- Stow (or, archaically, Stow-in-Lindsey) is a
village and
civil parish within the West
Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is 11
miles (18 km)...
- have been a monk at Medeshamstede. Or
Headdus or
Eatheadus of
Sidnacester For "
Sidnacester", see
Bishop of
Lindsey Fryde, et al.
Handbook of
British Chronology...
-
Fortified Settlement Sapperton Sleaford Bannovalum?
Settlement Sleaford Stow
Sidnacester Settlement Stow
Tattershall Drurobrivis Settlement Tattershall Torksey...
-
Secular Also
called bishop of the Magonsæte in Anglo-Saxon times.
Lindsey (
Sidnacester) 678
Secular Merged with Dorchester, c. 1010; also
called bishop of the...
- (Peterborough);
Saint ****wulf. 691 bet 716–727
Headda Headdi;
Eatheadus of
Sidnacester. bef 731 737
Aldwine Aldwyn; Aldwini. 737 bet 749–767
Witta ****tta. bef...
- Magonsæte), and
Lindsey (for the Lindisfaras). The bishop's seat at
Sidnacester (Syddensis) has been placed, by
various commentators, at Caistor, Louth...
-
earlier during the
periods when the sees of Lichfield, Leicester,
Lindsey (
Sidnacester) or
Dorchester (on-Thames)
respectively governed the
ecclesiastical life...
- and
Antiquities of the Town of
Newark in the
County of
Nottingham (the
Sidnacester of the Romans)". Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown. p. 48. Pevsner...
-
Antiquities of the Town of Newark, in the
County of
Nottingham (the
Sidnacester of the Romans), inter****d with
Biographical Sketches, in two parts...
- and the
location of the
former Roman city (civitatis) of Syddensis, or
Sidnacester, has been
greatly debated. In 1695,
Edmund Gibson placed it at Stow,...