「anglo-saxon」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)
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e for these days, "Ember", derives from the | Anglo-Saxon ymbren, a circuit or revolution (from ymb, |
ns of St Helen's Bishopsgate (from Minicen, | Anglo-Saxon for a nun; minchery, a nunnery). |
He was the author of | Anglo-Saxon England, a volume of the Oxford History of |
Her name is how she is known in | Anglo-Saxon, apparently a corruption of the British Aud |
cient name still in use is lydgate which is | Anglo-Saxon for a hanging gate. |
mented by other, later sources, such as the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), a British leader named Vortiger |
Anglo-Saxon had a larger selection of endings for the G | |
ns a Wood Pigeon, the second comes from the | Anglo-Saxon for a small valley. |
f the transition from post-Roman Britain to | Anglo-Saxon England; a certainty that would be the more |
ford as Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon, with a fellowship at Pembroke College. |
sometimes simply called a bourne, from the | Anglo-Saxon for a stream flowing from a spring, althoug |
Dodwell, C. R. (1982) | Anglo-Saxon Art, A New Perspective, Manchester UP, ISBN |
mbria, who, according to one version of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, accepted him as king. |
The name Evington comes from the | Anglo-Saxon name Aefa's Tun. |
In 616 AD, the | Anglo-Saxon King Aethelfrith met his end in battle agai |
en it was markted in national opposition to | Anglo-Saxon and Afro-American cultural imperialism. |
ing to some, the use of antlers suggests an | Anglo-Saxon origin along with other native Anglo-Saxon |
Excavation of the | Anglo-Saxon cemetery also revealed extensive occupation |
d have been in the ownership of Aelfgar, an | Anglo-Saxon who also had interests which included manor |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle also tells how when Cuthred succe |
British, | Anglo-Saxon and also Dutch students have developed a mu |
An | Anglo-Saxon charter also mentions 'the ridgeway' sugges |
stianize the Anglo-Saxons from their native | Anglo-Saxon paganism, although the date of his arrival |
s likely that a watermill existed here from | Anglo-Saxon times, although much of the current structu |
time, 200 years after the establishment of | Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, although Bertram Colgrave in the |
tiainize the Anglo-Saxons from their native | Anglo-Saxon paganism, although when he arrived in Engla |
in eight languages and became a pioneer in | Anglo-Saxon studies, an unprecedented achievement for a |
. Jr, "The Gesta Herewardi: Transforming an | Anglo-Saxon into an Englishman", in Summerfield, T. & B |
Anglo-Saxon Charters: an annotated list and bibliograph | |
f Ely) (died c. 699) was the daughter of an | Anglo-Saxon king, an abbess and a saint of the Christia |
The Norwich | Anglo-Saxon is an ancient preserved skeleton of the age |
Old English language, | Anglo-Saxon, the ancestor of modern English |
It dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and is first documented in 1232 AD. |
hn the Evangelist, Milborne Port is of late | Anglo-Saxon date, and parts may well span the Norman co |
The name Apsley dates from the | Anglo-Saxon period and means aspen wood. |
morial Lectures 8. Cambridge: Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, 1997-98. |
, a feature of Frisian law that links it to | Anglo-Saxon law, and stands apart from all other German |
Somerford is a name of | Anglo-Saxon origin and the interpretation is obvious: " |
of the River Tamar as the boundary between | Anglo-Saxon Wessex and Celtic Cornwall. |
Between | Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Bedfordshi |
ne with older reverences, disregarding some | Anglo-Saxon relics and tombs, and allowing the incorpor |
Between | Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Norfolk wa |
"Clito" was a Latin term equivalent to the | Anglo-Saxon "Aetheling", and the Germanic "Adelinus" (u |
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 |
Kent, what is now England was populated by | Anglo-Saxon pagans, and the new rulers did not think of |
The name Horsey comes from | Anglo-Saxon "hors-eg" and means 'horse island' and was |
Frank Stenton in | Anglo-Saxon England, and Ann Williams in her DNB articl |
Main articles: | Anglo-Saxon runes and Old English Latin alphabet |
