「anglo-saxon」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)5ページ目
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(meaning "elk") is based on the name of the | Anglo-Saxon eolh ("elk") which is of the same shape but |
g Penda of Mercia (who remained true to the | Anglo-Saxon religion) and the sisters of Peada of Merci |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records his death in the year 593 |
The | Anglo-Saxon sculpted Crowle Stone is at the back of the |
He is mentioned in lines 1958-1963 of the | Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf as Garmund the father of Offa |
ther theory is that the name comes from the | Anglo-Saxon words "wealh" (meaning forigners and used f |
Some have seen its origin in the | Anglo-Saxon name for witchcraft. |
6 he got his first opportunity to enter the | Anglo-Saxon market with a starring role in the Lifetime |
For the society, the | Anglo-Saxon scholar Benjamin Thorpe (1782-1870) edited |
Visitors can tour the ruins of the | Anglo-Saxon monastery of St Paul, which has been design |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 969 the village was recorded a |
I read a brief obituary of this | Anglo-Saxon woman, Violet Tillard; a delicate, frail cr |
re the Roman invasion of 43 AD) and through | Anglo-Saxon times, it stretched from Berkshire through |
s", in Stenton, D.M. (ed.), Preparatory to ' | Anglo-Saxon England'being the collected Papers of Frank |
, a feature of Frisian law that links it to | Anglo-Saxon law, and stands apart from all other German |
British Museum Guide to | Anglo-Saxon Antiquities. |
An Introduction to | Anglo-Saxon England (Second ed.). |
Parts of the church date back to | Anglo-Saxon times. |
The Coming of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
The village itself can be dated back to | Anglo-Saxon times; it takes its name from one of the mo |
en it was markted in national opposition to | Anglo-Saxon and Afro-American cultural imperialism. |
f the transition from post-Roman Britain to | Anglo-Saxon England; a certainty that would be the more |
led to the introduction of Christianity to | Anglo-Saxon England. |
His books and manuscripts relating to | Anglo-Saxon and northern literature, all his collection |
Elements of the design also relate to | Anglo-Saxon metalwork, and Coptic designs. |
The origins of Worrall go back to | Anglo-Saxon times, it had its roots in farming and was |
The village dates back to | Anglo-Saxon times, the parish church being founded by S |
St. George's Day celebrations for being too | Anglo-Saxon and demanded that the day should celebrate |
The town's | Anglo-Saxon origin is shown by its appearance in the Do |
st in armoured cavalry over the traditional | Anglo-Saxon war form. |
n Translating Beowulf" looks at translating | Anglo-Saxon. |
Finn and Hengest are two | Anglo-Saxon heroes appearing in the Old English epic po |
poetry in a way Olrik defines as typically | Anglo-Saxon. |
e majority of the latter kingdom fell under | Anglo-Saxon control in the 8th century. |
him as "king of the West Welsh", the usual | Anglo-Saxon name for the Cornish or southwestern Briton |
Acton is usually | Anglo-Saxon Old English for "farmstead at the oak tree( |
blished Jewish community, explicitly wanted | Anglo-Saxon immigrants, and New Orleans, a thriving urb |
settlements and villages on the Fylde were | Anglo-Saxon settlements. |
g a blood feud was either to pay a wergild ( | Anglo-Saxon, "man-price") or to be banished. |
be rebuilt as Cholsey parish church, where | Anglo-Saxon masonry survives in the tower. |
Whitbourne ( | Anglo-Saxon for "white stream") is a village in Eastern |
n in 1992 and 1996, both of whom were White | Anglo-Saxon Protestants (WASPs) from the South. |
Television's mini-series of Angus Wilson's | Anglo-Saxon Attitudes. |
Irish law corresponding approximately with | Anglo-Saxon wergild. |
nown but it has undeniable connections with | Anglo-Saxon pagan ritual. |
ho lived in, or was closely connected with, | Anglo-Saxon England from 597 to 1042. |
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