「anglo-saxon」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)3ページ目
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Main article: | Anglo-Saxon linguistic purism |
Main articles: | Anglo-Saxon runes and Old English Latin alphabet |
icance: peace was effectively maintained in | Anglo-Saxon times by the frith-guild, an early manifest |
As with the majority of | Anglo-Saxon writing, the poems are anonymous and their |
She married the | Anglo-Saxon nobleman Godwin of Wessex. |
r, Martin (1992) "The Liudhard Medalet", in | Anglo-Saxon England, Volume 20, eds. |
Mercia: An | Anglo-Saxon kingdom in Europe. |
d (died 1079 x 1086) was a mid-11th century | Anglo-Saxon thegn and sheriff in Worcestershire, Englan |
The basic differences between Mongolian and | Anglo-Saxon names, in connection with trying to fit Mon |
He also wrote several monographs on | Anglo-Saxon Numismatics, and a number of studies of Ang |
J. N. L. Myres - | Anglo-Saxon Pottery and the Settlement of England. |
The name is | Anglo-Saxon in origin and a derivation of "Shepherd's C |
Somerford is a name of | Anglo-Saxon origin and the interpretation is obvious: " |
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'. |
Fazakerley takes its name from | Anglo-Saxon root words - all descriptive words pertaini |
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. |
element is found not only in place names of | Anglo-Saxon origin, but also in some Southern Scottish |
k facing to the north wall of the nave from | Anglo-Saxon times. |
ith implications of freeman and nobleman in | Anglo-Saxon society). |
holic Church to eradicate earlier Norse and | Anglo-Saxon traditions of marriage amongst the nobility |
e of the successor fiefs of Northumbria, an | Anglo-Saxon Kingdom and later Earldom. |
It is notable among | Anglo-Saxon buildings for the many features of the peri |
hn the Evangelist, Milborne Port is of late | Anglo-Saxon date, and parts may well span the Norman co |
The remains of an | Anglo-Saxon settlement in the parish of Flixborough wer |
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 |
for Cambridge invented on the basis of the | Anglo-Saxon name Cantebrigge. |
Versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle similar to C and E. This included |
of of Northumbria (1072-75, the last of the | Anglo-Saxon Earls of England) who she had betrayed over |
ibbet Law as a practical application of the | Anglo-Saxon law of infangtheof. |
named the Granta, but after the name of the | Anglo-Saxon town of Grantebrycge had been modified to C |
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. |
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 |
ttended by bishops from the entirety of the | Anglo-Saxon church, both from Northumbria and from the |
Exeter and was once the hunting land of the | Anglo-Saxon kings. |
cribed in the entry for the year 851 of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
nterbury is recorded in Manuscript E of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle "Here Archbishop Plegmund was ele |
er, it may also indicate the position of an | anglo-saxon minster secondary to those at Barking or Ti |
astle was constructed on top of high-status | Anglo-Saxon housing, probably belonging to former house |
y and an important monastic reformer of the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
E. Thurlow Leeds - The Archaeology of the | Anglo-Saxon Settlements. |
The Homilies of the | Anglo-Saxon Church (1844) |
The occurrence of the | Anglo-Saxon compounds ymbren-tid ("Embertide"), ymbren- |
nd phrases into Old English (English of the | Anglo-Saxon period), just as the Common Speech is trans |
kelda is in fact simply a corruption of the | Anglo-Saxon haligkelda, meaning healing spring. |
Mercia's supremacy over the kingdoms of the | Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. |
Mary's, Gainford, stands on the site of an | Anglo-Saxon monastery built by Bishop Ecgred of Lindisf |
I read a brief obituary of this | Anglo-Saxon woman, Violet Tillard; a delicate, frail cr |
the Doniert Stone an inscribed stone of the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon English. |
or 6th century and may have been of either | Anglo-Saxon or Welsh origin. |
the word formed part of the name of several | Anglo-Saxon kings, e.g. |
ll aware that the Snape burial was of early | Anglo-Saxon, not of Viking age date, and this was part |
streaming for tin uncovered a hoard of 114 | Anglo-Saxon coins together with a silver chalice and ot |
Stowe manuscripts are a collection of 1085 | Anglo-Saxon and later medieval manuscripts, now in the |
te of Sheffield Castle found evidence of an | Anglo-Saxon building on the site. |
entry for 827 in the [C] manuscript of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, listing the eight bretwaldas |
840, working there on his Dictionary of the | Anglo-Saxon Language (1838), his best-known work. |
chplaces along the northern houndary of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of the Hwicce, along with Wast Hill |
f Ely) (died c. 699) was the daughter of an | Anglo-Saxon king, an abbess and a saint of the Christia |
w abbey at Whitby, amongst the ruins of the | Anglo-Saxon one of Streoneshalh. |
ons born to Ida of Bernicia, founder of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Bernicia. |
The name Litchurch is of probable | Anglo-Saxon origin, and may possibly derive from either |
Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon England. |
o moved to the continent in the wake of the | Anglo-Saxon invasions and helped to found the Brittonic |
