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ember 1967) was a 20th century historian of | Anglo-Saxon England, and president of the Royal Histori |
nity about 600, they laid the foundation of | Anglo-Saxon civilization and the present Great Britain. |
It may be the site of the burials of | Anglo-Saxon King Anna and his son Jurmin. |
with stylized niello animals, a feature of | Anglo-Saxon art which has since become known as 'Trewhi |
Facsimiles of | Anglo-Saxon Charters, 1991; The Liber Vitae of the New |
S.J. Ridyard, The Royal Saints of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
The Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic (ASNC) is one of the cons |
ear was appointed Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
He began the study of | Anglo-Saxon and related languages. |
he was Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford 1977 |
riet H, The Battle of Hastings: The Fall of | Anglo-Saxon England Atlandtic Books, London 2008 |
Although the church is said to be of | Anglo-Saxon origin, these sections have been lost over |
He was Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at the University of Cambridge from 1912 to |
e Staffordshire Hoard, the largest hoard of | Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. |
urse involving translation and criticism of | Anglo-Saxon and Middle English texts) and English Liter |
As with the majority of | Anglo-Saxon writing, the poems are anonymous and their |
as also Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford. |
ge barrow for the burials fits a pattern of | Anglo-Saxon re-use of ancient barrows and mounds. |
Of | Anglo-Saxon origins, it was constructed somewhere betwe |
element is found not only in place names of | Anglo-Saxon origin, but also in some Southern Scottish |
th (1789 - 27 May 1876), English scholar of | Anglo-Saxon language and Anglo-Saxon literature, was bo |
Walsden's name is of | Anglo-Saxon origin meaning "Valley of Foreigner" or "Va |
the Rawlinson and Bosworth professorship of | Anglo-Saxon at the University of Oxford, a chair that h |
for the establishment of a professorship of | Anglo-Saxon. |
f-date instrument for achieving the will of | Anglo-Saxon peoples" and seeking names and addresses of |
There are traces of | Anglo-Saxon long-and-short work high in the north-east |
tor of Swanswick and Rawlinson Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford. |
arch, the work examines the relationship of | Anglo-Saxon to Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and five Germani |
ford as Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon, with a fellowship at Pembroke College. |
time, 200 years after the establishment of | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, although Bertram Colgrave in the |
ns there include the decapitated remains of | Anglo-Saxon criminals. |
The Prosopography of | Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) is a major research project |
le of local self-government, a principle of | Anglo-Saxon derivation which, surviving the Norman Conq |
t of Glastonbury was the head (or abbot) of | Anglo-Saxon and eventually Benedictine house of Glaston |
een the Roman withdrawl and the founding of | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. |
The Anglian collection is a collection of | Anglo-Saxon royal genealogies and regnal lists. |
Oswald was a brother of Osric, King of | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Hwicce, a sub-kingdom of Mercia |
of the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford; having occupie |
ining, he dedicated himself to the study of | Anglo-Saxon history and literature, and wrote two influ |
om 1925 to 1945, Tolkien was a Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University, and an important crit |
, the battle marked the effective demise of | Anglo-Saxon paganism; Charles Plummer, in 1896, describ |
Aspects of | Anglo-Saxon Archaeology: Sutton Hoo and other discoveri |
chronology of the process, see Timeline of | Anglo-Saxon settlement in Britain. |
1999-2006 he was Head of the Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic. |
Elder; it demonstrated Rider's knowledge of | Anglo-Saxon, Welsh and German but could not compete wit |
Goltho is a village of | Anglo-Saxon roots situated in Lincolnshire, England. |
The village name is probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin but its meaning is uncertain. |
Template:Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge |
as elected the first Rawlinson Professor of | Anglo-Saxon, being the first to hold the Oxford positio |
The Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon was first appointed in 1795. |
est-selling books on the shamanic wisdom of | Anglo-Saxon England, and for his award-winning course a |
major influence on the later development of | Anglo-Saxon art. |
, but the stoke in the village's name is of | Anglo-Saxon origin. |
s are somewhat remote from the tradition of | Anglo-Saxon poetry. |
constitutes one of the primary examples of | Anglo-Saxon literature. |
er property that endowed a professorship of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
historians to refer conveniently to all of | Anglo-Saxon England south of the River Humber, and not |
aced as Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in 1969. |
dge was Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon from 1991 to 1998. |
The Stoppingas was a tribe or clan of | Anglo-Saxon England, based around Wootton Wawen and the |
e Whestone is merely a corruption of an old | Anglo-Saxon name [quote?]. |
