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The quoit brooch is a type of Anglo-Saxon brooch found from the 5th century and later during the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain that has given its name
Quoit_brooch
Decorative 5th–11th century clothing fasteners
(incomplete ring), and the quoit (double ring, one of each of the previous types) brooches. The circular was the most common brooch form during the middle
Anglo-Saxon_brooches
Topics referred to by the same term
Look up quoit in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Quoit may refer to: Quoit, a single-chambered megalithic tomb, also called a Dolmen Quoit (brooch), a pre-medieval
Quoit
Early medieval cultural group in Britain
jewellery, like brooches, buckles, beads and wrist-clasps, some of outstanding quality. Characteristic of the 5th century is the quoit brooch with motifs
Anglo-Saxons
interest, which both began to be common in the mid 5th century: The Quoit brooch style of metalwork which is found mainly in southern England, on the
Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain
Anglo-Saxon_settlement_of_Britain
Brooch in the form of a flat disk, with a pin back
grave goods. The Sarre Brooch, a 5th-century Kentish quoit brooch, British Museum Anglo-Saxon brooch, from Monkton, Kent Brooch from the Pentney Hoard
Disc_fibula
Details of Anglo-Saxon burials in England
identifying those features which make it unique. He suggests that the quoit brooch style was made and remade as part of the process of construction of new
Burial_in_Anglo-Saxon_England
Transitionary period from 383-410
Romano-British or Anglo-Saxon belt fittings in the Quoit Brooch Style from the Mucking Anglo-Saxon cemetery in Essex, early 5th century, using a mainly
End_of_Roman_rule_in_Britain
Clothing of Anglo-Saxon England
Christianisation of Anglo-Saxon England Anglo-Saxon brooches Quoit brooch Kingston Brooch Fuller Brooch "History: the Anglo-Saxons". BBC. Retrieved 21 February
Anglo-Saxon_dress
rites in early England. Sutton Publishing, 2000. Suzuki, Seiichi. The quoit brooch style and Anglo-Saxon settlement: a casting and recasting of cultural
Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England
Archaeology_of_Anglo-Saxon_England
Village in Kent, England
the British Museum and elsewhere, and include two of the very rare quoit brooches. The manor of Littlebourne belonged to St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury
Littlebourne
English art of the Anglo-Saxon period
distinctive Anglo-Saxon character, as in the Quoit Brooch Style of the 5th century. Anglo-Saxon brooches are the most common survivals of fine metalwork
Anglo-Saxon_art
North Sea Germanic ethnic group from the Jutlandic peninsula
'Saxon' characteristics of its neighbours in the southeast of England. Brooches and bracteates found in east Kent, the Isle of Wight and southern Hampshire
Jutes
Legendary king of Kent
(New York: Routledge, 2022); ISBN 9781032214177. Seiichi Suzuki, The Quoit Brooch Style and Anglo-Saxon Settlement: A Casting and Recasting of Cultural
Oisc_of_Kent
Archaeological site in Essex, England
domestic Anglo-Saxon pottery and late Roman military belt fittings in the Quoit Brooch Style. More than 5,000 items were donated to the British Museum by the
Mucking_(archaeological_site)
450 legendary battle
L. Byock (ed.), The Prose Edda, Penguin Suzuki, Seiichi (2000), The Quoit Brooch Style and Anglo-Saxon Settlement: a Casting and Recasting, Boydell &
Battle_of_Finnsburg
Early English kingdom
East Sussex, yielded late Roman or insular Roman metalwork including a Quoit Brooch Style buckle, which would indicate settlement here to the early 5th century
Kingdom_of_Sussex
Archaeological site in Kent, England
The Sarre Brooch in the British Museum, the classic example of the Anglo-Saxon Quoit Brooch Style
Sarre_Anglo-Saxon_cemetery
official headwear Quadrille dress Queue (hairstyle) Quiff Quilting Quoit (brooch) Rabbit hair Raccoon coat Racing flat Raffia palm Raglan sleeve Rah-rah
Index_of_fashion_articles
Japanese philologist
Beowulf, 1996 The Quoit Brooch Style and Anglo-Saxon settlement, 2000 The metre of Old Saxon poetry, 2004 Anglo-Saxon button brooches, 2008 The meters
Seiichi_Suzuki_(philologist)
Period of Cornish history from c. 225,000 years ago until c. 43 CE
Archaeology. 55: 241–248. Jones, Andy M.; Goskar, Thomas (2017). "Hendraburnick 'Quoit': recording and dating rock art in the west of Britain". Time and Mind.
Prehistoric_Cornwall
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
Girl/Female
Tamil
Dhanvanti | தநவஂதீ
Very quit, Holding wealth
Dhanvanti | தநவஂதீ
Girl/Female
Tamil
Dhanavanthi | தநாவாநà¯à®¤à¯€
Very quit, Holding wealth
Dhanavanthi | தநாவாநà¯à®¤à¯€
Girl/Female
Indian
Very quit, Holding wealth
Girl/Female
Irish
From each meaning “steed, horse.†The daughter of a king of the Irish province of Connacht, she was renowned for both her beauty and her fashion sense. “A smock of royal silk she had next to her skin, over that an outer tunic of soft silk and around her a hooded mantle of crimson fastened on her breast with a golden brooch.â€
Girl/Female
Indian
Very quit, Holding wealth
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Very Quit
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from Old French coit ‘flat stone’, probably a nickname for a skilled quoits player.
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
Boy/Male
English Hebrew Spanish
Shield wolf.
Boy/Male
Indian
The knower of all
Girl/Female
Hindu
Abbreviation of katherine, Pure
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian
Fairy; Goddess
Surname or Lastname
English (Hampshire)
English (Hampshire) : unexplained; perhaps of French origin, an adaptation of Fuget, a topographic name from fuge, a regional term for fougère ‘fern’.
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Hayley, HALLIE means "hay field."
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Pleasure of the Beneficent
Boy/Male
Indian
Acquirer, Earner, Blue
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Increase
Boy/Male
Hebrew
Wreath.
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
QUOIT BROOCH
n.
A flattened ring-shaped piece of iron, to be pitched at a fixed object in play; hence, any heavy flat missile used for the same purpose, as a stone, piece of iron, etc.
interj.
See the Note under Quit, a.
n.
To leave; to quit.
n.
A game played with quoits.
imp. & p. p.
of Quit
n.
The discus of the ancients. See Discus.
v. t.
To throw; to pitch.
v. t. & i.
See Quit.
n.
A quoit.
n.
A quoin.
v. t.
To throw, as a stone. [Obs.] See Quoit.
n.
A discus; a quoit.
v. i.
To throw quoits; to play at quoits.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Quit
a.
To have done with; to cease from; to stop; hence, to depart from; to leave; to forsake; as, to quit work; to quit the place; to quit jesting.
n.
A cromlech.
n.
The quoin post of a lock gate.
n.
Any one of numerous species of small passerine birds native of tropical America. See Banana quit, under Banana, and Guitguit.
n.
A quoin; a corner or external angle; a wedge. See Coigne, and Quoin.