Britain, the Byzantine Empire & the Saxon 'Heptarchy': a L9thC Arabic description of Britain http://www.caitlingreen.org/2016/04/heptarchy-harun-ibn-yahya.html …pic.twitter.com/y94Zs3zzvF
You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more
Considering the two parts of the name "Attila" are endemic to Germanic languages (since the name is Gothic, probably not Oghur Turkic) (1/2)
Can we actually associate these placenames with Attila? It's "Atta" + "ila" from Gothic. Maenchen-Helfen associates the fort with (2/3)
AEtla, Bishop of Dorchester. (3/3).
My reading of him is that he's associating it with the name Ætla, not the specific bishop named that :) Fwiw, is not impossible both Ætla >
> of Dorchester & the other Ætlas are named ultimately after Attila as not OE name, but whether all were named consciously... Hmm! ;)
Yeah it's a good question. I've often wondered if Bede's reference to the Saxons burning and pillaging across Britain actually refers (1/2)
To Attila's invasion of Gaul and he wrote in 'Saxons' and 'Britain' instead. (2/2).
Hah! Interesting idea! Bede is cribbing from Gildas here; however, is an interesting question if Gildas is echoing continental authors here…
Byz. always sends Franks cash, Clovis made consul, Fr qn Ethelbergh married Ethelberht of Kent, Burgundian Bishop Felix in Redwald kingdom
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.