er of the town, taking advantage of the old | Anglo-Saxon ramparts, with the motte close to the river |
The name Rossington translates from the old | Anglo-Saxon name of 'Farm on the Moor'. |
The Empire In Solution With Chapters On | Anglo-Saxon Civilization (1931) |
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". |
a compilation of epigrams and epigraphs on | Anglo-Saxon churchmen, some of whom are known only from |
He also wrote several monographs on | Anglo-Saxon Numismatics, and a number of studies of Ang |
s as the spoken language, a hybrid based on | Anglo-Saxon. |
The first Viking raid on | Anglo-Saxon England, is thought to have been between AD |
which was followed by postgraduate work on | Anglo-Saxon at King's College, Cambridge, gaining a PhD |
Cynethryth is the only | Anglo-Saxon Queen consort in whose name coinage was def |
This meeting was rather a witenagemot, or | Anglo-Saxon Parliament or Royal Council (in Christian k |
In Theodism or | Anglo-Saxon neopaganism in particular, the symbel has a |
nstruction, the foundations of the original | Anglo-Saxon Church were discovered. |
h students and faculty, and invent original | Anglo-Saxon songs. |
riory was built on the site of the original | Anglo-Saxon monastery is not clear. |
states that it's possible that the original | Anglo-Saxon rune poem manuscript would have appeared si |
e the excavated foundations of the original | Anglo-Saxon church and a large kerbed round barrow show |
which was a Latinised form of its original | Anglo-Saxon name, Fingreth, meaning 'the stream of the |
As in other | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, the many small monasteries allowe |
f Roman stonework can also be seen in other | Anglo-Saxon buildings. |
one of the nine plants invoked in the pagan | Anglo-Saxon Nine Herbs Charm, recorded in the 10th cent |
illustrate landscape features, particularly | Anglo-Saxon place-names. |
ca a deep current of Hispanophobia pervades | Anglo-Saxon culture. |
The name Litchurch is of probable | Anglo-Saxon origin, and may possibly derive from either |
Rask's | Anglo-Saxon, Danish and Icelandic Grammars were brought |
There is a working reconstructed | Anglo-Saxon farm called Gyrwe (pronounced 'Yeerweh') af |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday). |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
troper can be found on "Christmas in Royal | Anglo-Saxon Winchester" on the Herald AV Publications l |
Bradley, S.A.J. | Anglo-Saxon Poetry. |
as been suggested that this was a secondary | Anglo-Saxon burial, placed at the camp. |
nd, which was the site of a seventh-century | Anglo-Saxon archaeology find known as "Finglesham man," |
the word formed part of the name of several | Anglo-Saxon kings, e.g. |
can be coterminous with another significant | Anglo-Saxon root-word, sib (from which the word 'siblin |
These lords had succeeded, not to similar | Anglo-Saxon magnates, but to a crowd of lesser landhold |
The area has been settled since | Anglo-Saxon times. |
During the 11th century, six | Anglo-Saxon charters were copied into the gospel-book, |
ne with older reverences, disregarding some | Anglo-Saxon relics and tombs, and allowing the incorpor |
eem to have co-existed peacefully with some | Anglo-Saxon and Viking place names later being joined t |
Stenton | Anglo-Saxon England pp. |
F. M. Stenton, | Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd ed. |
The Gosforth Cross is a large stone | Anglo-Saxon high cross in the churchyard at Gosforth in |
Kintbury Abbey was a supposed | Anglo-Saxon monastery at Kintbury in the English county |
ated known textual history of any surviving | Anglo-Saxon poem. |
She conducted tenth-century | Anglo-Saxon manuscript research as a Fulbright Scholar. |
It is possible that | Anglo-Saxon place-names still in modern usage near Birm |
The consensus view is that | Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian traditions describe the sa |
th battle and campaign are described in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, it was given to him "because of |
It dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and is first documented in 1232 AD. |
Bishop of Whithorn can be placed using the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle on 15 June in either 776 or 777, |
The name Apsley dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and means aspen wood. |
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 |
The village lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundre |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ceawlin died the following year. |
al collectivist anarchism but also with the | Anglo-Saxon meaning of libertarianism free-market philo |
e for these days, "Ember", derives from the | Anglo-Saxon ymbren, a circuit or revolution (from ymb, |
Mary's Priory Church, Deerhurst, one of the | Anglo-Saxon buildings investigated by Taylor |
storia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum of the | Anglo-Saxon writer Bede, who is strongly critical of hi |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was betrayed by King Harthacn |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Eadred "reduced all |
Eadberht I died in 748, according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
e early to mid-10th century recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
The name Charing probably comes from the | Anglo-Saxon word cerring, a bend, as it stands on the o |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
in Scandinavian tradition, and also in the | Anglo-Saxon poems Beowulf and Widsith. |