a place of considerable importance in later | Anglo-Saxon times, and the evidence of coins shows that |
e vicar of Batheaston, and was Professor of | Anglo-Saxon (1808-1812), and afterwards Professor of Po |
Between | Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century Huntingdon |
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. |
blished Jewish community, explicitly wanted | Anglo-Saxon immigrants, and New Orleans, a thriving urb |
ded, but royal genealogies preserved in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Anglian collection agree |
Although Birmingham's origins lie in the | Anglo-Saxon period and the manor of Birmingham definite |
The Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic (ASNC) is one of the cons |
ing behind him a mass of annotations on the | Anglo-Saxon charters, and is buried in Water Stratford |
Rask's | Anglo-Saxon, Danish and Icelandic Grammars were brought |
AD 450, but the site was reoccupied in the | Anglo-Saxon era and a West Saxon charter drawn up betwe |
The name Litchurch is of probable | Anglo-Saxon origin, and may possibly derive from either |
e causeway may have been first built in the | Anglo-Saxon era, and rebuilt in the late 11th century b |
o moved to the continent in the wake of the | Anglo-Saxon invasions and helped to found the Brittonic |
ea of the valley of the River Tame in later | Anglo-Saxon charters and formed one of the core groupin |
He also wrote several monographs on | Anglo-Saxon Numismatics, and a number of studies of Ang |
th (1789 - 27 May 1876), English scholar of | Anglo-Saxon language and Anglo-Saxon literature, was bo |
Norwich Over the Water was an | Anglo-Saxon settlement and major trading area defended |
Most of the motifs have counterparts in | Anglo-Saxon art and Ottonian art. |
f-date instrument for achieving the will of | Anglo-Saxon peoples" and seeking names and addresses of |
rsisted among men in southern England after | Anglo-Saxon settlement; and 2) that the Scots were not |
rman times was the direct descendant of the | Anglo-Saxon freeman, and that the typical Anglo-Saxon s |
own to have travelled in Cumbria during the | Anglo-Saxon period and have given many words to the loc |
J. N. L. Myres - | Anglo-Saxon Pottery and the Settlement of England. |
There is an 8th century | Anglo-Saxon church, and nearby Ledston Hall. |
The legend is that she was an | Anglo-Saxon princess, and probably also a nun, who was |
ining, he dedicated himself to the study of | Anglo-Saxon history and literature, and wrote two influ |
d (died 1079 x 1086) was a mid-11th century | Anglo-Saxon thegn and sheriff in Worcestershire, Englan |
e of the successor fiefs of Northumbria, an | Anglo-Saxon Kingdom and later Earldom. |
e the excavated foundations of the original | Anglo-Saxon church and a large kerbed round barrow show |
ative history the principal sources are the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Irish annals. |
1999-2006 he was Head of the Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic. |
Church of St John the Evangelist is of late | Anglo-Saxon date and parts may well span the Norman con |
died in 634 AD; she was the daughter of an | Anglo-Saxon king and became a nun at Saint-Amand, Rouen |
Elder; it demonstrated Rider's knowledge of | Anglo-Saxon, Welsh and German but could not compete wit |
Template:Department of | Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, University of Cambridge |
ents of an amber glass claw beaker of early | Anglo-Saxon manufacture and a gold ring with filigree o |
est-selling books on the shamanic wisdom of | Anglo-Saxon England, and for his award-winning course a |
Elements of the design also relate to | Anglo-Saxon metalwork, and Coptic designs. |
g Penda of Mercia (who remained true to the | Anglo-Saxon religion) and the sisters of Peada of Merci |
620 - 26 October 664) was an | Anglo-Saxon monk and bishop from Northumbria. |
Between | Anglo-Saxon times and the nineteenth century the Englis |
It may be the site of the burials of | Anglo-Saxon King Anna and his son Jurmin. |
Finn and Hengest are two | Anglo-Saxon heroes appearing in the Old English epic po |
Richard Hodges - The | Anglo-Saxon Achievement: Archaeology & the Beginnings o |
The | Anglo-Saxon names are in brackets. |
Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are known from East Yorkshire. | |
enthusiasm for Arthur and his affinity for | Anglo-Saxon language are apparent in the work. |
