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Angles and Jeffrey
* Edogawa Ranpo ( 2008 ), " The Two-Sen Copper Coin ," translated by Jeffrey Angles, Modanizumu: Modernist Fiction from Japan, 1913 – 1938, ed.

Angles and 2011
A number of members have embarked on a variety of side projects, although a fourth album, entitled Angles, was released on March 22, 2011.
* Angles ( The Strokes album ), a 2011 album by The Strokes
In February 2011 the band The Strokes shot a music video for the single " Under Cover of Darkness " off of their 2011 album Angles at the Loew's Jersey Theatre, featuring the main lobby, promenade and stage.

Angles and ),
They were perhaps not named " Angles " at that time ; however, the territory of the Teutones probably included the Vorpommern and the region south to the Elbe ( mainly Holstein ), accounting for the implied larger range of the Angles in later sources.
When told they were called " Anglii " ( Angles ), he replied with a Latin pun that translates well into English: “ Bene, nam et angelicam habent faciem, et tales angelorum in caelis decet esse coheredes ” (" It is well, for they have an angelic face, and such people ought to be co-heirs of the angels in heaven ").
According to sources such as the History of Bede, after the invasion of Britannia, the Angles split up and founded the kingdoms of the Nord Angelnen ( Northumbria ), Ost Angelnen ( East Anglia ), and the Mittlere Angelnen ( Mercia ).
The first phase Migration Period displacement from between CE 300 and 500 included relocation of the Goths ( Ostrogoths and Visigoths ), Vandals, Franks, various other Germanic people ( Burgundians, Lombards, Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Suebi, Alemanni, Varangians and Normans ), Alans and numerous Slavic tribes.
Saxons also called March Rhed-monat or Hreth-monath ( deriving from their goddess Rhedam / Hreth ), and Angles called it Hyld-monath.
The Kingdom of the East Angles, formed about the year 520 by the merging of the North and the South Folk ( Angles who had settled in the former lands of the Iceni during the previous century ), was one of the seven Anglo-Saxon heptarchy kingdoms ( as defined in the 12th century writings of Henry of Huntingdon ).
* King Anna of East Anglia ( died c. 654 ), ruler of the East Angles
Later top 20 hits included 1970's " One Less Bell to Answer " ( U. S. # 2 ), 1971's " Love's Lines, Angles and Rhymes " ( U. S. # 19 ) and " Never My Love " ( U. S. # 12 ) ( 1971 ), 1972's "( Last Night ) I Didn't Get to Sleep at All " ( U. S. # 8 ) and " If I Could Reach You " ( U. S. # 10 ).
.. Sceaf ; who, as some affirm, was driven on a certain island in Germany, called Scandza, ( of which Jornandes, the historian of the Goths, speaks ), a little boy in a skiff, without any attendant, asleep, with a handful of corn at his head, whence he was called Sceaf ; and, on account of his singular appearance, being well received by the men of that country, and carefully educated, in his riper age he reigned in a town which was called Slaswic, but at present Haithebi ; which country, called old Anglia, whence the Angles came into Britain, is situated between the Saxons and the Goths.
A late 7th-century source, the Tribal Hidage, lists the peoples south of the Humber river ; among the largest groups of peoples are the West Saxons ( later Wessex ), the East Angles and Mercians ( later the Kingdom of Mercia ), and the Kingdom of Kent.
The Angles strengthened their influence over the area in 628, when ( says the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ), the West Saxons fought the ( Anglian ) Penda of Mercia at Cirencester and afterwards came to terms.
* Jill Freud ( born 1927 ), actress ( and wife of Sir Clement Freud MP for Isle of Ely 1973-87 ) founded ' Jill Freud and Company ' whilst working with the Angles Theatre in 1980.
Taking into account both archeological findings and Roman sources, however, one could conclude that the Jutes inhabited both the Kongeå region and the more northern part of the peninsula, while the Angles lived approximately where the towns Haithabu and Schleswig later would emerge ( originally centered in the southeast of Schleswig in Angeln ), the Saxons ( earlier known apparently as the Reudingi ) originally centered in Western Holstein ( known historically as " Northalbingia ") and Slavic Wagrians, part of the Obodrites ( Abodrites ) in Eastern Holstein.
The Angles were part of the Federation of the Ingaevones, with their mythical ancestor and god of fertility Yngvi, and both terms might well share the same root ( inglish -> anglish ), say as the origin of the federation.
** Jay Newland ( engineer / mixer ), Gil Goldstein, Michael Brecker ( producers ) & the Michael Brecker Quindectet for Wide Angles
The ' Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ' simply states that he " was slain, and his five Ealdormen with him ", but Florence of Worcester ( who, incidentally carries the same two year error as the earlier ' Chronicles ' - both place this event in 825 instead of 827 ) fleshes out the story: " Ludecan ( Ludeca ), king of the Mercians, mustered his forces and led an army into the province of the East Angles, for the purpose of taking vengeance for the death of king Beornulf ( Beornwulf ), his predecessor.

Angles and .
Angles are usually presumed to be in a Euclidean plane, but are also defined in non-Euclidean geometry.
The Angles is a modern term for a Germanic people, who took their name from the region of Angeln, a district located in what is today Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
The Angles were one of the main groups that settled in Britain in the post-Roman period, founding several of the kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, and their name is the root of the name England.
The name of the Angles is first recorded in Latinized form, as Anglii, in the Germania of Tacitus.
Two important geographers, Strabo and Pliny, are silent concerning the Angles.
Since the Angles took a geographic name, they possibly had other names not based on geography.
Possibly the first instance of the Angles in recorded history is in Tacitus ' Germania, chapter 40, in which the " Anglii " are mentioned in passing in a list of Germanic tribes.
The Suebian language developed into Old High German, while the Angles and Jutes were among the speakers of Old Saxon.
The Angles, as such, are not listed at all.
A second possible solution is that these Angles of Ptolemy are not those of Schleswig at all.
The Angles are the subject of a legend about Pope Gregory I, who happened to see a group of Angle children from Deira for sale as slaves in the Roman market.
Approximate central regions of tribes mentioned in Beowulf with the location of the Angeln | Angles.
Like the Finnsburg Fragment and several shorter surviving poems, Beowulf has consequently been used as a source of information about Scandinavian personalities such as Eadgils and Hygelac, and about continental Germanic personalities such as Offa, king of the continental Angles.
Bede's account of the early migrations of the Angles and Saxons to England omits any mention of a movement of those peoples across the channel from Britain to Brittany described by Procopius, who was writing in the sixth century.
The newcomers included Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians.
Latin, the common language of the church, Old English, the language of the Angles and Saxons, Irish, spoken on the western coasts of Britain and in Ireland, Brythonic, ancestor of the Welsh language, spoken in large parts of western Britain, and Pictish, spoken in northern Britain.
The siege lasted four months before the fortress fell to the Vikings who returned to Ireland with many prisoners, " Angles, Britons and Picts ", in 871.
Thus the modern population of Hungary do not feel that they belong in the Western Siberia that the Hungarian Magyars left 12 centuries ago ; and the English descendants of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes do not yearn to reoccupy the plains of Northwest Germany.
Angles whose sum is a right angle are called complementary.
The newcomers are known to have included Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Frisians, and there is evidence of other groups as well.
Collectively known as the " Anglo-Saxons ", these were mainly Saxons from Northern Germany, and Angles and Jutes from the Jutland peninsula.
In the same period Angles had conquered the previously Brythonic territory south of the Clyde and Forth, initially creating the Anglo Saxon kingdom of Bernicia, later becoming a part of the Kingdom of Northumbria.

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