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An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… sea; Itche, Isse, being a common name for rivers among the Iceni: thus Hitcham in Suffolk, Hitching in Hertfordshire, …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… the county formed part of the territory inhabited by the Iceni or Cenomanni, who, according to Whitaker, were …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… and that he did is plain, because the potent nation of the Iceni, at first sought alliance with the Romans, which being …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… part of it, and the Romans called the inhabitants the Iceni, or Ikeys, and by corruption Fikeys, as Higden calls …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire
… conditions prevailing in the East Anglian area with the Iceni as a client kingdom (Allen 1970, 1519). It seems …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… city, for Tacitus tells us, that the potent nation of the Iceni at first sought alliance with the Romans. Claudius did … disarm all the allies that he was suspicious of; but the Iceni, a potent nation, not yet diminished by wars, having … their escape was impossible. By this defeat of the Iceni, other states, then wavering, were settled: and …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire were part of the Roman Iceni, but cannot think, with Mr. Cambden, that they were … they might be afterwards, for Sammes (fol. 63) says, "The Iceni inhabited that part of Britain which the EastAngles did …
Displaying 41 - 47 of 47