「anglosaxon」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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he had no papers or credentials and was an | Anglo-Saxon, a group of people still relatively foreign |
In | Anglo-Saxon, a ceorl was an independent peasant landown |
h century - July 4, 725) was a Frankish and | Anglo-Saxon Abbess of noble blood. |
Bradfield Abbey was an | Anglo-Saxon abbey in Berkshire, England. |
Richard Hodges - The | Anglo-Saxon Achievement: Archaeology & the Beginnings o |
o stronger archaeological evidence of early | Anglo-Saxon activity in the area around Dorchester-on-T |
The village lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundre |
Walton lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative district of the Elmbridge hu |
The parish lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundre |
The village lay within the | Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Wallington hundr |
tribe, which is known to have resisted the | Anglo-Saxon advance in southeastern Britain long after |
e iron age, its name is a derivative of the | Anglo-Saxon Alfreincoma - by which name it was noted in |
Sicilian ancestry on his father's side, and | Anglo-Saxon ancestry on his mother's side. |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
About 1737 Lye began to work on an | Anglo-Saxon and Gothic dictionary, which he despaired o |
St. George's Day celebrations for being too | Anglo-Saxon and demanded that the day should celebrate |
mbria was a title in the Anglo-Danish, late | Anglo-Saxon, and early Anglo-Norman period in England. |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday). |
The toponym Eaton is | Anglo-Saxon, and "Water Eaton" means "farm by a river", |
ge and an author and editor specializing in | Anglo-Saxon and medieval literature, science fiction an |
Stowe manuscripts are a collection of 1085 | Anglo-Saxon and later medieval manuscripts, now in the |
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 |
urse involving translation and criticism of | Anglo-Saxon and Middle English texts) and English Liter |
orate for his work on the relations between | Anglo-Saxon and Nordic art in Viking times. |
en it was markted in national opposition to | Anglo-Saxon and Afro-American cultural imperialism. |
yle of religious art, a style that combined | Anglo-Saxon and Celtic themes, what is now called Hiber |
to dominate western Christendom, including | Anglo-Saxon and medieval England, from the time of Char |
akes its name though the name 'Luffield' is | Anglo-Saxon and means 'Lufa's field'. |
t of Glastonbury was the head (or abbot) of | Anglo-Saxon and eventually Benedictine house of Glaston |
His books and manuscripts relating to | Anglo-Saxon and northern literature, all his collection |
m- and introductory formulae known from the | Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon traditions (manno miltisto, d |
denote a parish typically formed during the | Anglo-Saxon and early medieval period where their narro |
The hamlet name is | Anglo-Saxon and means farm by a brook. |
(Volume 1: Physique, Prehistory, Roman, | Anglo-Saxon, and Domesday), Oxford: Oxford University P |
eem to have co-existed peacefully with some | Anglo-Saxon and Viking place names later being joined t |
British, | Anglo-Saxon and also Dutch students have developed a mu |
torio di Musica Giuseppe Verdi), as well as | Anglo-Saxon and Romance Languages and Philosophy at the |
The name Bredbury is | Anglo-Saxon and probably dates from the first permanent |
Royal Holloway College, and later an MA in | Anglo-Saxon and Frankish studies at the University of L |
ic traditions of Germanic languages such as | Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon. |
The consensus view is that | Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian traditions describe the sa |
1011 - 1068) was a landowner in both | Anglo-Saxon and post-Conquest England. |
The name of Williton is | Anglo-Saxon and means "estate on the Willet" (river), b |
Anglo-Saxon annals cite the total English losses as 81 | |
ons of prehistoric implements and Roman and | Anglo-Saxon antiquities found in Canterbury, Thanet and |
British Museum Guide to | Anglo-Saxon Antiquities. |
Her name is how she is known in | Anglo-Saxon, apparently a corruption of the British Aud |
and is the site of both roman and extensive | anglo-saxon archaeology |
nd, which was the site of a seventh-century | Anglo-Saxon archaeology find known as "Finglesham man," |
Aspects of | Anglo-Saxon Archaeology: Sutton Hoo and other discoveri |
Taylor developed an interest in | Anglo-Saxon architecture early in life. |
r as "one of the most precious survivals of | Anglo-Saxon architecture in England". |
l of Caer Lwydgoed (Lichfield), defeated an | Anglo-Saxon army with bishops under the walls of the to |
ish and Celts severely defeated an invading | Anglo-Saxon army at the Battle of Mons Badonicus some t |
Anglo-Saxon Art to A.D. 900 (1938) | |
Other names are sometimes used: in | Anglo-Saxon art Kendrick preferred "Helmet" and "Ribbon |
T. D. Kendrick - | Anglo-Saxon Art to A.D. 900. |
with stylized niello animals, a feature of | Anglo-Saxon art which has since become known as 'Trewhi |
Most of the motifs have counterparts in | Anglo-Saxon art and Ottonian art. |
Dodwell, C. R. (1982) | Anglo-Saxon Art, A New Perspective, Manchester UP, ISBN |
major influence on the later development of | Anglo-Saxon art. |
Anglo-Saxon Art: From the Seventh Century to the Norman | |
Latin component of English rather than its | Anglo-Saxon aspect." |
n 1858 became the Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University: the post was renamed |
ear was appointed Rawlinsonian Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
He was Elrington and Bosworth Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at the University of Cambridge from 1912 to |
