FACTOID # 59: People might eat oats when they're hungry, but people from Hungary don't eat oats.
 
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Encyclopedia > Brun (Saxony)

Brun (Latin Bruno; died 2 February 880) was a Saxon count, and possibly duke of Saxony. He was the elder son of Liudolf, Duke of Saxony. He died, along with several other Saxon noblemen, in a battle against the Normans. Nothing is known about his life. February 2 is the 33rd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... For other uses, see number 880. ... The Duchy of Saxony was a medieval Duchy covering the greater part of Northern Germany. ... Definition A count is a nobleman in most European countries, equivalent in rank to a British earl, whose wife is still a countess. Originally the title comes denoted the rank of a high courtier or provincial (military or administrative) official in the late Roman Empire: before Anthemius was made emperor... The term duke is a title of nobility which refers to the sovereign male ruler of a Continental European duchy, to a nobleman of the highest grade of the British peerage, or to the highest rank of nobility in various other European countries, including Spain and France (in Italy, principe... The Normans (adapted from the name Northmen or Norsemen) were Scandinavian invaders (especially Danish Vikings) who began to occupy the northern area of France now known as Normandy in the latter half of the 9th century. ...


According to legend, Brun is the founder of Brunswick and ancestor of the Brunones, counts of Brunswick. Braunschweig may also refer to the administrative region of Germany. ...



Preceded by:
Liudolf
Duke of Saxony
?
Succeeded by:
Otto the Illustrious


List of Dukes, Electors, and Kings of Saxony, 880-1918 The original Duchy of Saxony comprised lands in the north-westen part of present-day Germany, roughly corresponding to the modern German state of Lower Saxony and to Westphalia. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
The International Canal Monuments List - Part IIa - Individual Structures (11563 words)
The idea of lifting an actual boat from one canal level to another seems to have evolved separately in both England and Germany at the end of the 18th century.
The first recorded boat lift was constructed in 1788-89 on the short Churprinz Canal at Halsbrücke in Saxony (Germany).
One of the greatest of the early embankments was at Burnley, on the Leeds and Liverpool Canal (UK), where the canal is carried 1km over the valleys of the rivers Brun and Calder at a height of over 12m.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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