When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of Frisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Frisia

    Its end came in 734 at the Battle of the Boarn, when the Frisians were defeated by the Franks, who then conquered the western part up to the Lauwers. They conquered the area east of the Lauwers in 785, when Charlemagne defeated Widukind. This Frisia Magna was partly occupied by Vikings in the 840s, until they were expelled between 885 and 920 ...

  3. Frisian Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisian_Kingdom

    The earliest Frisian records name four social classes, the ethelings (nobiles in Latin documents) and frilings, who together made up the "Free Frisians" who might bring suit at court, and the laten or liten with the slaves, who were absorbed into the laten during the Early Middle Ages, as slavery was not so much formally abolished, as evaporated.

  4. Frisians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisians

    Though it is impossible to know exact numbers and migration patterns, research has indicated that many Frisians were part of the wave of ethnic groups to colonise areas of present-day England alongside the Angles, Saxons and Jutes, [24] starting from around the fifth century when Frisians arrived along the coastline of Kent. [25] [26]

  5. Frisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisia

    The earliest Frisian records name four social classes, the ethelings (nobiles in Latin documents) and frilings, who together made up the "Free Frisians" who might bring suit at court, and the laten or liten with the slaves, who were absorbed into the laten during the Early Middle Ages, as slavery was not so much formally abolished, as evaporated.

  6. Frisii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisii

    It was written more than 500 years after the last unambiguous reference to the ancient Frisii (the Panegyrici Latini in c. 297), and at a time when medieval Frisia and the Frisians were playing a dominant role in North Sea trade. The idea that the Frisians might have settled in Scotland and Ireland has triggered several imaginative histories.

  7. Archaeologists found Viking skeletons over 1,000 years old ...

    www.aol.com/archaeologists-found-viking...

    Archaeologists found 50 Viking-era skeletons in Åsum, Denmark.. Dating back to the 9th or 10th century, the graves are evidence of international trade. The area's growth was influenced by these ...

  8. Frisian Islands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisian_Islands

    The Frisian Islands, also known as the Wadden Islands or the Wadden Sea Islands, form an archipelago at the eastern edge of the North Sea in northwestern Europe, stretching from the northwest of the Netherlands through Germany to the west of Denmark.

  9. Seven Sealands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Sealands

    In Frisian historiography, the Seven Sealands (Old Frisian: Saun Selanden; [a] West Frisian: Sân Seelannen) were jurisdictional regions in medieval Frisia. An outgrowth of the origin myths of the Frisians , these divisions were used ideologically to refer to all of Frisia as early as the 14th century and became extremely popular by the ...