-
Wigstan (/
ˈwiːstɑːn/, Old
English pronunciation: [ˈwiːjˌstɑːn]; died c. 840 AD), also
known as
Saint Wystan, was the son of
Wigmund of
Mercia and Ælfflæd...
- two
ogres have
dragged off a boy
named Edwin. A
visiting Saxon warrior,
Wistan,
kills the
ogres and
rescues Edwin who is
discovered to have a wound, believed...
-
Vistan or
Veyestan or
Wistan (Persian: ويستان) may
refer to: Vistən,
Azerbaijan Vistan-e Bala, Iran Vistan-e Pain, Iran This
disambiguation page lists...
-
Wystan Hugh
Auden (/
ˈwɪstən ˈhjuː ˈɔːdən/; 21
February 1907 – 29
September 1973) was a British-American poet. Auden's
poetry is
noted for its stylistic...
-
sourced from
local suppliers.
Listed buildings in
Wistanstow June 1 – St.
Wistan,
Prince of Mercia,
Martyr in Butler's
Lives of
Saints see also Calder, who...
- also
Romanized as Vīstān-e Pā’īn, Veyestān-e Pā’īn, and
Wistān Pāīn; also
known as
Wistān) is a
village in
Khorramdarreh Rural District, in the Central...
- Danes,
buried at
Whitchurch Canonicorum (c. 831).
Saint Wigstan (Wystan,
Wistan, Winston), of the
royal house of
Mercia in
England (849)
Saint Gaudentius...
- there, All Saints' and St
Wistan's. St
Wistan's is so
called because it was one of the
places where the body of St
Wistan or
Wigstan rested before burial...
- Apr 1946 HMT St.
Olive Mar 1940 Minesweeper,
returned Nov 1945 HMT St.
Wistan May 1940
Auxiliary patrol, Anti-submarine,
returned May 1946 HMT St. Zeno...
- 21 March,
militants riding motorbikes attacked Intazayene,
Bakorat and
Wistan,
three villages in the
Tahoua Region close to the
Malian border, killing...