Launceston
(Redirectum de Dunheved)
Launceston (Cornubice: Lannstevan; Brythonice: Dunheved) est oppidum comitatús Cornubiae ad occidentalem partem Angliae extremam iacentis. Ibi nundinae tenebantur ab anno 979, mercatus autem ab anno 1201.[1]
Huius oppidi quattuor parochiae olim distinguebantur, videlicet Launceston St Mary Magdalene, Newport juxta Launceston, St Stephens by Launceston, St Thomas by Launceston.
Notae
recensere- ↑ Samantha Letters, "Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516: Cornwall"
Bibliographia
recensere- "Launceston (St. Mary Magdalene)" in Samuel Lewis, ed., A Topographical Dictionary of England (7a ed. 1848. ~)
- "Launceston" in Daniel Lysons, Samuel Lysons, Cornwall: a general and parochial history of the county (Magna Britannia. 1814. ~)
- Anne Preston-Jones, Peter Rose, "Medieval Cornwall[nexus deficit]" in Cornish Archaeology no. 26 (1986) pp. 135-185
Nexus externi
recensereVicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Launceston spectant. |
Vide Launceston apud Viciviam. |
- "Launceston" apud A Vision of Britain Through Time
- "Launceston" apud Open Domesday (recensio interretialis Libri de Wintonia ab Anna Powell-Smith elaborata ~)