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Saxon and also
We also know that the Saxon Shore as reflected in the Notitia was created as a part of the Theodosian reorganization of Britain ( post A.D. 369 ).
This is also the period in which almost all chroniclers agree that the Saxon people of pre-unification England submitted to Alfred.
The word black comes from Old English blæc (" black, dark ", also, " ink "), from Proto-Germanic * blakkaz (" burned "), from Proto-Indo-European * bhleg-(" to burn, gleam, shine, flash "), from base * bhel-(" to shine "), related to Old Saxon blak (" ink "), Old High German blah (" black "), Old Norse blakkr (" dark "), Dutch blaken (" to burn "), and Swedish bläck (" ink ").
He also is parsimonious in his praise for Aldhelm, a West Saxon who had done much to convert the native Britons to the Roman form of Christianity.
* The center under the command of Otto and of Thiebaud, Duke of Lorraine, and Henry, Duke of Brabant and Count Philip Courtenay-Namur: there are also many of the Saxon soldiers, knights and infantry of Brabant and Germany.
He also maintained his Indo-European studies with courses in Celtic, Old Saxon, Swedish and Sanskrit.
" The root also appears in Old Saxon fri which means " beloved lady ", in Swedish as fria (" to propose for marriage ") and in Icelandic as frjá which means " to love.
" This particular line of criticism also misses the obvious parallels that existed between the story's background ( England conquered by the Normans in 1066, when they killed Saxon King Harold at Hastings, about 130 years previously ) and the prevailing situation in Scott's native Scotland ( Scotland's union with England in 1707 – about the same length of time had elapsed before Scott's writing and the resurgence in his time of Scottish nationalism evidenced by the cult of Robert Burns, the famous poet who deliberately chose to work in Scots vernacular though he was an educated man and spoke modern English eloquently ).
West Low German, also known as Low Saxon (, ), is a group of dialects spoken in the northwest of Germany and adjacent territories of The Netherlands and Denmark.
While Dutch is classified as a Low Franconian language, the Dutch Low Saxon varieties, which are also defined as Dutch dialects, form a dialect continuum with the Westphalian language.
The Ottonian dynasty Ottonen was a dynasty of Germanic Kings ( 919 – 1024 ), named after its first emperor but also known as the Saxon dynasty after the family's origin.
The idea of Robin Hood as a high-minded Saxon fighting Norman lords also originates in the 19th century.
It derives from the Scottish Gaelic Sasunnach meaning, originally, " Saxon ", from the Latin " Saxones "; it was also formerly applied by Highlanders to ( non-Gaelic-speaking ) Lowlanders.
The 8th Century English historian Bede disagrees with Gildas, and states that the Saxon invasions continued after the battle of Mons Badonicus, including also Jutish and Anglic expeditions, resulting in a swift overrunning of the entirety of South-Eastern Britain, and the foundation of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
Experts believe it may also yield clues as to the boundary of the ancient Anglo Saxon kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria.
The start of the Viking Age, with the sack of Lindisfarne, also coincided with Charlemagne's Saxon Wars, or Christian wars with pagans in Saxony.
XSLT processors are implemented as standalone software such as Saxon and Xalan, and also as components of other software, for example:
In the middle of the 10th century, when the Saxon dukes of the House of Liudolfing had also become German kings, King Otto the Great entrusted more and more of his ducal authority to Hermann Billung.
In the 9th century the Saxon Hessengau also came under the rule of the Franconians.
His Saxon Wars also partly took place in what is thought of as Westphalia today.
The Old English is a reflex of the Common Germanic * wira-alđiz, also reflected in Old Saxon werold, Old High German weralt, Old Frisian warld and Old Norse verǫld ( whence the Icelandic veröld ).
She is also an important figure in The Saxon Stories of Bernard Cornwell, especially from Sword Song on.
A more realistic but also complicated potential is known as Woods Saxon potential.
In the Westphalian dialects of Low Saxon, in East Frisian Low Saxon and in the Saterland Frisian language, Saturday is called Satertag, also akin to Dutch Zaterdag, which has the same linguistic roots as the English word Saturday.

