The Brahhingas or Brahingas were a tribe or clan of Anglo-Saxon England whose territory was centred on the settlement of Braughing in modern-day Hertfordshire. The name of the tribe means "the people of Brahha",[1] with Brahha likely to have been either a leader of the tribe or a real or mythical ancestor.[2]

The tribe are first recorded in a charter dating from the 830s or 840s,[1] and their regio or administrative territory is likely to have included the later parishes of Reed, Barkway, Barley, Nuthampstead, Buckland, Wyddial, Anstey, Throcking, Aspenden, Layston, Great Hormead, Little Hormead, Westmill and Standon, in the valleys of the River Rib and River Quin.[3] The Brahhingas were originally within the area of the Middle Saxons but fell under the control of the East Saxons at an early date.[4] The area remained part of the Archdeaconry of Middlesex even after it became part of Hertfordshire.[4]

The territory of the Brahhingas exhibits a high degree of continuity with pre-Saxon eras. Immediately to the south of the tribe's royal vill in Braughing lay the site of the second largest Roman town in modern Hertfordshire, and next to that lay an Iron Age oppidum.[5] The location of the Roman town is called Wickham Hill, [5] a form of name including the Latin word vicus and the Old English suffix -ham, which often indicates continuity between Roman and Anglo-Saxon settlement.[6] These suggest that the territory of the Brahhingas may have developed gradually from an earlier pagus of the Catuvellauni during the Romano-British period.[7]

Alongside the Waeclingas and the Hicce, the Brahhingas were one of the most important tribes of the Anglo Saxon era within the area that would later become Hertfordshire, and the central places and territories of these areas were to be important building-blocks of the later administrative structure of the county.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Williamson 2000, p.ย 64.
  2. ^ Williamson 2000, p.ย 63.
  3. ^ Williamson 2013, p.ย 85.
  4. ^ a b Bailey 1989, p.ย 115.
  5. ^ a b Williamson 2013, p.ย 84.
  6. ^ Rowe & Williamson 2013, p.ย 116.
  7. ^ Williamson 2000, p.ย 85.

Bibliography

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  • Bailey, Keith (1989), "The Middle Saxons", in Bassett, Steven (ed.), The Origins of Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms, Leicester: Leicester University Press, pp.ย 108โ€“122, ISBNย 0718513177
  • Rowe, Anne; Williamson, Tom (2013), Hertfordshire: A Landscape History, Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, ISBNย 1909291021, retrieved 2014-07-07
  • Williamson, Tom (2000), The Origins of Hertfordshire, Manchester: Manchester University Press, ISBNย 071904491X, retrieved 2014-07-06
  • Williamson, Tom (2013), Environment, Society and Landscape in Early Medieval England: Time and Topography, Woodbridge: Boydell Press, ISBNย 1843837374, retrieved 2014-07-06

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Heptarchy

Ikelgas Spalda (Spalding) Bilmingas (part of south Lincolnshire) Essex: Brahhingas Beda Daenningas Caningaege Gegingas Surrey Gillingas Godhelmingas Haueringas

List of early Germanic peoples

Forest) Saxons (Island Saxons) East Saxons (East Secsenas) (in Essex) Brahhingas (Saxon tribe centred on the settlement of Braughing in modern-day Hertfordshire)

Braughing Hundred

Eastern Hertfordshire. The area was settled by the Saxon tribe called the Brahhingas and became part of the area of the Middle Saxons within the Kingdom of

Waeclingas

Verulamium, the Romano-British town that preceded St Albans. Together with the Brahhingas and the Hicce the Waeclingas were one of the most important tribes of

Regiones

continuity with earlier Roman or pre-Roman subdivisions, including that of the Brahhingas, which was based around Braughing in modern Hertfordshire, the site of

History of Hertfordshire

Essex. The main early Saxon tribes there seem to have been the Hicce, Brahhingas and Wรฆclingas. Place names tend to derive from Celtic rather than Saxon