id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 43910 Partington, S. W. The Danes in Lancashire and Yorkshire .txt text/plain 48126 3310 78 The presence of Danish place-names marks the district which they From the middle of the tenth century men bearing Anglo-Danish names Coming from the north-east another Norse and Danish settlement sprang work exist at places with Scandinavian names, such as Kirkby-Moorside, century old, "that in Cheshire there is a place called Brunburh near is derived from an old Norse word "hoop," for a small land-locked bay, Danish kingdom in England, we find the names of the following Jarls: coming of the Norse in 900 A.D. Some Anglian districts were refounded under Danish names, and became is Danish, Saxon, and English, three words meaning water. all place-names of Danish origin which provide many surnames in the The Norse place-names of Wirral prove that these lands were waste and Isle of Man, whose Bishops were men bearing Danish names, and therefore especially after the year 950, pure Danish or Scandinavian names begin ./cache/43910.txt ./txt/43910.txt