heptarchy การใช้
- Arms were attributed to the kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon heptarchy.
- In reality, the end of the Heptarchy was a gradual process.
- Sussex and Wessex ) during the Heptarchy.
- This period has been described as the Heptarchy, though this term has now fallen out of academic use.
- It was attributed to the Kingdom of Sussex later in a work called " Saxon Heptarchy " by John Speed that dates from 1611.
- By about 600, Anglo-Saxon England had become divided into a number of small kingdoms within what eventually became known as the Heptarchy.
- Recent research has revealed that some of the Heptarchy kingdoms ( notably Essex and Sussex ) did not achieve the same status as the others.
- By about 449, open conflict had broken out, and the immigrants began to establish their own kingdoms in what would eventually become the Heptarchy.
- Thousands of people, called Vigilants, stand ready to aid Patience in reclaiming the Heptarchy and fulfilling the prophecy at the center of their religion.
- During the Heptarchy, the most powerful king among the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms might become acknowledged as Bretwalda, a high king over the other kings.
- The first kings of Mercia were pagans, and they resisted the encroachment of Christianity longer than those of other kingdoms in the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy.
- Norfolk, Suffolk and several adjacent areas became the kingdom of East Anglia ( one of the heptarchy ), which later merged with Mercia and then with Wessex.
- Before the Kingdom of England was established as a united entity, there were various kingdoms in the area of which the main seven were known as the heptarchy.
- "' Brimpton "'is a mostly rural village and common field contains five round barrows from the period of the Heptarchy in Anglo Saxon England.
- Though " heptarchy " suggests the existence of seven kingdoms, the number fluctuated, as kings contended for supremacy at various times within the conventional period.
- The location of the barrow is right at the usual boundary of the kingdoms of Essex and Mercia during the early ( 6th century ) Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy.
- Frank Stenton describes the hidage figures given for the Heptarchy kingdoms as exaggerated and in the instances of Mercia and Wessex, " entirely at variance with other information ".
- The East Angles formed one of the seven kingdoms known to post-mediaeval historians as the Heptarchy, a scheme used by Henry of Huntingdon in the twelfth century.
- Before then, it consisted of a number of petty kingdoms which gradually coalesced into a Heptarchy of seven powerful states, the most powerful of which were Mercia and Wessex.
- ตัวอย่างการใช้เพิ่มเติม: 1 2 3