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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
Longer titles found:
Elbe Germanic peoples (view )
searching for elbe Germanic 11 found (80 total)
alternate case: Elbe Germanic
Rune
(6,976 words)
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northern Germany. A "West Germanic hypothesis" suggests transmission via Elbe Germanic groups, while a "Gothic hypothesis" presumes transmission via East Germanic
Germanic culture
(958 words)
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Germanic culture Migration period art Animal style Anglo-Saxon culture Elbe Germanic culture Germanic folklore Brogan, O., 1936. Trade between the Roman
Floß
(2,136 words)
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tribes settled in the Upper Palatinate. From the mid-1st century BC, Elbe Germanic tribes moved from north to south, displacing the Celts. Around 500,
History of Franconia
(7,489 words)
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of Rome in the first century BC and the simultaneous advance of the Elbe Germanic tribes from the north, Celtic culture began to decline. A Germanic cemetery
Saxons
(8,125 words)
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Germanic speakers towards the Roman limes (1.), southward migration of Elbe Germanic speakers (2.). Position of North Sea Germanic dialects during the
Early history of Pomerania
(4,601 words)
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culture), the expansion of the Gustow group, and many parallels to the Elbe Germanic areas. The dead were buried unburned. The culture existed until the
Lüneburg
(6,772 words)
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the Kalkberg which was the seat of the Billunger nobles from 951. The Elbe -Germanic name Hliuni corresponds to the Lombard word for "refuge site". From
Germanic peoples
(20,237 words)
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Germanicists have argued that the Przeworsk culture was occupied by the Elbe -Germanic tribes and there are also those who argue that the Przeworsk reflects
Lake Constance
(10,375 words)
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In times when the Romans had located the so-called "Suebi", then an Elbe Germanic tribe near a sea, this was understandable. The authors of the Early
Kingdom of the Suebi
(9,362 words)
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language. In particular, the Suebi are associated with the concept of an "Elbe Germanic " group of early dialects spoken by the Irminones, entering Germany from
Castra Alteium
(4,251 words)
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among the East Germanic peoples. Other comb types from Alzey come from Elbe Germanic regions. Half-round, serrated belt buckle plates of the "Muthmannsdorf"