HORSA hut - definição. O que é HORSA hut. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é HORSA hut - definição

LEGENDARY BROTHERS SAID TO HAVE LED THE INVASION OF BRITAIN IN 5TH CENTURY
Horsa; Hengist; Hengest and Horsa; User:Bloodofox/Hengist and Horsa; Hengest; Hengist & Horsa
  • William Hamilton]] (1793)
  • Hengist and Horsa arriving in Britain, as depicted by [[Richard Rowlands]] (1605)
  • Hengist from [[John Speed]]'s 1611 "Saxon Heptarchy"
  • The brothers in [[Edward Parrott]]'s ''Pageant of British History'' (1909)
  • The [[Uffington White Horse]]

HORSA         
  • HORSA hut block, Baltasound Junior High School, Shetland
1945-1950 GOVERNMENT PROGRAM IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
HORSA hut; HORSA building; Horsa hut
HORSA is the acronym for the 'Hutting Operation for the Raising of the School-Leaving Age', a programme of hut-building in schools introduced by the UK Government to support the expansion of education under the Education Act 1944 to raise the compulsory education age by a year to age 15.
Hengist and Horsa         
Hengist and Horsa are Germanic brothers said to have led the Angles, Saxons and Jutes in their invasion of Britain in the 5th century. Tradition lists Hengist as the first of the Jutish kings of Kent.
Hörnli Hut         
  • Hörnli Hut
MOUNTAIN HUT ON THE MATTERHORN
Hörnlihütte; Hornli Hut; Hornlihutte; Matterhorn hut
The Hörnli Hut (German: Hörnlihütte) is a mountain hut located at the foot of the north-eastern ridge (Hörnli Ridge) of the Matterhorn. It is situated at above sea level, a few kilometres south-west of the town of Zermatt in the canton of Valais in Switzerland.

Wikipédia

Hengist and Horsa

Hengist and Horsa are Germanic brothers said to have led the Angles, Saxons and Jutes in their invasion of Britain in the 5th century. Tradition lists Hengist as the first of the Jutish kings of Kent.

Most modern scholarly consensus now regards Hengist and Horsa to be mythical figures, and much scholarship has emphasised the likelihood of this based on their alliterative animal names, the seemingly constructed nature of their genealogy, and the unknowable quality of the earliest sources of information for their reports in the works of Bede. Their later detailed representation in texts such as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle can tell us more about ninth-century attitudes to the past than anything about the time in which they are said to have existed.

According to early sources, Hengist and Horsa arrived in Britain at Ebbsfleet on the Isle of Thanet. For a time, they served as mercenaries for Vortigern, King of the Britons, but later they turned against him (British accounts have them betraying him in the Treachery of the Long Knives). Horsa was killed fighting the Britons, but Hengist successfully conquered Kent, becoming the forefather of its kings.

A figure named Hengest, possibly identifiable with the leader of British legend, appears in the Finnesburg Fragment and in Beowulf. J.R.R. Tolkien has theorized that this indicates Hengest/Hengist is the same person and originates as a historical person.

Hengist was historically said to have been buried at Hengistbury Head in Dorset.