(1847), which includes the treatment of the | Anglo-Saxon, the Old Scandinavian, and the Low German b |
It also contains a description of the | Anglo-Saxon futhorc. |
entry for 827 in the [C] manuscript of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, listing the eight bretwaldas. |
emands included the abolition of compulsory | Anglo-Saxon, new optional papers in women's writing and |
The Way of Wyrd: Tales of an | Anglo-Saxon Sorcerer (London: Century, 1983, ISBN 978-0 |
o stronger archaeological evidence of early | Anglo-Saxon activity in the area around Dorchester-on-T |
Kempsey was part of the | Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Hwicce, and then a part of the K |
The name is found in versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle from the year 937. |
okkum's history is the assassination of the | Anglo-Saxon missionary Saint Boniface in 754. |
He was the fifth known ruler of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Bernicia. |
c in London in 1993, his own version of the | Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf for both the Royal Nation |
rman times was the direct descendant of the | Anglo-Saxon freeman, and that the typical Anglo-Saxon s |
Recorded by Bede as the nemesis of early | Anglo-Saxon Northumbria, King Penda was responsible for |
In most versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle the entry does not record the ide |
e iron age, its name is a derivative of the | Anglo-Saxon Alfreincoma - by which name it was noted in |
Its name is a corruption of the | Anglo-Saxon "Edenham", i.e. the town on Eden Water. |
A map showing the general locations of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms |
Peterborough Manuscript (Version E) of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, but the reference is not likely |
Ealdred was king of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Hwicce, jointly with Eanberht an |
an edition for the Rolls Series of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (1861) |
mbria, who, according to one version of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, accepted him as king. |
Remedies') is a collection of miscellaneous | Anglo-Saxon medical texts and prayers, written mainly i |
and also contains an amount of distinctive | Anglo-Saxon rune types. |
avations in Kentish barrows, chiefly of the | Anglo-Saxon period, in 1757 at Tremworth Down, Crundale |
It was named after the protagonist of the | Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf. |
, showing some of the characteristics of an | Anglo-Saxon territorial boundary. |
It is also the name of an | Anglo-Saxon leader who owned Beorma's Farm, from which |
unknown version(s) of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, possibly in Latin translation. |
Church of St John the Evangelist is of late | Anglo-Saxon date and parts may well span the Norman con |
sic, and was the author of Rudiments of the | Anglo-Saxon Tongue (1829), and of the article "Music" i |
As rune of the | Anglo-Saxon futhorc, it is called is. |
died in 634 AD; she was the daughter of an | Anglo-Saxon king and became a nun at Saint-Amand, Rouen |
much older cross, and the upper part of an | Anglo-Saxon cross shaft. |
ents of an amber glass claw beaker of early | Anglo-Saxon manufacture and a gold ring with filigree o |
Barbara(1990), "Kings and Kingdoms of Early | Anglo-Saxon England", Routledge. |
He was the sixth known ruler of the | Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Bernicia. |
Ear (rune), a part of the | Anglo-Saxon Futhorc (runic alphabet) |
iginally recorded in the 675AD entry of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
During the earliest years of the | Anglo-Saxon rule in England the word was probably used |
(meaning "elk") is based on the name of the | Anglo-Saxon eolh ("elk") which is of the same shape but |
He is mentioned in lines 1958-1963 of the | Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf as Garmund the father of Offa |
Visitors can tour the ruins of the | Anglo-Saxon monastery of St Paul, which has been design |
About 1737 Lye began to work on an | Anglo-Saxon and Gothic dictionary, which he despaired o |
written a number of leading articles on the | Anglo-Saxon economy, his second area of interest. |
This rune was inscribed on more | Anglo-Saxon cremation urns than any other symbol. |
ing behind him a mass of annotations on the | Anglo-Saxon charters, and is buried in Water Stratford |
al Gibor rune (the name may be based on the | Anglo-Saxon Gyfu rune). |
Nick Lyon that is very loosely based on the | Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf. |
also known as Kenaz ("torch"), based on its | Anglo-Saxon name. |
dale, the English teacher who spoke only in | Anglo-Saxon, in two series of Steven Moffat's school-si |
Cynewulf is one of the two only named | Anglo-Saxon poets. |
She was operated by | Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co. |
en it was markted in national opposition to | Anglo-Saxon and Afro-American cultural imperialism. |
gned it in 1868 to "a late Celtic, or early | Anglo-Saxon period". |
storia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum or the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. |
ge barrow for the burials fits a pattern of | Anglo-Saxon re-use of ancient barrows and mounds. |
Both the Celtic (Irish and Pictish) and | Anglo-Saxon elites had long traditions of metalwork of |
he ‘Kingston Brooch', an important piece of | Anglo-Saxon jewelry dating from the 7th Century, was di |
