Definition of SIWARD. Meaning of SIWARD. Synonyms of SIWARD

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word SIWARD. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word SIWARD and, of course, SIWARD synonyms and on the right images related to the word SIWARD.

Definition of SIWARD

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Meaning of SIWARD from wikipedia

- Siward (/ˈsuːwərd/ or more recently /ˈsiːwərd/; Old English: Siƿard) or Sigurd (Old English: Sigeweard, Old Norse: Sigurðr digri) was an important earl...
- Siward may refer to: Synardus or Siward (12th-century), king of Götaland Siward (Abbot of Abingdon) (died 1048), Bishop of St. Martins Siward, Earl of...
- Young Siward is a character in William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth (1606). He is the son of Siward, general of the English forces in the battle against...
- Siward Barn (Old English: Sigeweard Bearn) was an 11th-century English thegn and landowner-warrior. He appears in the extant sources in the period following...
- Siward (died 1048) was Abbot of Abingdon in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire) and a bishop in the Diocese of Canterbury. Siward was a monk at Glastonbury until...
- Danish earl Siward, though this may be a late attempt to deepen the Scottish royal family's links to the earldom of Northampton (of which Siward was regarded...
- 53°57′00″N 1°03′07″W / 53.950°N 1.052°W / 53.950; -1.052 Siward's Howe, sometimes written Siwards How and also known as Heslington Hill or Bunny Hill, is...
- Winchester with his three leading earls, Leofric of Mercia, Godwin, and Siward of Northumbria, to deprive her of her property, possibly because she was...
- hereditary succession to Northumbria when Earl Siward died in 1055. He ignored the claims of Siward's son, Waltheof, and appointed Tostig Godwinson as...
- Richard Siward (died 1248) was a distinguished 13th-century soldier, adventurer and banneret. He rose from obscurity to become a member of King Henry III's...