Regiones (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Regiones (singular: regio) or provinciae,(singular: provincia), also referred to by historians as small shires or early folk territories, were early territorial divisions of Anglo-Saxon England, referred to in sources such as Anglo-Saxon charters and the writings of Bede. They are likely to have originated in the years before 600, and most evidence for them occurs in sources from or about the 7th century.

Property Value
dbo:abstract Regiones (singular: regio) or provinciae,(singular: provincia), also referred to by historians as small shires or early folk territories, were early territorial divisions of Anglo-Saxon England, referred to in sources such as Anglo-Saxon charters and the writings of Bede. They are likely to have originated in the years before 600, and most evidence for them occurs in sources from or about the 7th century. Regiones were self-sufficient units of mixed subsistence agriculture consisting of scattered settlements producing the range of foodstuffs and other forms of produce necessary to support their population. They formed the defined territories of tribes or similar social groupings and were the building-blocks around which the larger Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were governed. Regiones gradually fragmented in the later Anglo-Saxon period as land was granted into private or ecclesiastical ownership by charter, and the smaller manors that emerged were gradually re-organised for military purposes into hundreds and the larger shires that later evolved into counties. The patterns of obligation that characterised regiones were often retained between successor manors, however, and their traces can be seen in many of the sokes, thanages, liberties, baronies and other administrative and ecclesiastic divisions that characterised later medieval society. Some historians have identified regiones with the concept of the Anglo-Saxon multiple estate. Others have argued that, while similarly organised, multiple estates represent a later stage of territorial organisation, after the concept of folkland or tribal occupation and obligation began to be replaced by that of bookland or documented private ownership. (en)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=3u0tlmkMVDYC%7Caccess-date=2014-06-15 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=7btzAsuOAWAC%7Caccess-date=2014-06-15 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=Qm4E97btenAC%7Caccess-date=2014-06-22 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=W2spwSjY9YcC%7Caccess-date=2014-08-31 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=W2spwSjY9YcC&pg=PA31%7Ceditor1-last=Barrow%7Ceditor1-first=Julia%7Ceditor2-last=Wareham%7Ceditor2-first=Andrew%7Ctitle=Myth, https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=WOX_vXbExhcC%7Caccess-date=2014-08-30 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=nPFY1DXNH9kC%7Caccess-date=2014-06-15 https://books.google.com/books%3Fid=nPFY1DXNH9kC&pg=PA91%7Ceditor-last=Stafford%7Ceditor-first=Pauline%7Ctitle=A
dbo:wikiPageID 43062439 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 13511 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1048764104 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Saxon dbr:Scotland dbr:End_of_Roman_rule_in_Britain dbr:Minster_(church) dbr:Anglo-Saxon_kingdoms dbr:Barking,_London dbr:Basingstoke dbr:Bede dbr:Benson,_Oxfordshire dbr:Berkshire dbr:Blythburgh dbr:Braughing dbr:River_Forth dbr:River_Meon dbr:River_Rother,_East_Sussex dbr:Liberty_(division) dbr:Limenwara dbr:Meonwara dbr:Christianity dbr:English_feudal_barony dbr:Epping,_Essex dbr:Brahhingas dbr:Angles dbr:Basingas dbr:Pastoral dbr:Subsistence_agriculture dbr:Celts dbr:Agronomy dbr:Wihtwara dbr:Civitates dbr:Iron_Age dbr:Lathe_(county_subdivision) dbr:Eastry dbr:Anglo-Saxon_charters dbr:Anglo-Saxon_multiple_estate dbr:Oxfordshire dbr:Food_render dbr:Hallamshire dbr:Hampshire dbr:Headington dbr:Hertfordshire dbr:Hexhamshire dbr:Historic_counties_of_England dbr:Isle_of_Ely dbr:Isle_of_Wight dbr:Anglo-Saxon_England dbr:Hundred_(county_division) dbr:Chertsey dbr:Jutes dbr:Latin dbr:Surrey dbr:Sussex dbr:Wessex dbr:Royal_vill dbr:Domesday_Book dbr:Bookland dbr:Bookland_(law) dbr:Sonning dbr:Kingdom_of_Kent dbr:Kingdom_of_Northumbria dbr:Kirtlington dbr:Old_English dbr:Oppidum dbr:Rape_(county_subdivision) dbr:Reading,_Berkshire dbc:Former_subdivisions_of_England dbr:Woking dbr:Kingdom_of_East_Anglia dbr:Kingdom_of_Essex dbr:Manorialism dbr:Shire dbr:Soke_(legal) dbr:Solent dbr:Vill dbr:Sunningas dbr:Tribal_Hidage dbr:Hundred_(division) dbr:Pagus dbr:Readingas dbr:Thanage dbr:Reading,_Berkshire_County dbr:Rodings dbr:Hrothingas dbr:Blithingas dbr:Havering dbr:Hillforts dbr:Minster_parish dbr:Woccingas dbr:Berecingas dbr:Haeferingas dbr:Uppingas
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Citation dbt:Convert dbt:Reflist dbt:Sfn dbt:Short_description
dct:subject dbc:Former_subdivisions_of_England
gold:hypernym dbr:Divisions
rdf:type dbo:AdministrativeRegion
rdfs:comment Regiones (singular: regio) or provinciae,(singular: provincia), also referred to by historians as small shires or early folk territories, were early territorial divisions of Anglo-Saxon England, referred to in sources such as Anglo-Saxon charters and the writings of Bede. They are likely to have originated in the years before 600, and most evidence for them occurs in sources from or about the 7th century. (en)
rdfs:label Regiones (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Regiones yago-res:Regiones wikidata:Regiones https://global.dbpedia.org/id/2NFNh
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Regiones?oldid=1048764104&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Regiones
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of dbr:Regio
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Limenwara dbr:List_of_geological_features_on_951_Gaspra dbr:List_of_geological_features_on_Europa dbr:List_of_geological_features_on_Miranda dbr:Brahhingas dbr:Basingas dbr:Beormingas dbr:Folkestone_and_Hythe_District dbr:Food_render dbr:History_of_Nottingham dbr:Regio dbr:Hallamshire dbr:Waeclingas dbr:Royal_vill dbr:St_Albans dbr:Sunningas dbr:Palus_Caprae dbr:Readingas dbr:Televen
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Regiones