Saxon and issued
His successor Ine issued one of the oldest surviving English codes of laws and established a second West Saxon bishopric.
He issued the oldest surviving English code of laws apart from those of the kingdom of Kent, and established a second West Saxon bishopric at Sherborne, covering the territories west of Selwood Forest.
In the war against Austria, Bernadotte led the Saxon contingent at the Battle of Wagram ( 6 July 1809 ), on which occasion, on his own initiative, he issued an Order of the Day attributing the victory principally to the valour of his Saxons, which order Napoleon at once disavowed.
* The Saxon city of Goslar starts making efforts to redeem its already issued annuities, a sure indication of financial difficulty and maybe an early sign of the 13th century crisis.
A charter issued in the first year of Æthelberht's reign reflects an extraordinary new kind of assembly: it was the first charter of a West Saxon king to include a full complement both of West Saxon and of Kentish witnesses.
It is notable that, although issued by the Saxon king of a Saxon kingdom, the term used in the laws to define Ine's Germanic subjects is Englisc.
On 5 March 1460 Christian granted a coronation charter ( or Freiheitsbrief ), issued first at Ribe ( Treaty of Ribe,, ) and afterwards at Kiel, which also repeated that Schleswig and Holstein-Rendsburg must remain united " dat se bliven ewich tosamende ungedelt " ( Middle Low German or Low Saxon, i. e. that they remain for ever together undivided ).
His efforts in this matter had received great encouragement when Albert of Saxony issued an edict dealing with the maltreatment of soldiers in the Saxon contingent, thus cutting the ground from under the feet of the Imperial Government, which had persistently attempted to deny or to explain away the cases put forward by Bebel.
After Ceolwulf's disappearance in 879, coinage issued in English Mercia named the West Saxon king, yet Æthelred issued charters in his own name, implying royal authority.
Ballenstedt was first mentioned in a 1030 deed, issued by Count Esico of Ballenstedt, son of one Count Adalbert, who held the office of a Vogt of Nienburg Abbey, and Hidda, a daughter of Margrave Odo I of the Saxon Ostmark.

Saxon and national
That the king should have consented to treat with his rebellious son, to refer the compromise to a meeting of Saxon nobles, to moderate the pugnacity of his own supporters, and to resign the rule over the more important half of his dominions – all this testifies to the fact that Æthelwulf ’ s Christian spirit did not exhaust itself in the giving of lavish charities to the Church, but availed to reconcile him to the sacrifice of prestige and power in the cause of national peace.
In view of his name, he possibly was a descendant of the Saxon leader and national hero Widukind, mentioned in the Royal Frankish Annals, who had battled Charlemagne in the Saxon Wars from 777 to 785.
As the regulator of national banks, Saxon was concerned with the competitive position of commercial banks.
Saxon wanted to expand the powers of national banks.
After many of Comptroller Saxon ’ s decisions granting national banks greater powers had been challenged, commercial banking firms had been able to expand their non-securities activities through the “ one bank holding company .” Because the Bank Holding Company Act only limited nonbanking activities of companies that owned two or more commercial banks, “ one bank holding companies ” could own interests in any type of company other than securities firms covered by Glass-Steagall Section 20.
Although by the 14th century the confederation faced wider challenges from a greater consolidation of national identity in the monarchy and Parliament, the legacy of the Saxon authority remained.
Saxon Switzerland () is a hilly climbing area and national park around the Elbe valley south-east of Dresden in Saxony, Germany.
In September 1990, even before the reunification of Germany, a national park was created in Saxon Switzerland in order to protect the unique natural character of the hill range.
In Germany there is the national park region of Saxon Switzerland, which consists two elements: the Saxon Switzerland National Park itself, founded in 1990 and covered an area of 93 km² ; and the protected area surrounding it that was founded in 1956 and covers 287 km².
Nonetheless, one of the consequences of the Reformation was the emergence of an almost perfect equivalence, in the Transylvanian context, of Lutheran and Saxon, with the Lutheran Church in Transylvania being de facto a Volkskirche, i. e. the ' national church ' of Transylvanian Saxons.
This has met with opposition from the borough councilor for Saxon Shore ward where the rest stop would be sited ; he accused the County council of " not thinking strategically ", not considering the environmental impact properly, and of siting the facility too close to a National Grid facility where he expects the fuel in vehicles to be a danger to a " facility of strategic national importance ".
After the Battle of Otford he returned to Edmund, but only by his treachery at the Battle of Ashingdon to secure the utter defeat of the national Saxon cause.
Articles suitable for direct inclusion below are those of national ( including Länderbahn ) importance such as national railway companies ( e. g. Royal Saxon State Railways ), national rail systems ( e. g. S-Bahn ) or locomotive genres ( e. g. Einheitsdampflokomotive ), or lists of national significance ( e. g. List of scheduled railway routes in Germany ).
* Saxon Switzerland, mountainous climbing area and national park in Saxony, Germany
* Saxon Switzerland, a mountainous area and national park near Dresden in Saxony, Germany

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