Definition of Wulfwin. Meaning of Wulfwin. Synonyms of Wulfwin

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Wulfwin. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Wulfwin and, of course, Wulfwin synonyms and on the right images related to the word Wulfwin.

Definition of Wulfwin

No result for Wulfwin. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Wulfwin from wikipedia

- Oak records a nuncupative (oral) will and is out of conventional order. Wulfwin had leased the manor for the term of three lives and the newly appointed...
- been owned by Wulfwin. His ownership of Selly Oak was challenged by the Bishop of Lichfield using a nuncupative (oral) will made by Wulfwin as evidence...
- league long and two furlongs wide. The value was and is twenty shillings. Wulfwin held it freely in the time of King Edward. At the time of the Domesday...
- Cambridgeshire. Castle Camps was originally a Saxon manor, belonging to Wulfwin, a Thane of King Edward the Confessor. After the Norman invasion, William...
- purposes. Byfleet appears in Domesday Book as Byeflete. It was held by Ulwin (Wulfwin) from Chertsey Abbey. Its domesday ****ets were: 2+1⁄2 cultivated hides;...
- woods were used for the pannage of pigs; ten pigs a year were paid to Wulfwin the local Anglo Saxon Lord. His Germanic name means wolf-friend. The Anglo...
- (Staffordshire) was owned by the Bishop of Lichfield. Selly Oak was leased to Wulfwin, who owned Birmingham as a freeman, by the Bishop of Lichfield. "Leases...
- a Frenchman. In 1066 the landowners had been Edward of Grappenhall and Wulfwin Chit, with the value of the land being £1. By 1086 this was £0.4 for two...