-
Beorma (/ˈbeɪɔːrmə/ BAY-or-mə, Old English: [ˈbeːorˠmɑ]) is the name most
commonly given to the
circa 7th
century Anglo-Saxon
founder or
later leader of...
- Birmingham, England. It is the
river on
which Birmingham was
founded by the
Beorma tribe in the 7th century. The name of the Rea
derives from a root found...
- 2018. e-architect "
Beorma Quarter".
Archived from the
original on 17
January 2013.
Retrieved 30
October 2010. "Birmingham
Beorma Quarter tower block...
-
tribe or clan
whose name
means '
Beorma's people' and
which may have
formed an
early unit of Anglo-Saxon administration.
Beorma,
after whom the
tribe was named...
- the
north of the Swedes, and the
Beormas, whom he
found living by the
White Sea.
Ohthere reported that the
Beormas spoke a
language related to that of...
- river,
probably the
Northern Dvina. At the
estuary of the
river dwelt the
Beormas, who
unlike the
nomadic Sami
peoples were sedentary, and
their land was...
-
accommodation London Greater London Newham Stratford 115 378 36 2026 26=
Beorma Tower Office /
Residential Birmingham West
Midlands City of
Birmingham City...
- 2021.
Retrieved 21
August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint:
unfit URL (link) "
Beorma Quarter". www.trevorhorne.com.
Retrieved 21
August 2021. "Case
Summary 2018/04812/PA...
-
whose name
literally means "
Beorma's people" and
which may have
formed an
early unit of Anglo-Saxon administration.
Beorma,
after whom the
tribe was named...
- far-away land". In Old
Norse and Old English, it was
known as
Bjarmaland and
Beormas respectively but
those Germanic names designate a
wider area than the Russian...