- (Onelan
modor and Ohtheres), and his sons
Eadgils (suna
Ohteres, sunu
Ohteres) and
Eanmund (suna
Ohteres). When
Ohthere and his
actions are concerned, he is...
- of Ongenþeow,
whereas Eadgils and
Eanmund are
referred to as the sons of
Ohtere:
Later in the poem, it
tells that
during the battle, Eadgils's
brother Eanmund...
- of
Ravenswood against the Geats, the
Swedish king
Ongentheow fell, and
Ohtere succeeded him. Rodulsvoll,
Rodulsfell Old Norse: Rǫðulsvǫll and Rǫðulsfjall...
-
mentioning ᚼᛅᛁᚦᛅ᛭ᛒᚢ (haiþa bu),
found in 1796. Old
English æt Hæðum, from
Ohtere's and Wulfstan's
accounts of
their travels to
Alfred the
Great in the Old...
- Toronto, doe.utoronto.ca Allport, Ben (2020), "Home
Thoughts of Abroad:
Ohtere's Voyage in its Anglo-Saxon Context",
Early Medieval Europe, 64 (28): 256–288...