The Saxon ChronicleLongman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1823 - 463 pages With an English Translation, and Notes, Critical and Explanatory to Which Are Added Chronological, Topographical, and Glossarial Indices. A short grammar of the anglosaxon language; a new map of the England during the heptarchy; plates of coins, & c. |
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Page x
... followers , he has given us the names of those learned persons who assisted him with this local information . The first is Alcuinus or Albinus , an abbot of IB ก b i Canterbury , at whose instigation he undertook the works PREFACE .
... followers , he has given us the names of those learned persons who assisted him with this local information . The first is Alcuinus or Albinus , an abbot of IB ก b i Canterbury , at whose instigation he undertook the works PREFACE .
Page xi
i Canterbury , at whose instigation he undertook the works who sent by Nothelm , afterwards archbishop of that province , full account of all ecclesiastical transactions in Kent , and in the contiguous districts , from the first ...
i Canterbury , at whose instigation he undertook the works who sent by Nothelm , afterwards archbishop of that province , full account of all ecclesiastical transactions in Kent , and in the contiguous districts , from the first ...
Page xii
... Canterbury , or by their direction 2 , at least as far as the year 1001 , or even 1070 ; for the Benet MS . , which some call the Plegmund MS . , ends in the latter year ; the rest being in Latin . From internal evidence indeed , of an ...
... Canterbury , or by their direction 2 , at least as far as the year 1001 , or even 1070 ; for the Benet MS . , which some call the Plegmund MS . , ends in the latter year ; the rest being in Latin . From internal evidence indeed , of an ...
Page xv
... Canterbury , whose Latin Chronicle ends in 1199 , the era of legal memory , had formed a design , as he tells us , of regulating his chronology by the Annunciation ; but from old arobienos tedi is ad brolina . Juze2 all valid d 4 the ...
... Canterbury , whose Latin Chronicle ends in 1199 , the era of legal memory , had formed a design , as he tells us , of regulating his chronology by the Annunciation ; but from old arobienos tedi is ad brolina . Juze2 all valid d 4 the ...
Page xx
... Canterbury , is placed to the year 1031 , but evidently written after the Conquest , and left unfinished . The Saxon part ends in the year 1070 , with the words , -- bletrungan undeɲfeng ; after describing at full length the dispute ...
... Canterbury , is placed to the year 1031 , but evidently written after the Conquest , and left unfinished . The Saxon part ends in the year 1070 , with the words , -- bletrungan undeɲfeng ; after describing at full length the dispute ...
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Common terms and phrases
abbot æften æfter æɲ afterwards alderman ancebircop archbishop army Bede bircop bishop buɲh butan buton C.T. Bi C.T. Biv calends Cant Canterbury Chronicle cing comon consecrated cuman cyng cynger cyning Cynric Danes died ealle þa Eanbald earl Engla-lande England eoɲl eopl Ethel feng ferde Flor Florence of Worcester folc foɲ fordferde fordrende fultume geane geaɲe gear Gibs Gode Godpine hærde heɲe heold heom heoɲa heopa hepe hine hpile ilcan geaɲe king land Laud Lundene M.West mannum micel mihte minster monks mycel niht Normandy ofer ongean pæn pæne pæɲon pær pæs pallium Petrob pið Pillelm pintɲa polde poldon pone pope Rome rona runu Saxon ships slain slew spide Wessex Whel ýlcan þæɲ þæɲe þær þam þan þer þet þir þone þuɲh þý
Popular passages
Page 296 - Truly there was much trouble in these times, and very great distress; he caused castles to be built, and oppressed the poor. The king was also of great sternness, and he took from his subjects many marks of gold, and many hundred pounds of silver, and this, either with or without right, and with little need. He was given to avarice and greedily loved gain.
Page 271 - Sweyne with two hundred and forty ships, together with Earl Esborn and Earl Thurkill, into the Humber; where they were met by the child Edgar, and Earl Waltheof, and Merle-Sweyne, and Earl Gospatric with the Northumbrians, and all the landsmen; riding and marching full merrily with an immense army: and so all unanimously advanced to York; where they stormed and demolished the castle, and won innumerable treasures therein; slew there many hundreds of Frenchmen, and led many with them to the ships;...
Page 320 - Giffard; and afterwards went to London; and on the Sunday following, before the altar at Westminster, he promised God and all the people, to annul all the unrighteous acts that took place in his brother's time, and to maintain the best laws that were valid in any king's day before him. And after this the Bishop of London, Maurice, consecrated him king; and all in this land submitted to him, and swore oaths, and became his men.
Page xii - Alfred himself was the author of a distinct and separate chronicle of Wessex, cannot now be determined. That he furnished additional supplies of historical matter to the older chronicles is, I conceive, sufficiently obvious to every reader who will take the trouble of examining the subject. The argument of Dr. Beeke, the present Dean of Bristol, in an obliging letter to the editor on this subject, is not without its force; — that it is extremely improbable, when we consider the number and variety...
Page 52 - All things that my brother Peada, and my brother Wulfere, and my sisters, Kyneburga and Kyneswitha, gave and granted to St. Peter and the abbot, these I will may stand; and I will in my day increase it, for their souls and for my soul. Now give I St. Peter to-day into his minster, Medhamsted, these lands, and all that thereto lyeth; that is, Bredon, Repings, Cadney, Swineshead, Hanbury, Lodeshall, Scuffanhall, Cosford, Stratford, Wattleburn, Lushgard, Ethelhunisland, Bardney.
Page 246 - He forsook his chrism and his rood, his ghostly weapons, and took to his spear and his sword, after his bishophood; and so went to the field against Griffin the Welsh king: and there was he slain, and his priests with him, and Elnoth the sheriff and many good men with them; and the others fled away.
Page 170 - In this year came Olave and Sweyn to London, on the nativity of St. Mary, with ninety-four ships; and they then continued fighting stoutly against the city, and would also have set fire to it. But they there sustained more harm and evil than they ever supposed that any citizens would be able to do unto them.
Page 293 - King William went from Normandy into France with an army, and made war upon his own lord, Philip the king, and slew many of his men, and burned the town of Mantes, and all the holy minsters that were in the town ; two holy men that served God, leading the life of anchorites, were burned therein.
Page 296 - He made many deer-parks; and he established laws therewith; so that whosoever slew a hart, or a hind, should be deprived of his eyesight. As he forbade men to kill the harts, so also the boars; and he loved the tall deer as if he were their father. Likewise he decreed by the hares, that they should go free. His rich men bemoaned it, and the poor men shuddered at it. But he was so stern, that he recked not the hatred of them all...