l la lb lc ld le lf lg lh li ll lm lo lp lr ls lt lu lv lw lx ly lz

Перевод: lade speek lade


[существительное]
канал ; устье реки;
[глагол]
грузить; нагружать; погружать; черпать; вычерпывать


Тезаурус:

  1. In 494 the Levantine fleets entered the Aegean; and in the Battle of Lade, off Miletos, the Samians, Miletos' old enemies, having been offered easy terms of surrender through their late tyrant (a nephew of Polykrates), started a debacle by hoisting sail and making off.
  2. Barclay's Brokers match on the Upper Hobhole at Lade Bank was cancelled.
  3. He seems to have intended to rule Norway, like Swegen, through the earls of Lade, and his dominion there would doubtless have been more secure if Earl Hakon had not died prematurely and without issue.
  4. Sighvat was in Olaf's service at the time, and his Vestrfararvsur (Western Travel Verses) name Earl Hakon, son of Earl Eric of Lade, as acting with Cnut, and speak repeatedly of money offered to Olaf's men, while the Tgdrpa of Thorarin Praise-Tongue, who apparently sailed with Cnut's fleet, indicates that he went first to Denmark to assemble his ships in the Limfjord in Jutland, and then proceeded north along the Norwegian coast to Trondheim.
  5. After the death of King Olaf Tryggvason of Norway at the battle of Svold in 999 it had been ruled by Earl Eric of Lade and his brother Swegen under the sovereignty of Cnut's father; according to later Scandinavian tradition, Eric married Swegen Forkbeard's daughter Gytha.
  6. Thorkell was there, having in the interval been in English service, and so was the Norwegian Earl Eric of Lade, and, if we can trust Thietmar of Merseburg, one Thorgut.
  7. However, the most important sources available to later northern writers were the poems attributed to the professional skalds who visited princely courts and were paid to celebrate the achievements of patrons like Cnut, King Olaf Haraldsson of Norway (St Olaf) and Earl Eric of Lade.
  8. Among those responsible for lfheah's death, if Osbern can be relied on, was Hakon, son of Earl Eric of Lade, and called dux by the Canterbury writer because he was later an earl under Cnut.
  9. Alastair Campbell, for example, thought that a verse supposedly from Thord Kolbeinsson's Eirksdrpa, which connects Earl Eric of Lade with the battle of Ringmere in 1010, is a fabrication, and that lines about an attack on Norwich said by the thirteenth-century Knytlinga Saga to be from Ottar the Black's Kntsdrpa probably came from a different poem on Swegen, who is known to have sacked the town in 1004.
  10. This was not the distillery at Newton House which was supplied with water from Loch Skerrols by a lade which ran just inside the wall of the wood below Newton school where J. MacFarlane made 3937 gallons.
  11. His union with Boleslav's sister may have both removed any danger from the Poles and secured their assistance against other tribes, and he subsequently turned his attention, in alliance with Olaf of Sweden and the Norwegian Earl Eric of Lade, to the destruction of Olaf Tryggvason, king of Norway.
  12. This area was once the site of a Gunpowder Mill and a lot of the old ruined buildings remain around the river including the Weir and the Old Mill Lade.
  13. Failure to meet these expectations would have been dangerous, especially as his army consisted partly of the forces of independent warlords like Thorkell the Tall and the Norwegian Earl Eric of Lade, whose loyalty could not be taken entirely for granted.

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