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chronicler and Æthelweard
King Alfred the Great and the chronicler Æthelweard identified this place with the district that is now called Angeln, in the province of Schleswig ( Slesvig ) ( though it may then have been of greater extent ), and this identification agrees with the indications given by Bede.
The chronicler Æthelweard is clearer on the point of agency, writing that it was Wulfstan and the ealdorman ( dux ) of the Mercians who deposed these ' deserters ' – perhaps born again pagans – and forced them to submit to Edmund.
Some scholars have identified him with Æthelweard, the well-known chronicler and ealdorman of the western shires.
In the Viking period, the chronicler Æthelweard reports that the most important town in Angeln was Hedeby.
The conclusion which can be derived from these prosopographical byways is that if the ealdorman and chronicler Æthelweard was her brother, she must have shared with him a common ancestor in King Æthelred.

chronicler and writing
The only source of this affair is the chronicler Liutprand of Cremona, writing some 50 years after the events of Sergius ’ pontificate.
Crusade chronicler William of Tyre, writing in the late 12th century, described sugar as " very necessary for the use and health of mankind ".
Referring approvingly to these hagiographies, the chronicler Cosmas of Prague, writing in about the year 1119, states:
Referring approvingly to these hagiographies, the chronicler Cosmas of Prague, writing in about the year 1119, states:
Meanwhile, the humanist chronicler Gaspar Frutuoso, writing in the second volume of his work Saudades da Terra mentioned: " These islands, known as Selvagens, apparently were discovered by Castilians, have a Castilian owner, as also Madeira and Azores archipelagos ... which will belong to this glorious and powerful Catholic King, the greatest in the world ".
Its use may have expanded across continents, e. g. Portuguese chronicler Gaspar Correia ( writing in the 1550s ), claims that in 1502, the Indian prince, the Zamorin of Calicut, dispatched negotiators bearing a " white cloth tied to a stick ", " as a sign of peace ", to his enemy Vasco da Gama.
Fulcher of Chartres ( born around 1059 in or near Chartres ) was a chronicler of the First Crusade, writing in Latin.
Schulz mentions that in Rangabhumi, Premchand comes across as a " superb social chronicler ", and although the novel contains some " structural flaws " and " too many authorial explanations ", it shows a " marked progress " in Premchand's writing style.
Then, during the rise of the internet / high tech in the late 1990s, Bronson became a leading chronicler of Silicon Valley in its heyday, writing two more best sellers.
Known as the first writing system of Arda, Sarati was invented by the Ñoldorin chronicler Rúmil of Valinor in the Valian Year of 1179.
Zosimus, a Byzantine chronicler writing around AD 500, records an invasion of Rome's Danubian provinces in 381 by a barbarian coalition of Huns, Scirii and Karpodakai (" Carpo-Dacians ").
The Arabian chronicler, Ibn Battuta, writing on the Riau islands in the 13th century states: " Here there are little islands, from which armed black pirates with poised arrows emerged, possessing armed warships ; they plunder people but do not enslave them.
As the Azorean chronicler Father Gaspar Frutuoso writing in the 16th Century, indicated, that the colonists benefited from the abundance of water and easy access to the sea:
The chronicler Walter Map, a Welshman writing in the 12th century, tells of a " wicked man " in Hereford who rose from the dead and wandered the streets of his village at night calling out the names of those who would die of sickness within three days.
The chronicler al-Zuhri, writing in the 1150s, called Azuggi the " capital of the Almoravids ".
He did, however, serve as a patron to Roger of Hoveden, the medieval chronicler who started writing about 1169.
A relatively later chronicler, writing during the reign of George IV Lasha ( son of Tamar and David Soslan ; 1212 – 1223 ), ascribes David Soslan, though vaguely, the Bagrationi ancestry.
He was still writing in 1199 and there are slight indications in another chronicle, the Gesta Regum, that he continued to write till 1210, when a sudden change in style and arrangement point to a new chronicler.
This meeting became more notable due to the writing of the contemporary chronicler Matthew Paris, who disparaged both Alexander and Otho.
William of Malmesbury, a chronicler of mixed Anglo-Norman descent writing in the twelfth century, described the Battle of Hastings as: " That fatal day for England, the sad destruction of our dear country patrie ".

