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Administrative division in Worcestershire
Halfshire (Latin: Hundredum Dimidii Comitatūs, 'hundred of half (the) county') was one of the hundreds in the English county of Worcestershire. As three
Halfshire
Traditional British term for county
hundreds, wapentakes and liberties such as: Allertonshire Blackburnshire Halfshire Howdenshire Leylandshire Powdershire Pydarshire Richmondshire Riponshire
Shire
County of England
british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol3/pp1-4 British History Online: The hundred of Halfshire: Introduction and map, Pages 1-4. A History of the County of Worcester:
Worcestershire
Topics referred to by the same term
metal band Crutch, Worcestershire, a former extra-parochial place in Halfshire, a medieval hundred of Worcestershire, UK Crutches, also known as filler
Crutch_(disambiguation)
Former land divisions of England
Names: Came Hundred, accessed 22 October 2020. Open Domesday Map: Halfshire hundred "Halfshire hundred". British History. Retrieved 4 February 2021. Open Domesday
List_of_hundreds_of_England
English Baron
An inquest in 1274-5 found that he had "appropriated" Doddingtree and Halfshire hundreds, which had been achieved by using his officials to harass the
William_(III)_de_Beauchamp
Area of Birmingham, England
follows: Northfield, a parish in the upper division of the hundred of Halfshire, county Worcester, 6 miles South-West. of Birmingham, its post town, and
Northfield,_Birmingham
Village in Worcestershire, England
Dunclent. After Cresslow was combined with others to create the larger Halfshire, what was by then the parish of Stone also included the settlements of
Stone,_Worcestershire
Topics referred to by the same term
Wyre Forest, a village near Kidderminster sometimes called Churchill in Halfshire Churchill, Holyoke, Massachusetts, a neighborhood in Holyoke Churchill
Churchill_(disambiguation)
Medieval English administrative district of Worcestershire
Wulfstan's manors were included in the Oswaldslow. When the hundred of Halfshire was formed (probably in the mid-12th century), three manors from the hundred
Oswaldslow
Village in Worcestershire, England
ownership led to the inclusion of Feckenham parish in the hundred of Halfshire in the 13th century. The village once stood in the middle of the ancient
Feckenham
Village in Worcestershire, England
Cane was combined with other Domesday hundreds to form the hundred of Halfshire, which was extant through the 19th century. Adam de Harvington, or de
Frankley
during the reign of Edward the Confessor, thus becoming a triple-hundred. Halfshire or Dimidii Comitatus de Wych (Half of Wych(e)) was formed before 1175–76;
Evolution of Worcestershire county boundaries since 1844
Evolution_of_Worcestershire_county_boundaries_since_1844
Town in Worcestershire, England
E. (1999). Glory Gone: The Story of Nailing in Bromsgrove (2nd ed.). Halfshire Books. ISBN 978-1899062041. Foster, John, ed. (1981). Bygone Bromsgrove:
Bromsgrove
Village in Worcestershire, England
http://opendomesday.org/search/?geo=halfshire Archived 22 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Open Domesday Map: Halfshire hundred Joan R. Kent, The English
Salwarpe
Village in Worcestershire, England
a parish by that time. Cresslow hundred was subsequently merged into Halfshire hundred. The current parish church, dedicated to St Mary, is believed
Doverdale
Village in Worcestershire, England
it formed part of the Clent Hundred, later to be amalgamated into the Halfshire Hundred. The name of the village is conjectured to derive from the Old
Hagley
Shropshire exclave of Halesowen and Oldbury
Halesowen parish back into Worcestershire, under the 'Lower' division of Halfshire hundred. Warley Wigorn was unified with Warley Salop to form the new parish
Detached_parts_of_Shropshire
Came, Clent, Cresselaw and Esch had been combined to form the hundred of Halfshire by the 13th century, while Doddingtree remained unchanged. The shire-court
History_of_Worcestershire
Village in Worcestershire, England
tenant-in-chief was the bishop of Worcester St Mary. When the hundred of Halfshire was formed (probably in the mid-12th century), Stoke Prior was one of
Stoke_Prior,_Worcestershire
Village in Birmingham, England
Norton and Selly Oak were in pre-Conquest Came Hundred which later became Halfshire Hundred. A Hundred was an administrative division of a Shire (County)
Stirchley,_Birmingham
Human settlement in England
manor from the rest of Wolverley, and was formerly in the hundred of Halfshire, whereas the rest of the parish was in Oswaldslow. Adjacent to Kingsford
Kingsford,_Worcestershire
Civil parish in Worcestershire, England
Kidderminster, gentleman, in his document of The Assessment of the Hundred of Halfshire dated 28 April 1629 (5th Caroli R) records a subsidy due in 1629, and
Elmley_Lovett
Village and civil parish in England
dates. Historically, Cofton Hackett was part of the upper division of Halfshire Hundred that also contained Bromsgrove, Dodderhill, Doverdale, Droitwich
Cofton_Hackett
Area of Birmingham, England
Historically, in the Middle Ages West Heath was part of the upper division of Halfshire Hundred that also contained Bromsgrove, Coston Hackett, Dodderhill, Doverdale
West_Heath,_West_Midlands
Former local government area in the UK
(1913), A History of the County of Worcester, Volume III: The Hundreds of Halfshire and Oswaldslow, The Victoria History of the Counties of England, (The
King's Norton and Northfield Urban District
King's_Norton_and_Northfield_Urban_District
Village in Worcestershire, England
originally it belonged to Clent Hundred and later to the lower division of Halfshire. In 1888 the growing village was separated administratively from Hagley
Blakedown
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Girl/Female
Muslim
Boy/Male
American, Australian, British, English
Son of Terrell
Male
Irish
Contracted form of Irish Gaelic Comhghall, COMGAL means "joint pledge."
Boy/Male
Buddhist, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Marathi, Telugu
The Buddha
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Protection Treasure
Boy/Male
Indian
Hero
Boy/Male
British, English
Swordsman
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
A name of Tree
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Young Girl
Male
English
Anglicized form of Hebrew Golyath, GOLIATH means "exile." In the bible, this is the name of a Philistine giant slain by David. A shard of pottery unearthed by archaeologists digging at Tell es-Safi, bears two Proto-Semitic names (alwt and wlt) which are etymologically similar to Hebrew Galyat/Golyat/Golyath. The shard dates to around 950 BC, very close to the time when the bible says Goliath lived.Â
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