-
Frisia was
centered around the
mouth of the Eems
roughly corresponding to
Emsgau and Federgau. The
eastern part was
centered around the
mouth of the Weser...
-
hundreds on the
lower Ems (Hugmerki, Hunusgau, Fivelgau, Federitgau, and
Emsgau). Most of the
territory over
which the
bishop eventually exercised sovereign...
- 1803: To
Bavaria Werl
County n/a n/a 987:
First mentioned 1062: Lost the
Emsgau to the
Archbishopric of
Bremen c. 1070:
Partitioned into Werl-Arnsberg and...
-
Emsigerland was
based on a
historic territorial parish (Landesgemeinde), the
Emsgau, and
formed its
economic centre.
Unlike the rest of East Frisia, no system...
-
important place. In the
Middle Ages, the
place initially belonged to the
Emsgau,
later to the
Moormerland under the rule of the
Cirksena to the Leerort...
- Hinte. In the
Early Middle Ages it
separated the
historical regions of
Emsgau and Federgau. The
first settlers built their houses here on
warfts in the...
-
uninhabited and
provided a
natural boundary between the
Federgau and the
Emsgau on one side and the
provinces of
Norditi (Norderland) and Östringen on the...
- the
large St. Peter's Church, one of the six
provost churches in the old
Emsgau, with its huge tower. The bell
dates to the year 1526. The
gravestone of...
-
western East
Frisia Drenthe:
Dutch province of Drenthe,
south of
Groningen Emsgau [de] or Gau Emsigerland: at the
mouth of the Ems,
southwest East Frisia...