in eight languages and became a pioneer in | Anglo-Saxon studies, an unprecedented achievement for a |
s from “Canna's Farm” or “Canna's Place” in | Anglo-Saxon), but there was a significant villa here in |
Abbey, Bishop of Sherborne, Latin poet and | Anglo-Saxon literature scholar, was born before the mid |
er are rooted in Germanic heroic poetry, in | Anglo-Saxon tradition recited and cultivated by scops. |
Kent, what is now England was populated by | Anglo-Saxon pagans, and the new rulers did not think of |
the surrounding areas had been populated by | Anglo-Saxon settlers. |
It is possible that | Anglo-Saxon place-names still in modern usage near Birm |
This was a known practice in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
To this work he prefixed an | Anglo-Saxon grammar. |
(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 |
s", in Stenton, D.M. (ed.), Preparatory to ' | Anglo-Saxon England'being the collected Papers of Frank |
le of local self-government, a principle of | Anglo-Saxon derivation which, surviving the Norman Conq |
The church, probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin is, not surprisingly, close to the v |
The village name is probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin but its meaning is uncertain. |
The name Willen is probably from | Anglo-Saxon or Old English meaning (at the) 'willows' t |
rom 1885 and also Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon since 1903. |
current Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, an |
n 1858 became the Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University: the post was renamed |
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 |
ear was appointed Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
he was Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford 1977 |
He was Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at the University of Cambridge from 1912 to |
as also Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford. |
tor of Swanswick and Rawlinson Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford. |
ford as Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon, with a fellowship at Pembroke College. |
of the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford; having occupie |
om 1925 to 1945, Tolkien was a Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University, and an important crit |
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. |
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 Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of | Anglo-Saxon (the name having been changed in 1916). |
The Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of | Anglo-Saxon, until 1916 known as the Rawlinsonian Profe |
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. |
er property that endowed a professorship of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
The Prosopography of | Anglo-Saxon England (PASE) is a major research project |
Wyrd and Providence in | Anglo-Saxon Thought (1928, reprinted in Interpretations |
Dodwell, C. R. (1982) | Anglo-Saxon Art, A New Perspective, Manchester UP, ISBN |
The first Viking raid on | Anglo-Saxon England, is thought to have been between AD |
London was essentially refounded in | Anglo-Saxon times with an Old English version of the na |
une names are feu for fe, rat for reidh (as | Anglo-Saxon rad), chaon for kaun, uncertain tiu for tyr |
Elements of the design also relate to | Anglo-Saxon metalwork, and Coptic designs. |
His books and manuscripts relating to | Anglo-Saxon and northern literature, all his collection |
orate for his work on the relations between | Anglo-Saxon and Nordic art in Viking times. |
arch, the work examines the relationship of | Anglo-Saxon to Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, and five Germani |
Saints and Relics in | Anglo-Saxon England, (1989) |
ns there include the decapitated remains of | Anglo-Saxon criminals. |
The present church replaces an | Anglo-Saxon building which was the cathedral of the Bis |
tribe, which is known to have resisted the | Anglo-Saxon advance in southeastern Britain long after |
Bloodfeud: Murder and Revenge in | Anglo-Saxon England. |
historical period per programme: Roman and | Anglo-Saxon; Medieval; Tudor; Stuarts; Georgian and Vic |
ons of prehistoric implements and Roman and | Anglo-Saxon antiquities found in Canterbury, Thanet and |
It is now open farmland, but has Roman and | Anglo-Saxon connections. |
haeological site with evidence of Roman and | Anglo-Saxon occupation. |
Offa was one of the great rulers of | Anglo-Saxon times, though his reign is often overlooked |
S.J. Ridyard, The Royal Saints of | Anglo-Saxon England. |
th (1789 - 27 May 1876), English scholar of | Anglo-Saxon language and Anglo-Saxon literature, was bo |
Remarkably, there is a second important | Anglo-Saxon building in the village, Odda's Chapel, a S |
The area has been settled since | Anglo-Saxon times. |
ld be as you suggest, although it should be | Anglo-Saxon London to line up with Category:Anglo-Saxon |
Sicilian ancestry on his father's side, and | Anglo-Saxon ancestry on his mother's side. |
llingford which is bordered on two sides by | Anglo-Saxon burh defences built in the 9th century. |
entury but the site has been used since the | Anglo-Saxon period. |
contact between English and Welsh since the | Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain, including Welsh loanwo |
For the society, the | Anglo-Saxon scholar Benjamin Thorpe (1782-1870) edited |
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