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Srbograd

Dun Sorvio
Sorbiodunum
Povodom grada - utvrde Srba iz neolitskog vremena u sadašnjoj južnoj Engleskoj
The outer defence was first made, it appears, in the Early Iron Age, and its British name
in its genitival form was Sorvioduni or Sorbiodoni. With the advent of the Saxons its
name underwent a change, and the ending — dunum (as the genitive is commonly
extended) was replaced by burg or burh, each meaning a defensive place.

The name appears as Searobyrg in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and is Sarisberie in


Domesday Book. (fn. 2)

The use of the abbreviation Sar' was common; it is discussed elsewhere. (fn. 3)

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=41775
Zanimljiva je lista toponima u Velsu
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/source.aspx?pubid=371

Iz engleskog žurnala “Clack” za književnost, umetnost i nauku

http://books.google.co.uk/books?
id=RmgEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA141&dq=Old+Sarum+serb&hl=sr&ei=8GFETbKZBKe
AhAeFt4SjAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAg#v=
onepage&q=Old%20Sarum%20serb&f=false
THE PRIMITIVE RACES OF DEVON.

PART in.

I. THE three legions which can be proved to have been stationed in Britain, viz., the
second, sixth, and twentieth, were composed of Roman citizens, and therefore their
prevalent language must have been Latin. (Vide "Whitaker, Hist. Manchester, bk. i., c. 6.)

1L Two other legions, portions of which might have brought in a non-Latin element,
viz., the seventh and tenth, were probably composed of Frisians and Batavians.

III. The Dalmatian cohort stationed at Brandon, under the command of the Count of
the Saxon Shore, is the principal Slavonic corps of whose presence we find any trace in
Britain. (Vide Latham, Eng. Lan. p. 3.)*

• I am indebted for the stove details to a learned member of the Plymouth Institution, who like myself is
by no means inclined to laugh at the theory of the Eastern origin of the ancient inhabitants of Devon.

IV. Even supposing, what is most improbable, that a Dalmatian, Pannonian or other
legion speaking an Eastern dialect of Arya to have been stationed in South Devon, this
would not suffice to explain either the antiquarian or philological phenomena on which
the Oriental theory rests.

The name Beltor is usually regarded as connected with the Hebrew and Semetic Bayal
or Baal, a lord, applied to the sun and, in an idolatrous sense, very frequent in Holy Writ.
The Slavonic accepts this same root in both its secondary meanings —1st, as an
idolatrous term, hence Balwan, an idol; 2nd, as a name of the sun, hence Biala, white. In
both these senses we may see traces of it in our ancient British names. The former mythic
term is possibly connected with that fabulous personage, king Belinus, from whom
Billingsgate was said to be called, and it is possible that some words now corrupted into
"well" or "val " may have anciently been Bel or Baal, used in an idolatrous sense.
The other use of Baal as a symbol of light or brightness is more important. The two
principal tribes or nationalities of the east and centre of England of whom we read, were
respectively called Cymri or Kymri, and Belgae. The former of these names Welsford
derives, and probably with truth, from the Hebrew Chum, and the Arabic Kahm, black,
which root becomes in Servian Kara, hence Cymri means "dark men" in the Slavonic and
Semetic languages. Now, in Slavonic, Belgae means just the opposite, deriving from a
Hebrew root, Baal, Biala: "white," "fair"—Belgae, "the fair men." So the difference of
Kymri and Belgae seems to sink into that of dark men and fair men.

The hut circle and rock pillar as well as the characteristic Danmonian names are ever
found near ancient and exhausted tin-workings, the number and extent of which must
astonish every traveller over Dartmoor, who does not reflect that this region supplied
most of the tin of the ancient world. Thus is the idea of mining brought home to us in
connection with that mysterious nation whose traces we have been endeavouring to
follow both in philology and antiquities, and it would be strange if the word "mining"
never occurred in eastern Aryan forms in our local names. It does occur, however, and in
a remarkable manner. The chief mining town of the Moor is yet called by the most un-
English name, Horra-bridge. Now the word Horraln in the Bohemian form, or Goraln
in the Polish form of Slavonic means "a miner." It is but a slight corruption of that
universal word Hor, a hill, which the Slavonians, being a nation mostly dwelling in
plains, associated with the idea of mines.

