saxons in Czech

Saxons Sasové Entry edited by: B2

Sentence patterns related to "saxons"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "saxons" from the English - Czech Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "saxons", or refer to the context using the word "saxons" in the English - Czech Dictionary.

1. Even perfidious Anglo - Saxons agree on the need for change.

2. Unsigned Brahms fascisticization Leptotyphlopidae saxons Nero abortogenic small-tired Bechirp

3. The difference is, you are Anglo-Saxons, we are Latins.

4. At some point after 440, the Anglo-Saxons settle in Britain.

5. The Franks took advantage of this by seizing some islands which the Saxons had held.

6. If they are defeated by the saxons, our peoples might never recover.

7. 11 The annals also recorded a war between the Romans and the Saxons.

8. Among the Anglo-Saxons, the pack consisted of 52 cards with four suits of 13 each.

9. The name Braker belongs to the early history of Britain, it's origins lie with the Anglo-Saxons

10. If the Anglo-Saxons eradicated the Celtic language, the Viking's impact was significantly less

11. "The dif-ference is," he said portentously, "you are Anglo-Saxons, we are Latins."

12. To the east of Frisia were the pagan Saxons, a diffuse and essentially nomadic conglomeration of tribes.

13. White Anglo-Saxons had 11 times more resources than Hispanics and 14 times more than Afro-Americans.

14. But churches had been burnt, priests killed, and proud Saxons had ritually washed off their enforced baptism.

15. "the Anglo-Saxons were exterminated, and unfortunate Harold with the number of had died (October 1066).

16. 23 Anglo-Saxons writhed on the stage, smeared with blood, singing words perhaps mercifully unintelligible, to brisk Purcellian strains.

17. All rights reserved**Viking: The Berserkers - In Dark Ages Britain, a group of young Saxons are captured

18. The Anglo-Saxons could never settle on swamps/Alluviums, and thus neither their realms nor administrative divisions ever contained them

19. The name Arbour has been recorded in British history since the time when the Anglo-Saxons ruled over the region

20. Indeed, France’s predicament might seem comparable with the “Anglo Saxons,” were it not for the French political class’s beloved baby, the euro.

21. The French Canadians of course, but also the Anglo-Saxons who, as Ottawa cuts the links with London, lose all uniqueness.

22. [1] The Anglo-Saxons were a cultural group formed by Germanic people that moved from mainland Europe to Britain

23. Vortigern, king of the Britons at the time of the arrival of the Saxons under Hengist and Horsa in the 5th century

24. Snorri relates that A餴ls Betook himself to pillage the Saxons, whose king was Geir骹r and queen Alof the Great

25. 28 The hierarchy of race with Aryans or Anglo-Saxons at its apex was under threat of contamination from the supposed lesser breeds.

26. King Arthur, the mythological figure associated with Camelot, may have been based on a 5th to 6th-century British warrior who staved off invading Saxons.

27. Athelstan was the King of the Anglo-Saxons from 924 to 927 and King of the English from 927 until his death in 939

28. Around the fifth century a.d., the Anglo-Saxons referred to April as Oster-monath or Eostre-monath, a reference to the goddess …

29. The hierarchy of race with Aryans or Anglo-Saxons at its apex was under threat of contamination from the supposed lesser breeds.

30. The Anglo-Saxons are responsible for the majority of the modern English language as well as the legal system and general society in England today.

31. Over the subsequent centuries, Vikings, Saxons, Anglo-Normans, Jews, English, Scots, Spaniards, French Huguenots and many other races came, saw and intermarried with the Celts.

32. Æthelstan or Athelstan was King of the Anglo-Saxons from 924 to 927 and King of the English from 927 to 939

33. At the beginning of ninth century, under their king Egbert the West Saxons of defeated the Mercies. In 8 Egbert became an overlord of all the England.

34. At the beginning of ninth century, under their king Egbert the West Saxons of defeated the Mercies. In Egbert became an overlord of all the England.

35. Following the arrival of the Anglo-Saxons, who occupied most what is now the country of England, some of the Britons migrated to Wales, Cornwall and …

36. Angulus Angles Flevum Franks Tulifurdum Saxons Asturica Western Roman Empire Bracara Western Roman Empire Brigantium Western Roman Empire Aregelia Langobards Lupfurdum Thuringians Uburzis Alamans Duna

37. One of them, Anderitum, was besieged and stormed by the Anglo-Saxons led by the first king of Sussex, Ælle (477-514), and his son, Cissa, in 491.

38. The Battle of Basing was a victory of a Danish Viking army over the West Saxons at the royal estate of Basing in Hampshire on about 22 January 871

39. The name Bodkins finds its origins with the ancient Anglo-Saxons of England.It was given to one who worked as a maker or seller of knives

40. Saxon invasion Ancient Britons were not overrun by invading Saxons in the Dark Ages, suggests a new map based on the DNA of people from the …

41. Angle, member of a Germanic people, which, together with the Jutes, Saxons, and probably the Frisians, invaded the island of Britain in the 5th century ce

42. The KS2 History curriculum explores the world of Anglo-Saxons as a part of British history, starting with the Stone Age and ending with the Viking and Anglo-Saxon struggle for power.

43. After several modest successes, a truce was called and the Saxons handed over to the Romans young men fit for duty in the Roman military – in exchange for free passage back to their homeland.

44. The Bretons arrived in their current homeland in the fifth and sixth centuries AD , fleeing the Anglo-Saxons in their native Britain.Brittany was independently governed until 1532, when it was formally annexed to France.

45. The surname Athelstan was first found in Kent where Athelstan or Æthelstan (895-940), was King of the West- Saxons and Mercians, and afterwards of all the English, was the son of Eadward the Elder, and of a noble Lady Ecgwyn

46. Athelings of Wessex, where Egbert and Ethelwulf, Alfred and Edward, ever resplendently, Spaciously shine, shepherds of peoples, Excellent Athelings, and Athelstan, Godwin And Harold the hero, helms of the Saxons, Have their names written in record of glory In legend and story, leaving their fame as an Honor forever to England, peerless

47. Agrimony was used in the Holy Salve of the Anglo Saxons who believed it kept them free from evil spirits and poi read more They also used to pound it with frogs blood to cure all sorts of things but the idea is far too repulsive for me.

48. The Baronage of England, or, An historical account of the lives and most memorable actions of our English nobility in the Saxons time to the Norman conquest, and from thence, of those who had their rise before the end of King Henry the Third's reign deduced from publick records, antient historians, and other authorities / by William Dugdale

49. William of Malmesbury, speaking of the laxity of manners among the Anglo-Saxons in the age preceding the Conquest, says, "Potabatur in commune ab omnibus, in hoc studio noctes perinde ut dies perpetuantibus, parvis et Abjectis domibus totos sumptus absumebant, Francis et Normannis absimiles, qui amplis et superbis ædificiis modicas expensas agunt."

50. Bede states that the Anglii, before coming to Great Britain, dwelt in a land called Angulus, "which lies between the province of the Jutes and the Saxons, and remains unpopulated to this day." Similar evidence is given by the Historia Brittonum.King Alfred the Great and the chronicler Æthelweard identified this place with Anglia, in the province of Schleswig (Slesvig) (though it may then have