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Siward (/ˈsuːwərd/ or more
recently /
ˈsiːwərd/) or
Sigurd (Old English: Sigeweard, Old Norse: Sigurðr digri) was an
important earl of 11th-century northern...
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Siward may
refer to:
Synardus or
Siward (12th-century), king of Götaland
Siward (Abbot of Abingdon) (died 1048),
Bishop of St.
Martins Siward, Earl of...
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Young Siward is a
character in
William Shakespeare’s play
Macbeth (1606). He is the son of
Siward,
general of the
English forces in the
battle against...
- 53°57′00″N 1°03′07″W / 53.950°N 1.052°W / 53.950; -1.052
Siward's Howe,
sometimes written Siwards How and also
known as
Heslington Hill or
Bunny Hill, is...
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Siward Barn (Old English:
Sigeweard Bearn) was an 11th-century
English thegn and landowner-warrior. He
appears in the
extant sources in the
period following...
- when Frø, king of Sweden,
invaded Norway and
killed the
Norwegian king
Siward. Frø put the
women of the dead king's
family into a
brothel for
public humiliation...
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Siward (died 1048) was
Abbot of
Abingdon in
Berkshire (now Oxfordshire) and a
bishop in the
Diocese of Canterbury.
Siward was a monk at
Glastonbury until...
-
Danish earl
Siward,
though this may be a late
attempt to
deepen the
Scottish royal family's
links to the
earldom of
Northampton (of
which Siward was regarded...
-
Siward (or Sigweard) was a
medieval Bishop of Rochester.
Siward was
abbot of
Chertsey Abbey, a
Benedictine abbey in
Surrey before he was
selected for...
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Winchester with his
three leading earls,
Leofric of Mercia, Godwin, and
Siward of Northumbria, to
deprive her of her property,
possibly because she was...