- hier: S. 81. (online) Ausführlicher
Eckhard Freise:
Widukind in Attigny. In: 1200
Jahre Widukinds Taufe.
Paderborn 1985, S. 12–45, hier: S. 35ff. (online)...
-
Widukind of
Corvey (c. 925 –
after 973; German:
Widukind von Corvey, in
italian Vitichindo Sacco di Corvey, in
Latin VVITICHINDI SAXO) was a
medieval Saxon...
-
Widukind Lenz (4
February 1919, Eichenau,
Bavaria – 25
February 1995) was a
distinguished German pediatrician,
medical geneticist and
dysmorphologist who...
-
completely commanded Westphalia. That summer, he met
Widukind and
persuaded him to end his resistance.
Widukind agreed to be
baptised with
Charlemagne as his...
-
because medieval writers such as
Widukind of
Corvey and Adam of
Bremen give
conflicting accounts of how it came about.
Widukind of Corvey,
writing during the...
-
signifies universal all-sustaining pillar.
Clive Tolley has
argued that
Widukind of
Corvey in a p****age of his
Deeds of the
Saxons (c. 970) is in fact describing...
- The
Widukind-Gymnasium
Enger (vidʊkɪnd-gYmnaʰsium əŋər) is a
Gymnasium located on Tiefenbruchstraße 22, Enger, Herford, Northrhine-Westphalia. It is named...
-
domains as soon as he
turned his
attention elsewhere.
Their main leader,
Widukind, was a
resilient and
resourceful opponent, but
eventually was defeated...
-
legends link his
adversary Widukind to
places near Detmold, Bielefeld, Lemgo, Osnabrück, and
other places in Westphalia.
Widukind was
buried in Enger, which...
- the
Saxon chief Widukind,
leader of the
resistance against Charlemagne, fled
Saxony in the face of the
Frankish onslaught.
Widukind found refuge with...