Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The name is believed to be of Jutish origin.
Ehta' is a Jutish personal name, while 'ham' means settlement.
Hengest has sometimes been identified with the Jutish king of Kent.
The county was occupied by Jutish tribes until Saxon times.
Later also the contacts increased between the Danes and the people on the northern half of the Jutish peninsula.
Following the Jutish example the Saxons began invading Britain in earnest.
See Witta, son of Wecta for the mythological Jutish chieftain.
The Quoit Brooch Style has been regarded as Jutish, from the 5th century.
The Jutish cemetery at Sarre revisited: A rescue evaluation.
Great Chart is first mentioned in 762 as Seleberhtes Cert, a Jutish name.
Shepway was an ancient division of Kent and originated, probably in the 6th Century, during the Jutish colonisation.
A lathe was an ancient administration division of Kent, and may well have originated during a Jutish colonisation of the county.
In the southern, narrow part of the Jutish peninsula the trackway followed the edge of western marshes and eastern moraine country.
The remaining Jutish population in Jutland assimilated in with the settling Danes.
Over the winter, the Danes and their Jutish allies brood over the fall of Hnæf.
Hithinus fell in love with Hilda, the daughter of Höginus, a strongly built Jutish chieftain.
He married Ingeborg, the daughter of the Jutish chieftain Harald Klak.
Alone among the kingdoms then existing Kent was Jutish, rather than Anglian or Saxon.
Over the next 100 years, an Anglo-Saxon community formed within the city walls, as Jutish refugees arrived, possibly intermarrying with the locals.
The white horse of Kent is the old symbol for the Jutish kingdom of Kent, dating from the 6th-8th century.
The Saxons are followed by a band of Jutish raiders, who find Aquila and take him to Jutland.
Another suggestion is that the settlement took its name from Jutish people 'Kyn', kin folk, who settled on a wooded hill or 'snode'.
By this compact, the often rebellious Jutish nobility lost the support they had previously enjoyed in Schleswig and Holstein.
Vortigern employed Jutish mercenaries to help fight the Saxons who were attempting to establish settlements in Kent.
The historian Margaret Deanesly argued that it was made at Canterbury, by a native Jutish artisan.