Nor is Horrabridge the only place where we find traces of this word. St. Gorran, in
Cornwall, is the Polish form of the same word, and by it we may be afforded a new key
to one of the great problems of English history. Even the "I" in the Slavonic Goralny, "a
miner," is to be found in the old Cornish name for the miners of the west of the county,
Gorleuen; and it is highly probable that the same name was originally connected with
that mysterious race of the east of England, of Leicestershire, and the adjacent counties :
the ancient Coranians.

Such are but a very few instances of the many names scattered over the south of Devon
and the adjacent county, that seem to bear the impress of an Oriental or Venedic origin.
The circumstances of their deposition, if we may use the geological term, and the tribes
to which they originally belonged are at present very difficult for us te discover; but their
existence at all seems to invest with a semblance of truth the ancient and despised Welsh
traditions, and to give a kind of certainty to the vague theories long entertained by
antiquaries on most unsatisfactory bases. The dreams of Polwhele and his fellow
labourers become almost inductive realities. The vague conjectures of the antiquary and
the fables of the mythologists concerning the Oriental population of our southern coasts
become altered into a very high probability. There is much, however, that remains to be
done. That this mysterious nation was of Aryan origin we have no reason to doubt, nor
that they spoke the ancient Arya in its Eastern purity, free from the complexities that have
corrupted the Celtic and the Gothic tongues. At the same time the question may arise
whether they were as Polwhele supposed, Asiatic tribes direct from the regions of the
East; or as the traditions affirm, for I cannot but think that the Trojan myth refers to this
people, an Asiatic colony from Italy, a doctrine which the strong Latin influence in
Cornish would seem to favour; or merely some wandering Venedic tribes from Eastern
Europe, driven perhaps before the Cymri in their Western march.

This latter theory (except in the name Bud being applied anciently to the Slavonians,
and in the use of Horra, Gorran, Gorleuen for mountaineers), has not so much basis in
this district as in others where similar names occur. The region of South Devon is by no
means the only locality of these traces of extinct Aryan races. The whole of the south of
England contains them from the great trilithic temple of Stonehenge, itself evidently the
work of a race similar to that which raised our Devonian cromlechs and rock-circles.

That marvellous work is generally believed to have been the national temple of the
ancient population of southern England. If anywhere then, in Wilts should we expect
striking Oriental words, and such we find. The very name of the county is Slavonic. The
Wilty were a Slavonic tribe who lived on the borders of Saxony during the middle ages,
whose name was probably derived from the Slavonic Wilk, a wolf, a widely extended
Aryan word. The term Wilseten may be Saxon, and the Wilty have come over with
Cerdic, as adventurers and conquerors of Wessex; but the application of the name to the
county of Stonehenge and the name of the river Willy, seem to point to a greater
antiquity. The name of Wiltshire's ancient capital, Sarum, is especially important.
SzafFarzik gives Sarum as the name of an old Sarmatian city of the Don. The spelling
is the same in both and seems to give Sarum in Wilts a similar relation to the Euthenian
Sarum that New Plymouth has to Plymouth. The word Sarum is not however Slavonic,
though Severnoi is still used for Northern, but Persian. Sara in Zend, Szaffarzik says,
means " the desert or steppe," an epithet peculiarly applicable to Salisbury Plain, on the
border of which old Sarum was built. No place in England more deserves the same
epithet as Zahara (for Zahara is of the same root) than Salisbury Plain. Whoever has
traversed it on a dark winter's day will have felt itsloneliness, as near as anything English
can be, to the sameness of the Russian steppe or African desert.

In Dorsetshire we do not find many of these Oriental names till we reach the frontiers
of Devon where two occur; Sherborne, in Dorset, and Chard, in Somerset. Sherb or
Serb is still the name of an entire nationality of Eastern Europe, the Servians, who
once had several large tribes near the Elbe on the Saxon frontier, from whence they
were driven south or into Poland by the Germans. This name Serb may be of still
greater antiquity and connected with Sarum, for even till late years the ancient population
of Cornwall were called Sarazin by the Cornish, and their deserted stream-works, Atal
Sarazin. From this I imagine that this word was the real name of our ancient population,
perhaps from their capital being the "City of the Desert" near Stonehenge. The word
Sara-zin would mean "Man of the Desert" Sara, Zendic for Desert, In or Jin being an
Oriental termination for man. Of course this theory has its weak side, as Saracen might
have been brought by the Crusaders into Cornwall; but we may ask why should the
Cornishmen think those ancient miners were the Moslem foes of Christendom, unless
they had a tradition of their Eastern origin?