for Cambridge invented on the basis of the | Anglo-Saxon name Cantebrigge. |
The first authentic mention of it is in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it is stated that Aethelfl |
Versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle similar to C and E. This included |
The | Anglo-Saxon State. |
The name "Wassell" is derived from the | Anglo-Saxon "Weardsetl" meaning a watchplace. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham, Norfo |
igin who is mentioned on lines 93-96 in the | Anglo-Saxon poem Widsith. |
ry similar to midsummer celebrations in the | Anglo-Saxon. |
South Elmham comes from the | Anglo-Saxon " hamlet where elms grew" and is first ment |
(See the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle). |
of of Northumbria (1072-75, the last of the | Anglo-Saxon Earls of England) who she had betrayed over |
he Brigantes, a Brythonic tribe, before the | Anglo-Saxon invasion. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Version of the Life of St. Guthlac, Hermit |
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 |
Meers Brook marked the boundary between the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Deira (later Northumbria) and M |
r whose placename is first mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (ASC) of 895AD, is supposedly nam |
tings to a wide readership and explored the | Anglo-Saxon history of Suffolk. |
ibbet Law as a practical application of the | Anglo-Saxon law of infangtheof. |
written a number of leading articles on the | Anglo-Saxon economy, his second area of interest. |
e formation of a two-party system after the | Anglo-Saxon model." |
named the Granta, but after the name of the | Anglo-Saxon town of Grantebrycge had been modified to C |
It was recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 796 as Thyrefeld. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that she was "deprived of |
mented by other, later sources, such as the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), a British leader named Vortiger |
For the | Anglo-Saxon tribe, see Gaini. |
t from Denmark in the earliest phase of the | Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain. |
A Comparative Grammar of the | Anglo-Saxon Language (1870) (reprinted, 1977). |
She was placed under the management of the | Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd. |
He returned from exile in 792, and the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that he was "apprehended |
Mercian supremacy over the kingdoms of the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
A map of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms |
Excavation of the | Anglo-Saxon cemetery also revealed extensive occupation |
The | Anglo-Saxon names are in brackets. |
n power by 633 (and possibly by 626, if the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is correct). |
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 |
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. |
ttended by bishops from the entirety of the | Anglo-Saxon church, both from Northumbria and from the |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, ed. and tr. |
During the | Anglo-Saxon Christian period (from 600 AD) there was a |
Exeter and was once the hunting land of the | Anglo-Saxon kings. |
Nunneries and the | Anglo-Saxon Royal Houses. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle refers to King Coenred as having |
cribed in the entry for the year 851 of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
"Clito" was a Latin term equivalent to the | Anglo-Saxon "Aetheling", and the Germanic "Adelinus" (u |
nterbury is recorded in Manuscript E of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle "Here Archbishop Plegmund was ele |
itta and the grandfather of Wihtgils in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Historia Brittonum, the P |
eotype tourist from Northern Europe and the | Anglo-Saxon sphere was prominent from the 1970s to the |
me was recorded in 915 as Cyricbyrig in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and means "the fort with a churc |
y and an important monastic reformer of the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
e Hutch, and re-edited in the 1990s for the | Anglo-Saxon market, by Saban Entertainment. |
plied to the Kingdom of Cornwall during the | Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain and the period of the H |
istory of English kings and queens from the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms onward. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Poetic Record 1. New York, 1931. |
nty and unreliable, mainly derived from the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, written four centuries after his |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he became king the same year as |
E. Thurlow Leeds - The Archaeology of the | Anglo-Saxon Settlements. |
efers to a enclave of Britons surviving the | Anglo-Saxon conquest of the area. |
s more elegant than simply referring to the | Anglo-Saxon word green. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records for the year 653: The Mid |
In the | Anglo-Saxon system of frankpledge, or frith-borh, the h |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was beheaded. |
ish population may have lived here into the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Version of the Holy Gospels (1848) |
nt occupancy next appears in 1042, when the | Anglo-Saxon Earl of Wessex, Harold Godwinson (later Kin |
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