the parish of Rochdale is believed to be of | Anglo-Saxon origin, as evidenced by historical document |
tially accepted by native-born Americans of | Anglo-Saxon descent as white. |
Lam Brook is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter as forming part of the boundaries o |
Godwine Porthund was listed in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the public hangman for Shrewsb |
c. 1113 x 1124) is an early 12th century | Anglo-Saxon noble associated with Roxburghshire, a cult |
The | Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham, Norfo |
Helenstowe Nunnery was an | Anglo-Saxon nunnery at Abingdon in the English county o |
He was lecturer in | Anglo-Saxon History at Cambridge from 1978, reader in A |
uit 780), also Hugeburc or Huneberc, was an | Anglo-Saxon nun at the Abbey of Heidenheim in Germany. |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle at the time of King Edward the Co |
Hope-Taylor also theorised that the | Anglo-Saxon settlement at Yeavering had been situated t |
ish and Celts severely defeated an invading | Anglo-Saxon army at the Battle of Mons Badonicus some t |
, at a location near an important excavated | Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Boss Hall in Ipswich, was dedic |
Kintbury Abbey was a supposed | Anglo-Saxon monastery at Kintbury in the English county |
riet H, The Battle of Hastings: The Fall of | Anglo-Saxon England Atlandtic Books, London 2008 |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Bagsecg was slain by a sword whil |
The Stoppingas was a tribe or clan of | Anglo-Saxon England, based around Wootton Wawen and the |
on a hedge.The glass vase was a 6th century | Anglo-Saxon "claw beaker" which had been buried beside |
By birth an | Anglo-Saxon, he became archbishop in 655 and held the o |
the Covent Garden area have shown that the | Anglo-Saxon settlement became established considerably |
Evidence from the eighth century | Anglo-Saxon historian, Bede points to the Picts also be |
oins and stone carvings, and exhibits about | Anglo-Saxon culture, Bede's life and works, the life of |
storia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum of the | Anglo-Saxon writer Bede, who is strongly critical of hi |
factresses Wulviva and (Lady) Godiva, local | Anglo-Saxon landowners before the Norman takeover of th |
For the society, the | Anglo-Saxon scholar Benjamin Thorpe (1782-1870) edited |
in Scandinavian tradition, and also in the | Anglo-Saxon poems Beowulf and Widsith. |
as the Brondings who are referred to in the | Anglo-Saxon poems Beowulf and Widsith. |
ook Beowulf and Grendel, he argues that the | Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf is based on a memory of the qu |
He is mentioned in lines 1958-1963 of the | Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf as Garmund the father of Offa |
It was named after the protagonist of the | Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf. |
les (24 km) east of Oxford and grew from an | Anglo-Saxon settlement beside the river. |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 9th centuries an |
ere originally prelates who administered an | Anglo-Saxon diocese between the 7th and 9th centuries. |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 11th centuries a |
atfield Chase near Doncaster, Yorkshire, in | Anglo-Saxon England between the Northumbrians under Edw |
ttended by bishops from the entirety of the | Anglo-Saxon church, both from Northumbria and from the |
, showing some of the characteristics of an | Anglo-Saxon territorial boundary. |
It is an | Anglo-Saxon bronze brooch of the early tenth century. |
Mary's, Gainford, stands on the site of an | Anglo-Saxon monastery built by Bishop Ecgred of Lindisf |
Eynesbury takes its name from the | Anglo-Saxon "Ernulf's Burgh". |
th, above countries, which was made for the | Anglo-Saxon rock, but not for the Latin rock, rock in S |
element is found not only in place names of | Anglo-Saxon origin, but also in some Southern Scottish |
Peterborough Manuscript (Version E) of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, but the reference is not likely |
These lords had succeeded, not to similar | Anglo-Saxon magnates, but to a crowd of lesser landhold |
The village name is probably of | Anglo-Saxon origin but its meaning is uncertain. |
e Hutch, and re-edited in the 1990s for the | Anglo-Saxon market, by Saban Entertainment. |