Of the Cornish name Sarazin we find little trace in the Roman Itineraries, at least in
Devon. From Richard of Cirencester we read that Devon and Cornwall were peopled
during the Roman dominion by three tribes:—

I. The Cimbri (a branch of the Welsh Cymri probably) who peopled the borders of
Devon and Somerset, and probably most of North Devon. These may have been a purely
Cymrian tribe, and to their descendants possibly we might owe the strong predominant
Celtic influence in Cornish, in which most of the Oriental elements of our Devonian
names seem absorbed. The more resolute of the other Britons joined this tribe on the
Saxon invasion and thus formed the Cornish nationality, spreading west from the Exe,
until the reign of Athelstan, when the Celtic element was pushed back to the Tamar, and
the Saxon influence infused into our Devonian nationality. This Cymrian element has
since become so strong in Cornwall as almost to demolish the remains of all non-Celtic
population.

II. The Danmonii, whom the Romans found the most powerful people of the West,
inhabiting the south coast of Devon and Cornwall, a nation of laborious miners, to whom
it may be that we owe much of our Dartmoor antiquities and the Aryan names of South
Devon.

III. The Carnabii, or the Gorleuen of the west, perhaps our oldest Aryan
population, driven to the far west by the tide of successive invasions. The name
Carnabii, as I have said, would mean " the miners " in Venedic.

Now from my slight acquaintance with what remains of the old Cornish, I should be by
no means inclined to class it with the Oriental forms of Aryan. Of course all languages of
the same family have more or less similarity to each other, and so we must expect to find
in the Cornish several words common to all the languages of Europe. There are indeed
some few Cornish words that have a striking similarity to Slavonic (of .which I have
formed a list), but the mass of the language like the other Celtic tongues is either sui
generis or else showing close affinity to the Latin, and to the Latin only of continental
languages. I cannot but think, however, that a careful philological analysis of the Cornish;
an examination of its divergencies from the other tongues in the Celtic family, and
especially of those words which appear entirely distinct from all the continental forms of
Aryan; the elimination of such words as seem to be of a recent Saxon or Latin derivation;
an inquiry into the origin of the few, but yet important Venedic forms; an explanation of
the strong Latin tendency of the language in general, might, if carefully conducted, lead
to the most important results in illustrating the aboriginal ethnology of the West of
England.

W. S. LACH SZTRMA

Odlomak iz

A Selection of curious articles from the


Gentleman's magazine, Том 2
Аутор: John Walker

http://books.google.co.uk/books?pg=PA543&dq=Old%20Sarum
%20serb&ei=8GFETbKZBKeAhAeFt4SjAg&ct=result&id=7CEJAAAAQAAJ&hl=sr&
output=text
A town among the ancient Britons was intended for purposes very different from
modern towns. The petty states ' into which the island was divided seem not to have
equalled the size of a modern county ,t and, as they were ever quarrelling, it behoved
each state to have a place of security for their wives and cattle when threatened by an
invasion of their neighbours. Forests were usually chosen for this purpose; but in open
districts some insulated hill was fortified for a refuge. Such was Old Sarum (Serbia
dunumj, such was Badbury; and both of them were improved to Roman purposes by
these conquerors. Their towns were garrisons, which collected the tribute of the
neighbourhood; and as that tribute was chiefly paid in corn, many granaries must have
been necessary to receive this bulky commodity.! Hence an immediate appearance of a
town must arise in the place to which the Britons were compelled to carry their corn.
Some complaints are extant, that money was sometimes extorted by the procurators (the
commissaries,) lest the natives should be compelled to carry their corn to distant
garrisons instead of those in the neighbourhood.

If any one expects to find the quadrangular form in all Roman earth-works, he
unwarily extends the form of the legionary camp to purposes to which it is inadequate.
The square was chosen only because their constant discipline , thus arranged every
soldier in a known place, and prevented the confusion of promiscuous encampment.^ A

• Thus Batavia was formed from viat-awe, wet soil Britannia probably from brat-
anac, tin-country, Stc **BRATANAC means son-of brother on Serbian language.!

\ Cantium (Kent) was divided into four principalities; indeed, it probably included part
of Sussex.

