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Englishry
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Englishry
Specifically, presentment of Englishry refers to the establishment that a person slain was an Englishman rather than a Norman. Englishry, if established, excused the hundred.
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Englishry
Englishry (ˈɪŋglɪʃrɪ) Forms: 5 Englisherie, 7 englechery, -esherie, Englichiré, -ishiré, -ishrye, 8 Englecerie, -eschiré, -escyre, -icherie, 7– Englishry. [ad. AFr. englecherie, f. englesche, ad. ME. englisch, English; see -ry.] 1. a. The fact of being an Englishman. Chiefly in legal phrase Presentm...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Irishry
Irishry Hist. or arch. (ˈaɪərɪʃrɪ) Also 5 -ery. [f. Irish a. + -ry. Cf. Sc. ershry, s.v. Erse.] 1. collect. The native Irish, as opposed to English settlers in Ireland.1375 Barbour Bruce xvi. 317 (Camb. MS.) He had apon his party The eryschry [Edin. MS. Irschery; ed. 1616 Irishry]. c 1450 Holland Ho...
Oxford English Dictionary
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English national identity
unification of the Kingdom of England in the ninth and tenth centuries, and changing status once again in the eleventh century after the Norman Conquest, when Englishry
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Phantasy Quartet
The musicologist Eric Roseberry summarises: "If the pastoral slow section echoes the leisurely folkiness of an Englishry that Britten had not yet entirely
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Welshry
Welshry (ˈwɛlʃrɪ) Also 4 Walschrie; 7 Welshrye, 9 Welshery. [f. Welsh a. + -ry, or ad. med.L. Walescheria (1249).] † 1. Welshmen or Welsh people collectively. Obs.1338 R. Brunne Chron. (1810) II. 244 After þam alle he sent, To fend þe Walschrie with him at þer powere. 2. That part of a town or count...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Anglo-Saxonism in the 19th century
See also
Albion's Seed
Anglosphere
British Israelism
Englishry
Our Island Story
White Anglo-Saxon Protestants
References
Further reading
Anderson
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-ry
-ry, suffix a reduced form of -ery, occurring chiefly after an unstressed syllable ending in d, t, l, n, or sh (the usual type being words of three syllables with the stress on the first), but also in a few cases after stressed vowels or diphthongs. The older examples sometimes represent OF. forms i...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Welsh people
immigration to Wales after the Norman Conquest, and several Normans encouraged immigration to their new lands; the Landsker Line dividing the Pembrokeshire "Englishry The terms Englishry and Welshry are used similarly about Gower.
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Foster Barham Zincke
The Plough and the Dollar, or the Englishry of a Century hence, London, 1883, 8vo.
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fugitive
fugitive, a. and n. (ˈfjuːdʒɪtɪv) Forms: 4–6 fugit-, fugyt-, -if(e, -yf(e, -yve, (5 fegetyff), 6– fugitive. [a. F. fugitif, fugitive, ad. L. fugitīvus, f. fugit- ppl. stem of fugĕre to flee.] A. adj. (Formerly sometimes with inflected plural, esp. in legal phrases after AF.) 1. Apt or tending to fle...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Leges Edwardi Confessoris
"Presentment of Englishry and the Murder Fine." Speculum 12, no. 3 (1937): 285-98
O'Brien, Bruce R. (ed. and tr.)
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valiant
valiant, a. (and n.) (ˈvæljənt) Forms: α. 4 vaillaunte, vaylaunt, vailant, 5 -aunt, vaillant. β. 4, 6 valliaunt, 5 valya(u)nte, 5–6 valya(u)nt, 6 waly-, valiaunt(e, Sc. valliant, 4– valiant (6–7 valient); 6 valeaunt(e, valeant, Sc. vaill-, wailleant. γ. (Chiefly Sc.) 5–6 vailȝeand, 6 vail(l)-, wailȝ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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