-
Archenfield (Old English: Ircingafeld,
Middle English: "Irchenfield") is the
historic English name for an area of
southern and
western Herefordshire in...
- the 5th and 7th centuries. It was
later referred to by the
English as
Archenfield. The
kingdom lay
mostly in what is now
western Herefordshire (now in...
-
persisted well into the
modern period across the
border in England.
Archenfield was
still Welsh enough in the time of
Elizabeth I for the
Bishop of Hereford...
-
venerated as a saint. He was the
evangelist of
Ergyng (Welsh: Erging) (later
Archenfield, Herefordshire) and much of south-east Wales.
Dubricius was the illegitimate...
- the
Severn estuary. It then
attacked Ergyng in south-east
Wales (now
Archenfield in Herefordshire) and
captured Cyfeilliog,
Bishop of Ergyng.
Edward ransomed...
-
deanery mergers have
taken place:
Kington and
Weobley before 1972 Ross and
Archenfield before 1979 *including
Cathedral Last
updated 25
November 2020. "Statistics...
-
Parthey &
Pinder 1848:233 Britannia, Iter XIII "Why
Archenfield",
Archenfield Archaeology,
Archenfield Archaeology Ltd,
retrieved 11 June 2009 "History:...
-
Welsh place names and the
historic Welsh commote of
Archenfield. In 1887 it was written: "
Archenfield was
still Welsh enough in the time of
Elizabeth for...
- in
rural Herefordshire, England. It lies
within the
historic area of
Archenfield, near the
Welsh border, south-west of the city of Hereford. The parish...
-
media related to Leominster.
Leominster Town
Council Leominster Town
Website Leominster History from
Archenfield Archaeology (this site is not available)...