Cumberland & Westmorland, Ancient and Modern: The People, Dialect, Superstitions and CustomsWhittaker and Company, 1857 - 171 sider |
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Side 5
... Romans , because - taking the current view of the language - they speak a Latin dialect ! Yet something equivalent to this is done daily concerning names and languages a little older . The nature of the information that may be obtained ...
... Romans , because - taking the current view of the language - they speak a Latin dialect ! Yet something equivalent to this is done daily concerning names and languages a little older . The nature of the information that may be obtained ...
Side 14
... Roman general to Britain . Our British ethnography has remained to the present day in the same rude state in which we received it from Cæsar - the conjectures of Tacitus concerning the Silures and Caledonians notwithstanding . On ...
... Roman general to Britain . Our British ethnography has remained to the present day in the same rude state in which we received it from Cæsar - the conjectures of Tacitus concerning the Silures and Caledonians notwithstanding . On ...
Side 16
... Romans showed so much fear , in canoes made by the process of hollowing single logs with fire and flint ? Much more probable is it that they only reached these islands in company with the Celts , after having obtained metal weapons ...
... Romans showed so much fear , in canoes made by the process of hollowing single logs with fire and flint ? Much more probable is it that they only reached these islands in company with the Celts , after having obtained metal weapons ...
Side 17
... other hand , the Cambro- Celtic term for capes was corn , a horn , as in Cornwall . Amongst the latest of the Hiberno - Celtic colonists , prior to the * Owen's Welsh Dictionary . C Roman conquest , were the Brigantes and Silures . The.
... other hand , the Cambro- Celtic term for capes was corn , a horn , as in Cornwall . Amongst the latest of the Hiberno - Celtic colonists , prior to the * Owen's Welsh Dictionary . C Roman conquest , were the Brigantes and Silures . The.
Side 18
The People, Dialect, Superstitions and Customs Jeremiah Sullivan. Roman conquest , were the Brigantes and Silures ... Romans invariably adopted the foreign name , and never gave one of their own . Celtic modes of burial are divided , by ...
The People, Dialect, Superstitions and Customs Jeremiah Sullivan. Roman conquest , were the Brigantes and Silures ... Romans invariably adopted the foreign name , and never gave one of their own . Celtic modes of burial are divided , by ...
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Cumberland & Westmorland, Ancient & Modern: The People, Dialect ... Jeremiah Sullivan Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2020 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Ambleside amongst ancient Angles appears Baal belong Beltain Blencogo boggle bone-fires Britain Bronze age burial-place cairn called Caltram Cambro-Celts Castle Celtiberians Celts century CHAPTER Christian colonised connexion Cornwall Cumberland Cumberland and Westmorland Cumbrian dialect Cumrew Cumwhitton custom Danes Danish Denmark district doubt Eamont Edenhall England English euphonic Europe evidence existence fairies fell fire fireworship former German giants Gothic graves ground Hiberno-Celtic hill Iberian inhabitants Ireland Irish Irish language island Kendal kind Kirkby Kirkby Stephen Kirkby Thore Lancashire land language late latter Luck of Edenhall means mixed modern monument mountain mythology names of places neighbourhood night Norse observed once origin orthography peculiar Penrith period person pond present probably pronunciation remains remarkable river Roman Saxon says Scandinavian Stone age story superstition supposed Tatár town traces tradition tribes tumulus Ullswater village vowel Wales Welsh Westmorland whilst witch words Worsaae
Populære passager
Side 16 - in which an urn is often placed. The author is possessed of one, discovered beneath an immense cairn at Roughlee, in Liddesdale. It is of the most barbarous construction; the middle of the substance alone having been subjected to the fire, over which, when hardened, the artist had laid an inner and outer coat of unbaked clay, etched with some very rude ornaments.
Side 31 - The system of Druidism is thought to have been formed in Britain, and from thence carried over into Gaul; and now those who wish to be more accurately versed in it, for the most part go thither
Side 128 - adds: I speke of many hundred yeres ago, But now can no man see none elves mo. In
Side 1 - die ältesten und dauerndsten Denkmäler, erzählt eine längst vergangene Nation gleichsam selbst ihre eigenen Schicksale, und es fragt sich nur, ob ihre Stimme uns noch verständlich bleibt.
Side 73 - In the early part of the (Icelandic) commonwealth, when a man was suspected of theft, a kind of tribunal composed of twelve persons named by him, and twelve by the person whose goods had been stolen, was instituted before the door of his dwelling, and hence called a door-doom; but as this manner of proceeding generally ended in bloodshed, it was abolished.'
Side 132 - the neighbouring villages to assemble at this well early in the afternoon of the second Sunday in May, and there to join in a variety of rural sports. It was the village wake,
Side 152 - a pace-egging, I hope you'll prove kind, I hope you'll prove kind with your eggs and strong beer, And we'll come no more nigh you until the next year.
Side 128 - in the uncultivated wilds of Northumberland, but even there I could only meet with a man who said that he had seen one that had seen fairies.
Side 106 - is the only other remains of fireworship in these counties. It was once an annual observance, and is still occasionally employed in the dales and some other localities (according to the import of the name, cattle-fire)
Side 15 - draw. It is supported by three large rude pillars about eight feet high; but there are also five others which are of no use at present, as not being high enough