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Its and Anglo-Saxon
Its composition by an anonymous Anglo-Saxon poet is dated between the 8th and the early 11th century.
Its name is thought to derive from the rye that was once grown in this area, or from the Anglo-Saxon word rithe which means a small stream.
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Cissan dūn = " hill belonging to man named Cissa ".
Its name derives from the Anglo-Saxon Wifeleslēah: " Wifel's woodland clearing ".
Its name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon words gāt, ' goat ', and wīc, ' dairy farm ', i. e. ' goat farm '.
Its name comes from the Anglo-Saxon flēot " tidal inlet ".< ref > In Anglo-Saxon times, the Fleet served as a dock for shipping.
Its subjugation may have occurred around AD 500, from the opposition of the British leader known as Arthur, the second, third and fourth of whose twelve battles were fought in ' Linnuis ' and whose twelfth victory held back Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years.
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon īeg
Its name may come from Anglo-Saxon manig-fald = " many folds ", referring to its meanders.
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Leman-tūn or Lemen-tūn = " farm on the River Leam ".
The Angles re-occupied a 1st century Roman fort on the site of Jarrow in the 5th century Its name is recorded around AD 750 as Gyruum, representing Old English Gyrwum = " the marsh dwellers ", from Anglo-Saxon gyr = " mud ", " marsh ".
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Læccford
Its name comes from that of the Cilternsæte, a tribe that occupied the area in early Anglo-Saxon period.
Its name came via Anglo-Saxon from Celtic leman or lemin = " having elm trees " or " marshy river ".
Its name most likely came from Anglo-Saxon Ēanafeld or similar, meaning " open land belonging to a man called Ēana " or " open land for lambs ".
Its name is recorded in Anglo-Saxon in 955 AD as Andeferas, and is thought to be of Celtic origin: compare Welsh onn dwfr = " ash ( tree ) water ".
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Boiacot = either " Boia's Cottage " or " the cottage of the boys or servants ".
Its churchyard contains the stump of a preaching cross which may be Anglo-Saxon ; if so, it would pre-date the main church.
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Dena fær = " the ford or passage of the Danes ", referring to Viking invasions.
Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book as Banford, and likely came from Anglo-Saxon Bēamford = " tree-trunk ford ".
Its name came from Anglo-Saxon Pirige-fyrhþ = " sparse woodland where peartrees grow ".
Its position, so far from the village, it is thought, arose from its purpose, in Anglo-Saxon times, of serving travellers crossing the river on their way from Ashbourne to Nottingham.
Its earliest known developed form, one that continues to the present-day, is arguably the decorative surface pattern work exemplified by the Lindisfarne Gospels and the exterior carving of Anglo-Saxon churches and monuments.

Its and name
Its name means " earth wolf " in the Afrikaans / Dutch language.
Its name is Latin for " water-carrier " or " cup-carrier ", and its symbol is 20px (), a representation of water.
Its Roman name was Obringa.
Its name means " pump " and it specifically represents an air pump.
Its name means " no feet " in Greek, and it represents a bird-of-paradise ( which were once believed to lack feet ).
Its name has become a byword for any and all supposed advanced prehistoric lost civilizations.
Its name is derived from the nickname for New York, the Empire State.
Its scientific name is Musa textilis.
Its name implies associations dating back to the time of Columba and, although undocumented before the 12th century, it may have served the monks of the Columban family as an ' Iona of the east ' from early times.
Its name is frequently shortened to in Japan.
Its title is a literal English translation of the German name for Mozart's Serenade No. 13 for strings in G major, Eine kleine Nachtmusik.
Its name was changed by Lysimachus to Alexandria Troas, in memory of Alexander III of Macedon ( Pliny merely states that the name changed from Antigonia to Alexandria ).
Its main creator was the Nigerian multi-instrumentalist and bandleader Fela Kuti, who gave it its name, who used it to revolutionise musical structure as well as the political context in his native Nigeria.
Its name commemorates the uprisings in East Berlin of 17 June 1953.
Its name was chosen by Queen Victoria in 1858 and, in 1871, it became the sixth province of Canada.
Its name can be connected to drum and bass or Miami Bass, whose influence can still be heard in Bass music's edgey raw energy.
Its name comes from a nightclub in London that is also called Bedrock.
Its first product was Turbo Pascal in 1983, developed by Anders Hejlsberg ( who later developed. NET and C # for Microsoft ) and before Borland acquired the product sold in Scandinavia under the name of Compas Pascal.
Its name originates from the gin's popularity in India during the British Raj and the sapphire in question is the Star of Bombay on display at the Smithsonian Institution.
Its Cornish name, Goen Bren, is first recorded in the 12th century.
Its English name, chive, derives from the French word cive, from cepa, the Latin word for onion.
Its name is Latin for " horned male goat " or " goat horn ", and it is commonly represented in the form of a sea-goat: a mythical creature that is half goat, half fish.
Its name is Latin for cross, and it is dominated by a cross-shaped asterism that is commonly known as the Southern Cross.
Its name refers to Cetus, a sea monster in Greek mythology, although it is often called ' the whale ' today.

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