- De
obsessione Dunelmi ("On the
siege of Durham") is an
historical work
written in the
north of
England during the Anglo-Norman period,
almost certainly...
- century. Uhtred's
death by ********ination was
described in De
obsessione Dunelmi and has been
interpreted as the
beginning of a
blood feud. Lest he be confused...
- Æthelred II. This
follows the
ancestry given in the
earlier De
obsessione Dunelmi, in
which Gospatric's
father is
named as Maldred, son of Crinan, tein (thegn...
- Earl of Caithness, and a son Maldred. The
latter is said by De
obsessione Dunelmi to have been son of Crinan, tein (thegn Crínán). He was
identified as Crínán...
- Durham, also
known as De situ
Dunelmi,
Carmen de situ
Dunelmi or De situ
Dunelmi et de
sanctorum reliquiis quae
ibidem continentur carmen compositum, is...
- Æthelred II.34-5. John of Worcester, Chronicon, AD 1009. De
Obsessione Dunelmi § 2;
Handbook of
British Chronology, p. 27.
Handbook of
British Chronology...
- Regum, the
Libellus de exordio, De
primo Saxonum adventu and De
obsessione Dunelmi; the
Libellus de
exordio is
likely to have been "aut****d" by Symeon; see...
-
former kingdom of Deira. The twelfth-century
tract known as De
obsessione Dunelmi (The
siege of Durham, ****ociated with
Symeon of Durham)
claims that Uhtred's...
-
Maldred (Gaelic: Máel Doraid) of Allerdale,
referred to by De
obsessione Dunelmi as a son of 'thegn Crínán',
possibly Crínán,
abbot of Dunkeld,
which would...
- Duncan's
theory is
supported by the twelfth-century
tract De
obsessione Dunelmi,
where the
death of
Uhtred is described;
although the
killing of Uhtred...