Ar Pecset a oa ur meuriad Angled a oa en em staliet war-dro 590 e norzh hag e kreiz ar pezh zo hiziv ar Peak District[1] (e rouantelezh vrezhon gozh ar Pek). Ar vro-se a oa gwechal dindan klan keltiek ar Brigantae, ur meuriad Brezhoned, a-raok an aloubadeg angl-ha-saoz. Hervez an Tribal Hidage e talc'hent 1200 hid. E Derbyshire e oant en em staliet da gentañ, war a seblant, kent mont war-raok a-hed ar stêrioù Derwent ha Dove e-pad ar VIvet kantved. Dont a reas neuze an Angled eus ar reter-se da vezañ anvet Pecsætna pe Pecset[2]. Diwezhatoc'h, o rouantelezh a zeuas da vezañ rann norzh rouantelezh Mercia hag e 848 en em vodas witenagemot Mercia e Repton[2].

Pecsættan
Pecset
Flag
VIvet kantved – VIIIvet kantved Flag
Location of Pecset
Location of Pecset
Kêr-benn Dianav
Yezh(où) Hensaozneg
Gouarnamant Monarkiezh
Istor
 - Krouet VIvet kantved
 - Staget ouzh Mercia VIIIvet kantved


Notennoù kemmañ

  1. Turbutt, G., (1999) A History of Derbyshire, Volume 1, pp 259-60 Cardiff: Merton Priory Press
  2. 2,0 ha2,1 Online Encyclopedia, da gentañ e levrenn V 08, pajenn 73 eus embannadur 1911 an Encyclopedia Britannica

Daveoù kemmañ

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  • Collis, J. (1983) Wigber Low Derbyshire: A Bronze Age and Anglian Burial site in the White Peak. Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, University of Sheffield.
  • Davies, W. and Vierk, H. "The contexts of Tribal Hidage: social aggregates and settlement patterns", in Frühmittelalterliche Studien, viii (1974)
  • Dumville,D. "The Tribal Hidage: an introduction to its texts and their history", in The Origins of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms ed. S.Bassett, 1989. ISBN 0-7185-1317-7
  • Fowler, M. J. (1954) "The Anglian Settlement of the Derbyshire and Staffordshire Peak District." DAJ 74, 134-151.
  • Hart, C. R. (1981) The North Derbyshire Archaeological Survey. Leeds: A. Wigley & Sons
  • Hodges, R. and Wildgoose, M. (1980) "Roman or native in the White Peak", in Branigan, K. (ed) Rome and the Brigantes, 48-53. Sheffield, Sheffield University Press.
  • Hodges,R. (1991a) "Notes on the Medieval Archaeology of the White Peak." In R. Hodges and K. Smith (eds) Recent Developments in the Archaeology of the Peak District :111-22 (Sheffield Archaeological Monographs 2) Sheffield.
  • Hughes, R. G (1961) "Archaeological Sites in the Trent Valley, South Derbyshire" DAJ 81, 149-50.
  • Jones, H. (1997) The Region of Derbyshire and North Staffordshire from AD350 to AD700: an analysis of Romano-British and Anglian barrow use in the White Peak. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
  • Ozanne, A. (1962-3) "The Peak Dwellers" Medieval Archaeology 6-7, 15-52.
  • Roffe, D. (1986b) "The Origins of Derbyshire" DAJ 106, 102-112.
  • Rollason et al
  • Routh, T. (1937) "A Corpus of the Pre-Conquest Carved Stones of Derbyshire" DAJ 58, 1-46.
 
Ur roue saoz gant e witan (XIvet kantved)
  • Sidebottom, P.C. (1994), Schools of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture in the North Midlands. Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Sheffield.
  • Sidebottom P.C (1999) "Stone Crosses in the Peak and the Sons of Eadwulf." DAJ 119, 206-19.
  • Stenton, F. (1905) "Introduction to the Derbyshire Domesday", in W. Page (ed) The Victoria History of the County of Derbyshire. London.
  • Unwin, T. (1988) "Towards a model of Anglo-Scandinavian rural settlement in England", in Hooke, D. (ed) Anglo-Saxon Settlements, 77-98.
  • Yorke, B. (1990) Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England, London: Seaby.