derive from Sceot-hulls-worth, implying an | Anglo-Saxon "dwelling-place by the Scout hills". |
icance: peace was effectively maintained in | Anglo-Saxon times by the frith-guild, an early manifest |
(see | Anglo-Saxon Crafts by Kevin Leahy, p75-76) |
As the manor of Enfield had been held in | Anglo-Saxon times by Asgar, Master of the Stud to Edwar |
There is a working reconstructed | Anglo-Saxon farm called Gyrwe (pronounced 'Yeerweh') af |
Anglo-Saxon Shepshed cannot have been much more than a | |
for Cambridge invented on the basis of the | Anglo-Saxon name Cantebrigge. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ceawlin died the following year. |
yle of religious art, a style that combined | Anglo-Saxon and Celtic themes, what is now called Hiber |
In | Anglo-Saxon, a ceorl was an independent peasant landown |
The name Charing probably comes from the | Anglo-Saxon word cerring, a bend, as it stands on the o |
une names are feu for fe, rat for reidh (as | Anglo-Saxon rad), chaon for kaun, uncertain tiu for tyr |
, the battle marked the effective demise of | Anglo-Saxon paganism; Charles Plummer, in 1896, describ |
Anglo-Saxon Remedies, Charms, and Prayers from British | |
Anglo-Saxon annals cite the total English losses as 81 | |
e word 'clapper' derives ultimately from an | Anglo-Saxon word, cleaca, meaning 'bridging the steppin |
She was placed under the management of the | Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co Ltd. |
She was operated by | Anglo-Saxon Petroleum Co. |
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. |
om the Old English *Frige-hop: Frige was an | Anglo-Saxon goddess cognate with the Old Norse goddess |
Anglo-Saxon is common throughout the Anglo-Saxon period | |
variant form, in Bald's Leechbook, another | Anglo-Saxon medical compendium. |
The early | Anglo-Saxon village consisted of a few structures, main |
Cynethryth is the only | Anglo-Saxon Queen consort in whose name coinage was def |
ristianizing Kinship: Ritual Sponsorship in | Anglo-Saxon England, Cornell University Press (1998), I |
Cubitt | Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 13 |
Cubitt | Anglo-Saxon Church Councils p. 42 |
eaches back to the Roman occupation, and an | Anglo-Saxon village, covering approximately 30 acres (1 |
ternatively 'Cripplegate' could be from the | Anglo-Saxon term crepel, meaning a covered way or under |
The Gosforth Cross is a large stone | Anglo-Saxon high cross in the churchyard at Gosforth in |
The | Anglo-Saxon sculpted Crowle Stone is at the back of the |
ist II (also Christ B), poem written by the | Anglo-Saxon poet Cynewulf on Christ's Ascension. |
It is possible that he was also the | Anglo-Saxon poet Cynewulf, who was known to be alive at |
m on King Edward's Succession (Old English; | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle D, s.a. |
from the nearby hamlet of Thrupe, which in | Anglo-Saxon meant dairy farm. |
Listed as a witness in an | Anglo-Saxon charter dated 985, which is listed as no. |
he ‘Kingston Brooch', an important piece of | Anglo-Saxon jewelry dating from the 7th Century, was di |
North Petherton, where the Alfred Jewel (an | Anglo-Saxon ornament dating from the late 9th century) |
Shire Court or Shire Moot was an | Anglo-Saxon institution dating back to the earliest day |
llingford which is bordered on two sides by | Anglo-Saxon burh defences built in the 9th century. |
St. George's Day celebrations for being too | Anglo-Saxon and demanded that the day should celebrate |
Edgworth is of | Anglo-Saxon origin, denoting a village in the hills and |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes this battle in the entr |
Walton lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative district of the Elmbridge hu |
The village lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundre |
The parish lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundre |
The village lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Wallington hundr |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not say who was the aggresso |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not name the leaders in Nort |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday). |
ings related to Dorset: Wessex; the ancient | Anglo-Saxon kingdom, Dorset's agriculture, Dorset's san |
ght to have originated from that of a local | Anglo-Saxon chieftain Duddela an Old English name and ' |
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