Kapitel
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Preface
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- List of Tables xi
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Linguistic Conventions and Abbreviations xv
- Abstracts xvi
- Introduction: Frisians – Who, When, Where, Why? 1
- 1. Palaeogeography and People: Historical Frisians in an archaeological light 5
- 2. The Anglo-Frisian Question 25
- 3. Frisian between the Roman and the Early Medieval Periods: Language contact, Celts and Romans 43
- 4. ‘All quiet on the Western Front?’ The Western Netherlands and the ‘North Sea Culture’ in the Migration Period 53
- 5. Power and Identity in the Southern North Sea Area: The Migration and Merovingian Periods 75
- 6. How ‘English’ is the Early Frisian Runic Corpus? The evidence of sounds and forms 93
- 7. The Geography and Dialects of Old Saxon: River-basin communication networks and the distributional patterns of North Sea Germanic features in Old Saxon 125
- 8. Between Sievern and Gudendorf: Enclosed sites in the north-western Elbe– Weser triangle and their significance in respect of society, communication and migration during the Roman Iron Age and Migration Period 149
- 9. Cultural Convergence in a Maritime Context: Language and material culture as parallel phenomena in the early-medieval southern North Sea region 173
- 10. The Kingdom of East Anglia, Frisia and Continental Connections, c. ad 600–900 193
- 11. A Comparison of the Injury Tariffs in the Early Kentish and the Frisian Law Codes 223
- 12. Cultural Contacts between the Western Baltic, the North Sea Region and Scandinavia: Attributing runic finds to runic traditions and corpora of the Early Viking Age 243
- Index 273
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Figures vii
- List of Tables xi
- Preface xiii
- Acknowledgements xiv
- Linguistic Conventions and Abbreviations xv
- Abstracts xvi
- Introduction: Frisians – Who, When, Where, Why? 1
- 1. Palaeogeography and People: Historical Frisians in an archaeological light 5
- 2. The Anglo-Frisian Question 25
- 3. Frisian between the Roman and the Early Medieval Periods: Language contact, Celts and Romans 43
- 4. ‘All quiet on the Western Front?’ The Western Netherlands and the ‘North Sea Culture’ in the Migration Period 53
- 5. Power and Identity in the Southern North Sea Area: The Migration and Merovingian Periods 75
- 6. How ‘English’ is the Early Frisian Runic Corpus? The evidence of sounds and forms 93
- 7. The Geography and Dialects of Old Saxon: River-basin communication networks and the distributional patterns of North Sea Germanic features in Old Saxon 125
- 8. Between Sievern and Gudendorf: Enclosed sites in the north-western Elbe– Weser triangle and their significance in respect of society, communication and migration during the Roman Iron Age and Migration Period 149
- 9. Cultural Convergence in a Maritime Context: Language and material culture as parallel phenomena in the early-medieval southern North Sea region 173
- 10. The Kingdom of East Anglia, Frisia and Continental Connections, c. ad 600–900 193
- 11. A Comparison of the Injury Tariffs in the Early Kentish and the Frisian Law Codes 223
- 12. Cultural Contacts between the Western Baltic, the North Sea Region and Scandinavia: Attributing runic finds to runic traditions and corpora of the Early Viking Age 243
- Index 273