the Rawlinson and Bosworth professorship of | Anglo-Saxon at the University of Oxford, a chair that h |
om 1925 to 1945, Tolkien was a Professor of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University, and an important crit |
er property that endowed a professorship of | Anglo-Saxon at Oxford. |
which was followed by postgraduate work on | Anglo-Saxon at King's College, Cambridge, gaining a PhD |
uilt along the east coast to defend against | Anglo-Saxon attack. |
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes, 1956 (with Angus Wilson) | |
Television's mini-series of Angus Wilson's | Anglo-Saxon Attitudes. |
It is likely that the battle, like many | Anglo-Saxon battles, took place on the nearby neolithic |
as elected the first Rawlinson Professor of | Anglo-Saxon, being the first to hold the Oxford positio |
Wigbert, born in Wessex around 670, was an | Anglo-Saxon Benedictine monk from the monastery of Glas |
Accounts of the symbel are preserved in the | Anglo-Saxon Beowulf (lines 489-675 and 1491-1500), Drea |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 9th centuries an |
Leuthere (or Leutherius) was an | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester. |
Brihtwine (or Beorhtwine) was an | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells. |
Benna (bishop), a 9th century | Anglo-Saxon bishop of Hereford |
Frithestan (or Frithustan) was an | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester. |
Wulfhlem II was the fourth | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells. |
Sigar (or Sigegar; died circa 996) was an | Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Wells. |
episcopal title which was first used by an | Anglo-Saxon bishop between the 7th and 11th centuries a |
For the 9th century | Anglo-Saxon bishop of Hereford, see Benna (bishop). |
between the 10th and 11th centuries by the | Anglo-Saxon Bishops of Ramsbury. |
r Northamptonshire Helmet) is a 7th century | Anglo-Saxon boar-crested helm found by archaeologists f |
strete (great made-road), mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon bounds of Wolverley. |
It is an | Anglo-Saxon bronze brooch of the early tenth century. |
te of Sheffield Castle found evidence of an | Anglo-Saxon building on the site. |
The present church replaces an | Anglo-Saxon building which was the cathedral of the Bis |
Remarkably, there is a second important | Anglo-Saxon building in the village, Odda's Chapel, a S |
Mary's Priory Church, Deerhurst, one of the | Anglo-Saxon buildings investigated by Taylor |
It is notable among | Anglo-Saxon buildings for the many features of the peri |
f Roman stonework can also be seen in other | Anglo-Saxon buildings. |
llingford which is bordered on two sides by | Anglo-Saxon burh defences built in the 9th century. |
irford Graves: a record of researches in an | Anglo-Saxon burial place in Gloucestershire. |
Sutton Hoo - | Anglo-Saxon burial site near Woodbridge, Suffolk, Engla |
The Taplow burial, a 7th century | Anglo-Saxon burial mound, is in the grounds of the hous |
The largest Early | Anglo-Saxon burial site ever excavated, it contains wit |
as been suggested that this was a secondary | Anglo-Saxon burial, placed at the camp. |
Burley, whose name may be derived from the | Anglo-Saxon bury which means a 'fortified place' |
s from “Canna's Farm” or “Canna's Place” in | Anglo-Saxon), but there was a significant villa here in |
ver 1,000 years of religious history - from | Anglo-Saxon carvings on one wall, to medieval wall pain |
area first held a bishopric in 680, and the | Anglo-Saxon cathedral was probably located close to (if |
Recent Excavations in | Anglo-Saxon Cemeteries in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk (1 |
Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are known from East Yorkshire. | |
1757: Rev. Bryan Faussett begins excavating | Anglo-Saxon cemeteries in Kent, England (continues to 1 |
Suffolk) is the site of two 6th-7th century | Anglo-Saxon cemeteries, where it is believed that membe |
The | Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Spong Hill, North Elmham, Norfo |
Excavation of the | Anglo-Saxon cemetery also revealed extensive occupation |
, at a location near an important excavated | Anglo-Saxon cemetery at Boss Hall in Ipswich, was dedic |
A large | Anglo-Saxon cemetery, in use from the mid 10th century |
Lam Brook is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter as forming part of the boundaries o |
Dodford is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter of 944. |
Listed as a witness in an | Anglo-Saxon charter dated 985, which is listed as no. |
The brook is mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter of ideterminate date. |
Bedgebury is first mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter in AD 841, the name deriving from t |
An | Anglo-Saxon charter also mentions 'the ridgeway' sugges |
gh bank' at the river mouth mentioned in an | Anglo-Saxon charter. |
Anglo-Saxon Charters VI. | |
ea of the valley of the River Tame in later | Anglo-Saxon charters and formed one of the core groupin |
It is recorded in the Domesday Book and the | Anglo-Saxon charters of 964-995. |
During the 11th century, six | Anglo-Saxon charters were copied into the gospel-book, |
Facsimiles of | Anglo-Saxon Charters, 1991; The Liber Vitae of the New |
ing behind him a mass of annotations on the | Anglo-Saxon charters, and is buried in Water Stratford |
Anglo-Saxon Charters: an annotated list and bibliograph | |
ght to have originated from that of a local | Anglo-Saxon chieftain Duddela an Old English name and ' |
The Sheffield Cross is an | Anglo-Saxon Christian monument, dating from the early n |
During the | Anglo-Saxon Christian period (from 600 AD) there was a |
Bishop of Whithorn can be placed using the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle on 15 June in either 776 or 777, |
