Sammelwerk
![]() |
Names, Places and People: An Onomastic Miscellany in Memory of John McNeal Dodgson Rumble, Alexander R. • Mills, Anthony David [Hrsg.]. |
Deskriptoren: | ![]() |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Kurztitel: | Miscellany John McNeal Dodgson |
Permalink:
http://opac.regesta-imperii.de/id/328609
Alternative Formate:
MARC21 | BibTeX
![]() |
[ |
Autoren suchen: Rumble, Alexander R. • Mills, Anthony David |
Inhalt
![]() | Bibliography of the writings of John McNeal Dodgson |
![]() | John McNeal Dodgson: a personal memoir |
![]() | Three notes on the St Petersburg Bede |
![]() | "The land between Ribble and Mersey" in the early tenth century |
![]() | The Danish element in the minor and field-names of Yarborough Wapentake, Lincolnshire |
![]() | The plural of singular -ing: an alternative application of Old English -ingas |
![]() | The use of Middle English castel in the names of medieval town-houses |
![]() | A funeral monument |
![]() | Scandinavians in Cheshire: a reassessment of the onomastic evidence |
![]() | The hunting of the snor |
![]() | Shapes in the landscape: some words |
![]() | The location of the burh of Wigingamere - a reappraisal |
![]() | Souterscales - a Furness Abbey estate in Lonsdale |
![]() | The context of Brunanburh |
![]() | An Anglo-Saxon beacon system |
![]() | The survival of pre-Conquest place-names (mostly minor) in Worcestershire |
![]() | A Scandinavian personal name in Wales |
![]() | The voicing of initial fricatives revisited |
![]() | Hundred meeting-places in the Cambridge region |
![]() | Three difficult English place-names reconsidered |
![]() | The Dee at Chester and Aberdeen: thoughts on rivers and divinities |
![]() | Roads and Romans in south-east Lindsey: the placename evidence |
![]() | Old English place-name elements in Domesday Flintshire |
![]() | Locational surnames in fourteenth-century Denbighshire |
![]() | Old English winterdun |
![]() | Ad Lapidem in Bede and a Mercian martyrdom |
![]() | Reading a Kentish charter |
![]() | Æle-/Ele- as a name-form on coins |
![]() | Old English halh, "slightly raised ground isolated by marsh" |
![]() | "Another Seaborough", "the other Dinnaton": some manorial affixes in Domesday book |
![]() | Middle English utlete |
![]() | Wigingamere |