翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Law Society of Manitoba
・ Law Society of New Brunswick v Ryan
・ Law Society of New South Wales
・ Law Society of Northern Ireland
・ Law Society of Scotland
・ Law Society of Singapore
・ Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Windvogel
・ Law Society of Upper Canada Archives
・ Law Society of Upper Canada v Skapinker
・ Law Song Seng
・ Law Speed
・ Law Students in Action Project
・ Law Teik Hock
・ Law Telegraph Company
・ Law Terms Act 1830
Law Ting Holm
・ Law Ting Pong Secondary School
・ Law Uk Folk Museum
・ Law Union of Ontario
・ Law v Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration)
・ Law v. Siegel
・ Law Week Colorado
・ Law Wing-cheung
・ Law with Two Phases
・ Law without the state
・ Law Yearbook of China
・ Law's Falls, Coonoor
・ Law, Culture and the Humanities
・ Law, Dundee
・ Law, government, and crime in Winnipeg


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Law Ting Holm : ウィキペディア英語版
Law Ting Holm

Law Ting Holm (also known as Tingaholm〔("Tingaholm, Tingwall" ) Shetland Heritage. Retrieved 30 May 2012.〕) is a small promontory at the north end of the freshwater Loch of Tingwall, Mainland Shetland, Scotland.〔 It was once an islet entirely surrounded by water, joined to the shore by a stone causeway wide and long.〔〔("Law Ting Holm" ). RCAHMS. Retrieved 15 August 2010.〕 In the 1850s the levels of the loch were lowered and the holm evolved to its present form.〔Smith (2009)〕 The Loch of Tingwall is west of the town of Lerwick and has one additional island - Holm of Setter.
==Norse parliament==
Law Ting Holm was the location of Shetland's local parliament until the late 16th Century.〔〔Graham-Campbell and Batey (1998) p. 67〕〔("Thing" ) Shetlopedia/Way Back Machine. Version of 1 October 2012. Retrieved 12 July 2014.〕 There are documents relating to assemblies taking place in Tingwall from as early as 1307, although the only reference to the Thing (assembly) meeting on the holm itself comes from a letter dated 1532.〔〔Ballantyne & Smith (1999) p. 196〕
As was common with other such meeting places, a mound may have been made from handsful of earth from the various local þings represented at the meeting, so that all members could say that they were on their home ground. A small, much eroded mound can still be seen and the remains of a wall were found on the perimeter of the island, suggesting the creation of secluded area for meetings.〔〔 Locations where the deliberations of the assembly could be seen but not easily overheard are typical of þing sites.〔("Law Ting Holm, Shetland" ). archeurope.com Retrieved 15 August 2010.〕 The stones on which the "Ford" and other officials of the meeting sat, were reportedly removed at some time in the 18th century to improve the grazing potential.〔
In the 1570s Earl Robert Stewart moved the thing to nearby Scalloway Castle, although the holm was used once more in 1577 when over 700 Shetlanders brought a complaint against the local Foud, Lawrence Bruce, before royal commissioners from Edinburgh.〔Ballantyne & Smith (1999) pp. 183-224〕
Writing in 1774, Low〔Low (1774) p. 154〕 reports that the stone seats had been ripped up to create more room for grazing, although in 1809 Edmonston 〔Edmonston (1809) p. 130〕 suggests that the sites of a stone table and bench can still be traced upon the holm. Excavation undertaken in 2011 as part of the HERA funded Assembly Project revealed the remains of a Late Iron Age/ Pictish settlement at the Law Ting Holm but did not produce clear evidence of later activities. However, archaeological finds indicate that the causeway continued to be maintained well into the 19th century.〔Coohlen & Mehler (2011)〕〔Coohlen & Mehler (2014)〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Law Ting Holm」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.