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・ Beor (biblical figure)
・ Beorhtheah
・ Beorhthelm
・ Beorhthelm of Stafford
・ Beorhthelm of Winchester
・ Beorhtnoð æthling of Kent
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・ Beorhtwulf of Mercia
・ Beorma
Beormingas
・ Beorn
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・ Beorn of Sweden
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・ Beornia
・ Beornmod
・ Beornrad
・ Beornrad of Echternach
・ Beornred of Mercia
・ Beornstan of Winchester
・ Beornstan the Archdeacon
・ Beornwulf of Mercia


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Beormingas : ウィキペディア英語版
Beormingas
The ''Beormingas'' (; from Old English) were a tribe or clan in Anglo-Saxon England, whose territory possibly formed a ''regio'' or early administrative subdivision of the Kingdom of Mercia. The name literally means "Beorma's people" in Old English, and Beorma is likely to have been either the leader of the group during its settlement in Britain or a real or legendary tribal ancestor. The name of the tribe is recorded in the place name Birmingham, which means "home of the ''Beormingas''".
The extent of the territory of the ''Beormingas'' has been reconstructed by identifying linkages between the later medieval parishes and manors that replaced it, suggesting that the ''regio'' would have extended from West Bromwich in the west to Castle Bromwich in the east, and from the southern boundaries of Sutton Coldfield in the north to the northern boundaries of Kings Norton and Northfield in the south.
''Regiones'' in the West Midlands were often served during the early Anglo-Saxon period by a minster, whose minster parish coincided with the tribal land-unit. Two such minsters have been identified in the ''Beormingas area: one at Harborne with a minster parish that included Edgbaston, Handsworth, West Bromwich, Great Barr, Selly Oak and probably Birmingham itself; and one at Aston with a minster parish that included Erdington, Castle Bromwich, Deritend, Water Orton and Yardley. Aston's placename suggests that it may have been established as a sub-minster of Harborne, which would have therefore been the original minster of the ''Beormingas''.
The ''Beormingas'' are likely to have been of Anglian origin, and to have formed part of the gradual Anglian settlement of the valley of the River Trent spreading upstream from the Humber Estuary. The location of the placename Birmingham suggests that the tribe may have formed part of the Tomsaete or Tame-dwellers, who are recorded as occupying this area of the valley of the River Tame in later Anglo-Saxon charters and formed one of the core groupings of the Kingdom of Mercia.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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