-
height of horses. Old English: Gif man þeoh þurhstingð,
stice ghwilve vi
scillingas. Gife ofer ynce, scilling. æt twam yn****, twegen. ofer þry, iii scill...
- gold coin that
replaced the
aureus in the 4th century. The Anglo-Saxon
scillingas of the 7th
century were
still small gold coins.[citation needed] In 796...
-
undeoror sẏlle⋅ oþþe eaƿunga oþþe dearnunga⋅
gilde ægðer þam cẏnge ⋅xl⋅
scillingá. ge seþe hi sẏlle ge seþe hi bẏcge:⋅ And let one
money p**** throughout...
-
Merovingians in Francia, but
these were rare, the most
common being gold
scillingas (shillings) or thrymsas. Ecgfrith's pennies, also
known as sceattas, were...
- century.
These early coins were gold, and
probably were the
shillings (
scillingas in Old English) that are
mentioned in Æthelberht's laws. The
coins are...
-
Condonation Collegatary Contorts Chisholm 1911, p. 801. The
legal phrase & n.
scillingas to bote, "and n.
shillings as compensation"
often followed after other...
- not
appear for
several more years.
These were small, gold coins,
called scillingas (shillings) in
surviving Anglo-Saxon law codes,
although they have since...
- (2010). "Units of
Account in Gold and
Silver in Seventh-Century England:
Scillingas,
Sceattas and Pæningas" (PDF). The
Antiquaries Journal. 90.
Society of...
- name.
These early golden coins were
probably the
shillings (Old English:
scillingas) that are
mentioned in Æthelberht's laws. The
coins are also
known to...
- for this period, they
describe a wide
range of
compensatory payments in
scillingas and scættas from c. 600 onwards.
These terms reflect translations of continental...