo-Saxon mutha meaning mouth of a river. |
The first part, Barton, is an | Anglo-Saxon word meaning Barley Farm, and is a common p |
Its | Anglo-Saxon name means 'Horsa's burial mound'. |
akes its name though the name 'Luffield' is | Anglo-Saxon and means 'Lufa's field'. |
The hamlet name is | Anglo-Saxon and means farm by a brook. |
The name of Williton is | Anglo-Saxon and means "estate on the Willet" (river), b |
ge and an author and editor specializing in | Anglo-Saxon and medieval literature, science fiction an |
to dominate western Christendom, including | Anglo-Saxon and medieval England, from the time of Char |
urse involving translation and criticism of | Anglo-Saxon and Middle English texts) and English Liter |
The meticulous hand is | Anglo-Saxon square minuscule. |
Wigbert, born in Wessex around 670, was an | Anglo-Saxon Benedictine monk from the monastery of Glas |
The Sheffield Cross is an | Anglo-Saxon Christian monument, dating from the early n |
The Taplow burial, a 7th century | Anglo-Saxon burial mound, is in the grounds of the hous |
the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of | Anglo-Saxon (the name having been changed in 1916). |
ut it is not recorded (Wivel may be from an | Anglo-Saxon personal name 'Wifel'). |
ne) is derived from 'Wulfa's Tun', from the | Anglo-Saxon personal name Wulfa and the Old English tun |
orate for his work on the relations between | Anglo-Saxon and Nordic art in Viking times. |
His books and manuscripts relating to | Anglo-Saxon and northern literature, all his collection |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle notes only that the Mercians and |
Cwichelm (died circa 636) was an | Anglo-Saxon king of the Gewisse, a people in the upper |
holic Church to eradicate earlier Norse and | Anglo-Saxon traditions of marriage amongst the nobility |
al collectivist anarchism but also with the | Anglo-Saxon meaning of libertarianism free-market philo |
h century - July 4, 725) was a Frankish and | Anglo-Saxon Abbess of noble blood. |
of of Northumbria (1072-75, the last of the | Anglo-Saxon Earls of England) who she had betrayed over |
The | Anglo-Saxon Version of the Life of St. Guthlac, Hermit |
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