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An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… ELSING Was the lordship of William Earl Warren: Toke, a Saxon thane, was lord of it in the reign of the Confessor, …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… Elmham, in King Edward's time, and was in that see in the Saxon age: 3 carucates of land then belonged to it (held at …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… Conqueror, or took care of by Godric his steward, Ulf, a Saxon, lord of it in the days of King Edward, being deprived, …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… Had also a little lordship, given to that monastery in the Saxon age, to find provision for the monks; half a carucate … and was given to St. Bennet's abbey, by Ernaldus, a Saxon; Hugh, the abbot, in the reign of King Stephen, granted … doctor. 1525, William Howseman. Robert Church. 1551, Hen. Saxon. 1551, Henry Lewen. 1557, James Stankye. 1561, John …
A History of the County of Oxford
… Churches Eynsham was apparently the site of an early Saxon minster and the centre of a large parochia, steadily … founded as a chapel for the villagers when Eynsham's Saxon minister became the abbey church of a closed order in …
A History of the County of Oxford
… 41 arguments for large discrepancies between the Anglo-Saxon and later boundaries lack foundation. The land granted … ditch presumably defined the lands of an early Anglo-Saxon settler, Tilgar, whose name was given to the forest … but the precise location was not recorded. 5 Early Anglo-Saxon bone implements were discovered just south of the …
A History of the County of Oxford
… What appeared to be part of the burial ground of the Anglo-Saxon minster was discovered at the north-west corner of the …
Alumni Oxonienses
… 1673. See Foster's Index Eccl. Ferber, John Bernhardus a Saxon, created D.Med. 9 Sept., 1680. [ 20] Ferby, (Sir) …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… to Fish Garth, the latter word signifying in the Anglo-Saxon language a "weir;" and of this name the modern …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… The name of Fala is derived from Fah, in the Anglo-Saxon, "speckled," and law, the description of hill upon …
Displaying 781 - 790 of 3692