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Walafrid and Strabo
Walafrid Strabo, a monk of the Abbey of St. Gall writing in the 9th century, remarked, in discussing the people of Switzerland and the surrounding regions, that only foreigners called them the Alemanni, but that they gave themselves the name of Suevi.
* Walafrid Strabo ( c 808 49 )
The language survived as a domestic language in the Iberian peninsula ( modern Spain and Portugal ) as late as the 8th century, and Frankish author Walafrid Strabo wrote that it was still spoken in the lower Danube area and in isolated mountain regions in Crimea in the early 9th century ( see Crimean Gothic ).
* 849 Walafrid Strabo
* Walafrid Strabo, Swabian monk and theological writer
* August 18 Walafrid Strabo, German monk and theologian
* Walafrid Strabo
The fragmentary oldest Life was recast in the 9th century by two monks of Reichenau, enlarged in 816 824 by the celebrated Wettinus, and about 833 884 by Walafrid Strabo, who also revised a book of the miracles of the saint.
Walafrid Strabo described it in his poem Hortulus as having a sweet scent and being useful for many human ailments — he went back to the Greek root for the name and called it lelifagus.
Returning to Fulda two years later, he was entrusted with the principal charge of the school, which under his direction became one of the most preeminent centers of scholarship and book production in Europe, and sent forth such pupils as Walafrid Strabo, Servatus Lupus of Ferrières, and Otfrid of Weissenburg.
* Walafrid Strabo ( 808-849 )
He was trained at the monastery of Fulda, then under the abbot Hrabanus Maurus, and became the friend of Walafrid Strabo and Loup de Ferrières.
cs: Walafrid Strabo
no: Walafrid Strabo
sh: Walafrid Strabo
* Walafrid Strabo ( 113 114 )
# REDIRECT Walafrid Strabo

Walafrid and .
Other works ascribed to Walafrid tell of Saint Gall in prose and verse.
Walafrid Strabo's works are theological, historical and poetical.
An Expositio quatuor Evangeliorum is also ascribed to Walafrid.
Of special interest is the fact that Walafrid, in his exposition of the Mass, shows no trace of any belief in the doctrine of transubstantiation as taught by his famous contemporary Radbertus ; according to him, Christ gave to his disciples the sacraments of his Body and Blood in the substance of bread and wine, and taught them to celebrate them as a memorial of his Passion.
At the time he sent it to Grimald Walafrid had, as he himself tells his audience, hardly passed his eighteenth year, and he begs his correspondent to revise his verses, because, " as it is not lawful for a monk to hide anything from his abbot ", he fears he may be beaten with deserved stripes.
However, an old tradition linked the book to Pope Gelasius I, apparently based on Walafrid Strabo's ascription of what is evidently this book to the 5th-century pope.

alternatively and spelt
The Noongar (; alternatively spelt Nyungar, Nyoongar, Nyoongah, Nyungah, or Noonga ) are an Indigenous Australian people who live in the south-west corner of Western Australia, from Geraldton on the west coast to Esperance on the south coast.
After the Knights Hospitaller took control of the castle, it became known as Crac de l ' Ospital ; the name Crac des Chevaliers ( alternatively spelt Krak des Chevaliers ) was introduced by Guillaume Rey in the 19th century.
Until the Victorian era it was alternatively spelt Shobington ; it was at about this time that the name changed to its current spelling.
This creation is often referred to as Baron Strange de Knokyn or Baron Strange of Knokyn ( alternatively spelt Knokin or Knockin ).
Explanations have been put forward that the name means ' meeting place ' in the Walgalu language, with reference to the various transcriptions of Kambera ( alternatively spelt Kamberra, Nganbra or Nganbirra ).
A large council estate, Meadow Well ( alternatively spelt Meadowell or Meadowwell on local signs ) to the west of the town, was constructed to house residents displaced by the clearance of the Dockwray Square slum.
In 1315, the daughter of King Robert I of Scotland ( Robert The Bruce ), Marjorie ( alternatively spelt Margery ) Bruce, married Walter Stewart ( or Steward ) ( 1293 1326 ), the 6th Lord High Steward of Scotland.
Hampstead Norreys ( alternatively spelt Hampstead Norris ) is a village and civil parish in Berkshire, England.
The northernmost point of South Norwood is at Beaulieu Heights ( alternatively spelt Beulah Heights, Beaulah Heights and Beulieu Heights ) which contains Beulah Heights Park, overlapping with Upper Norwood and New Town.
Endorsement ( alternatively spelt indorsement ) may refer to:
Leeghwater himself spelt his name alternatively as Leegwater, Leegh-water, Leeghwater and Leechwater.
Thanasis Veggos, alternatively spelt Thanassis and / or Vengos, ( Greek: Θανάσης Βέγγος ; pronounced: Thanássis Véngos ; 29 May 19273 May 2011 ) was a Greek actor and director born in Neo Faliro, Piraeus.
Vemulawada ( alternatively spelt Vemulawada ) is a town 35 km from Karimnagar, in the Andhra Pradesh state, India.
It can alternatively be spelt Hoogli or Hugli.
Darvaz (: Дарвоз / درواز ), alternatively spelt Darwaz, Darvoz, or Darwoz, was an independent principality until the 19th century, ruled by a mir and its capital was at Kalai-Khumb.
Koothu (), and alternatively spelt as kuttu, means dance or performance.
It was alternatively known as Kingston on Thames ( spelt with or without hyphens ).

alternatively and Strabo
The gorge, alternatively known as the Iberian Gates or the Caucasian Gates, is mentioned in the Georgian annals under the names of Ralani, Dargani, Darialani ; Strabo calls it Porta Caucasica and Porta Cumana ; Ptolemy, Fortes Sarmatica ; it was sometimes known as Porta Caucasica and Portae Caspiae ( a name bestowed also on the " gate " or pass beside the Caspian Sea at Derbent ); and the Tatars call it Darioly.

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