Little is said of his reign in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle other than the bare facts that he |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Eadred "reduced all |
Versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle similar to C and E. This included |
r whose placename is first mentioned in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (ASC) of 895AD, is supposedly nam |
It was recorded in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 796 as Thyrefeld. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that she was "deprived of |
He returned from exile in 792, and the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reports that he was "apprehended |
n power by 633 (and possibly by 626, if the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is correct). |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle refers to King Coenred as having |
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 |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records for the year 653: The Mid |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for the year 449 records th |
While the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle only briefly mentions the battle, |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Archbishop Oscytel w |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not say who was the aggresso |
ded, but royal genealogies preserved in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Anglian collection agree |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle at the time of King Edward the Co |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 661 reports that bot |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that in 825 (adjusted date |
He died in 762, according to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (recorded under 760 due to chrono |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for the year 737 reports that he |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle notes only that the Mercians and |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (in its entry for 656) includes a |
Godwine Porthund was listed in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the public hangman for Shrewsb |
The name is found in versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle from the year 937. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle tells us that, in 686, "Caedwalla |
In most versions of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle the entry does not record the ide |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes this battle in the entr |
an edition for the Rolls Series of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (1861) |
As the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the devastation of neighb |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that in 702 Coenred succe |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle also tells how when Cuthred succe |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle omits any mention of an East Angl |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Bagsecg was slain by a sword whil |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not name the leaders in Nort |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of 792 records the village as Hor |
690 and died about 7 July 705, although the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that he died in 703. |
ative history the principal sources are the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Irish annals. |
The | Anglo-Saxon chronicle reports that in 1052 Harold Godwi |
Huwal is mentioned only in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle entry for 926, as one of several |
m on King Edward's Succession (Old English; | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle D, s.a. |
The | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records his death in the year 593 |
In the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in 969 the village was recorded a |
location associated with the battle in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) with Thingwall on Merseyside, fu |
mented by other, later sources, such as the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle), a British leader named Vortiger |
(See the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle). |
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 |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ceawlin died the following year. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was betrayed by King Harthacn |
The first authentic mention of it is in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where it is stated that Aethelfl |
( | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Peterborough Chronicle) |
me was recorded in 915 as Cyricbyrig in the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and means "the fort with a churc |
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 |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he was beheaded. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he began his reign in 591, but i |
owever, the earliest source for Cerdic, the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, was put together in the late nin |
ttle, including important accounts from the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the writings of Anglo-Norman his |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, he died on 30 September, but the |
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. |
According to the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, in 1065 Earl Harold of Wessex, h |
Peterborough Manuscript (Version E) of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, but the reference is not likely |
mbria, who, according to one version of the | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, accepted him as king. |
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