-
state of Schleswig-Holstein. The
earliest recorded use of the term, as "
Engla londe", is in the late-ninth-century
translation into Old
English of Bede's...
-
Engla Tocyme (The
Coming of the English) is the
third studio album by the
English pagan metal band Forefather. It was
recorded from
September to November...
- 10-year-old
Engla Juncosa Höglund went
missing on her way home from
soccer practice in Stjärnsund, Sweden. When she did not
answer her
mobile phone,
Engla's mother...
-
which two more
albums would be
released by the band, The
Fighting Man and
Engla Tocyme, in 2000 and 2002, respectively. Forefather's
fourth album, Ours...
-
August Englas (15
January 1925 – 21
March 2017) was an
Estonian wrestler who
competed for the
Soviet Union.
Englas was born in Pühajärve
Parish (now part...
- ISBN 978-1-139-49144-0. Bosworth, Joseph; Toller, T.
Northcote (1921). "
Engla land". An Anglo-Saxon
Dictionary (Online).
Charles University. Archived...
- The
Kingdom of the East
Angles (Old English: Ēastengla Rīċe; Latin:
Regnum Orientalium Anglorum),
informally known as the
Kingdom of East Anglia, was a...
-
probably derives from the
Angeln peninsula, is the root of the name
England ("
Engla land" or "Ængla land"[citation needed]), as well as
ultimately the word...
- had
withdrawn from Britain. The Anglo-Saxons gave
their name to
England ("
Engla land",
meaning "Land of the Angles") and to the English. The Anglo-Saxons...
- or the Angelcynn,
originally names of the Angles. They
called their land
Engla land,
meaning "land of the English", by Æthelweard
Latinized Anglia, from...