chronicler and late
According to the late 13th century chronicler Martin of Opava, Stephen VIII was described as being a German, who was elected pope due to the power and influence of his royal relative, the German king Otto I. Martin states that Otto ignored the will of the cardinals in imposing Stephen upon them, and because Stephen was hated for being a German, he was taken by supporters of Alberic II, who proceeded to maim and disfigure him to such an extent that Stephen was unable to appear in public again.
This is supported by claims by a chronicler from the late 16th century, who wrote that Anne was twenty when she returned from France.
According to the late tenth-century chronicler, Richer of Rheims, in 936 Æthelstan sent Oda to France to arrange the return to the throne of France of King Louis IV.
According to some late sources, such as the chronicler John of Wallingford, Amlaíb was the son of Sitriuc and this West Saxon princess.
His breakthrough came with the 1944 triptych Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, and it was this work and his heads and figures of the late 1940s through to the mid 1950s that sealed his reputation as a notably bleak chronicler of the human condition.
A chronicler of Tours in the late twelfth century records the death, in 1066, of an Angevin baron named Geoffroi de Preulli, who supposedly " devised " or " invented " ( invenit ) the tournament.
His interest in and elaboration of economic details, statistical information, and political and psychological insight mark him as a more modern chronicler of late medieval Europe.
A document from the year 1157 says the Visconti were holders of the captaincy of Marliano ( today Mariano Comense ); late chronicler Galvano Fiamma confirms this version.
King Æthelberht ordered the church to be erected of " becoming splendour, dedicated to the blessed apostles Peter and Paul, and endowed it with a variety of gifts " William Thorne, the late fourteenth-century chronicler of the Abbey, records 598 as the year of the foundation.
late 12th century ), English chronicler, was a monk of St Swithin's house at Winchester.
Traces of the past can be cherished by visiting the Dolmen de Axeitos or " The Parthenon of Megalithic " as described by the late official chronicler of the municipality, Carlos Garcia Bayon.
He is then recorded by the Byzantine chronicler Theophanes the Confessor as having been responsible for the sack of the fortress of Charsianon in late 730, but Arab sources credit Mu ' awiyah ibn Hisham for this act.
Another chronicler, Robert of Gloucester, speaking in part of earlier centuries, in the mid to late thirteenth century:

chronicler and century
1143 ), English chronicler, was sacristan of the church of Beverley in the first half of the twelfth century.
Ælle was the first king recorded by the 8th century chronicler Bede to have held " imperium ", or overlordship, over other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
The 12th century chronicler Henry of Huntingdon produced an enhanced version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle that included 514 as the date of Ælle's death, but this is not secure.
While Tacitus called it Mare Suebicum after the Germanic people of the Suebi, the first to name it also as the Baltic Sea ( Mare Balticum ) was eleventh century German chronicler Adam of Bremen.
The chronicler William of Tyre reports on the renovation of the Church in the mid-12th century.
In turn, the 12th century chronicler Gallus Anonymus says that Dobrawa came to Poland surrounded by secular and religious dignitaries.
In the 16th century, in the reign of the Mughal Emperor Akbar, his chronicler Abu al-Fazl ibn Mubarak wrote in the famous Ain-i-Akbari:
According to Matthew Paris, the 13th century chronicler of St Albans Abbey, Abbot Ulsinus ( Wulsin ) founded three churches in 948, reputedly to tend to the physical and spiritual needs of the growing number of pilgrims to Alban's shrine: St Peter's, St Stephen's and St Michael's.
The 2nd century chronicler Hegesippus also left an account of the death of James, and while the details he provides diverge from those of Josephus, the two accounts share similar elements.
A century and a half later in the poem La Prison amoreuse ( 1372-73 ) by French chronicler and poet Jean Froissart ( c. 1337-1405 ), we find:
His recounting of the period was remarkable for the rise of what 19th century papal historians saw as a " pornocracy ", or " rule of the harlots ", a reversal of the natural order as they saw it, according to Liber pontificalis and a later chronicler who was also biased against Sergius III.
According to a 17th century chronicler, Ibrahim had asked Suleiman not to promote him to such high positions, fearing for his safety ; to which Suleiman replied that under his reign no matter what the circumstance, Ibrahim would never be put to death.
The 6th century chronicler Jordanes reports a tradition that they had been driven out of their homeland by the North Germanic Dani, which places their origins in the Danish isles or southernmost Sweden.
During the 13th century a French chronicler who travelled through Calabria stated that “ the peasants of Calabria spoke nothing but Greek ”.
The eighth century monk and chronicler the Venerable Bede wrote a history of the English church called Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum ; the history only covers events up to 731, but as one of the major sources for Anglo-Saxon history it provides important background information for Offa's reign.
Haifa ( or Haifah ) is mentioned by the mid-11th century Persian chronicler Nasir Khusraw, and the 12th and 13th century Arab chroniclers, Muhammad al-Idrisi and Yaqut al-Hamawi.
Eusebius is also said to have referred to Hefa as Caiaphas civitas, and Benjamin of Tudela, the 12th century Jewish traveller and chronicler, is said to have attributed the city's founding to Caiaphas, the Jewish high priest at the time of Jesus.
One twelfth century chronicler described her as of noble birth, and she may have been related to St Dunstan.
According to the twelfth century chronicler William of Malmesbury, the abbey was built on a gravel spur " between the rivers Kennet and Thames, on a spot calculated for the reception of almost all who might have occasion to travel to the more populous cities of England ".
A 16th century chronicler Guagnini wrote in his famous book Sarmatiae Europeae descriptio, that Rus ' was divided in three parts.
A copy of the law was transcribed by a monastic chronicler into the Croyland Chronicle, where it was discovered by Sir George Buck more than a century later during the reign of James I.

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