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A new English translation of the entire text was prepared for the Phillimore Edition, published 1975–1992 for Phillimore & Co under the general editorship of John Morris. The Phillimore Edition is synoptic, placing its translation alongside a facsimile of Farley's edition, and is published in a separate volume for each county.
John Swinnerton Phillimore (26 February 1873 – 16 November 1926) was a British classical scholar, translator, and poet.. Born at Boconnoc in Cornwall, [1] Phillimore was, like his father, Augustus Phillimore before him, and four brothers, educated at Westminster School (1886-91), where he was a Queen's Scholar, before going on to read Literae Humaniores at Christ Church, Oxford, where he was ...
Aaron Thompson was apparently born in 1681 or 1682, [1] the youngest son of George Thompson, owner of the estate of Farmanby, north east of Penrith in Cumberland. George Thompson came from a Cavalier and therefore presumably Church of England family, but his wife Jane, daughter of William Jameson of Parkhead, Kirkoswald, from a Presbyterian one; both were excommunicated for recusancy in 1666 ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Phillimore is the surname of: People: ... British classical scholar, translator, and poet; Joseph Phillimore ...
HIC ANNOTANTUR TENENTES TERRAS IN DERBYSCIRE ["Here are noted (those) holding lands in Derbyshire"]: i Rex Willelmus ii Eps de Cestre iii Abbatia de Bertone iv Hugo comes v Rogeri pictauensis
(July 2015) Click [show] for important translation instructions. View a machine-translated version of the German article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting ...
South Lancashire (Inter Ripam et Mersam) in the Domesday Book. The Domesday Book of 1086 AD identifies King William the Conqueror's tenants-in-chief for historic Lancashire within Cestrescire and Eurvicscire (). [1]
A translation from the original Latin is as follows: The battle of Hehil among the Cornish, the battle of Garth Maelog, the battle of Pencon among the South Britons, and the Britons were the victors in those three battles. [1] [2] The Annales Cambriae are undated but Egerton Phillimore placed the entry in the year 722. [3]