J It is said, that eight hundred small decked vessels were once employed to transport
corn from Britain to the leeions on the German frontier.

§ At Hod-hill, near Blandford,ls a complete specimen of the legionary camp in high


preservation.

square is by no means adapted to permanent defence; for that a circle is much better,
since nothing is weaker than an unflanked angle. Silchester and old Sarum prove plainly
enough that their town fortifications were more frequently in a circular form.

Of Badbury-rings this is a brief account. The two inner rings were the repository of
stores and the habitation of the garrison. The space inclosed is about three hundred yards
diameter; the area of course, about fourteen acres. Without the two inner rings another
skirts around at the distance of forty or fifty yards; leaving a space for those of the natives
who chose to live under the protection of the garrison, but who could not safely be
admitted to reside within its limits. The necessities of the garrison for traders and
labourers must soon attract this kind of suburb around them. The outer ring is about a
mile round, and, as well as the others, rather exceeds in height and steepness tlie ramparts
of Old Sarum, which has also an inner inclosure for the garrison. The very narrow
summit of the ramparts at Badbury proves that it was never walled round; nor, perhaps,
was any ancient town where the foss and ramparts are double.

In the rings at Badbury are entrances, one opening on the Roman road to Old Sarum
(visible in the beginning of this century,*) another towards Dorchester (Durnovaria) of
which some trace is still extant on the downs. Combined with'this second entrance, in the
outer ring is a third pointing towards Blandford, and of use to communicate with the
stationary camps at Hod-hill and Shilleston, near that place. The evidence of these
military roads, and many Roman coins dug up at Badbury, leave no doubt of its being the
situation of the ancient Vindocladia

…of the Itinerary of Antoninus, whose routes are good and valid, though his military
distances (like all other Roman numerals) are exceedingly mutilated by copyists.

In Saxon times this place was called Baddon-byrig, the memorial of some chieftain
there buried. So usual was this cause of altering an ancient name among the Saxons, that
at last the general name of every town became borough, because it so constantly ended in
berig, or bury, a word derived from byrian or bytigean, 'tobury, hide, or cover; whence
also rtLbbh'burroTus, and the monumental hillocks called

DODACI

Na srpskom jeziku su lako razumljivi toponimi u Engleskoj:

- the general name of every town became borough, because it so constantly ended in
berig, or bury, a word derived from byrian or bytigean, 'tobury, hide, or cover;

'***on old Serbian “butni”means “Put it, hide it” but “bure” means wooden shape
for covering things , for ex. food for winter times…Glagol “butnuti”znači staviti, dok
je “bure” drvena posuda za skladištenje zaliha- zimnice napr.

-ancient Vindocladia

***on Serbian Vindo-clada means “Idol of Vinds/Serbs”. Probably wooden


one….Klada je na srpskom trupac, balvan, dugačko drvo, takođe drveni idol paganskog
Boga..odatle klad-kao veza sa precima..i kladovo- kao grobište, mesto predaka ili mesto
drvenih idola-klada

-towards Dorchester (Durnovaria)

***on serbian Dur-nova means “the new one dur” and “dur” is always in beginning
of Serbian words which explain something “hard to cross over”….Dur je uvek
predmetak u srpskom za nešto što je teško prebroditi I proći, koaplanina Dur-mitor ili
reka Du(r)nav..Tako se Durnovar razume kao Novi Dur, nova prepreka..ali I
DRNOVA-R., možda od Drvno-var (naselje od drvenih kuća ili drveno svetilište) ili
DRENOV-A, mesto gde ma mnogo drenova..Dren je mitsko drvo Srba, vezano za
zdravlje I isceljenje “Zdrav kao dren”.

- Hod-hill, near Blandford

*** Walking-hill, hill for walking on Serbian because “hod” means stepping, walking,
going..Verb”hodati” (“oditi”,”Hoditi”) means “go”,”walk”..

- Thus Batavia was formed from viat-awe


- *** BATA on Serbian means brother,commonly little brother…. but as verb
“batati” means “to pass, to come, to walk with sounds of each foot”..therefor
BATA-VIA can be mixed word in meaning”across the land of little brother” or,
maybe, “across the noise-land”

- - wet soil Britannia probably from brat-anac, tin-country, Stc

**BRATANAC means son-of- brother on Serbian language.BRAT is brother,”anac” is


edding for male…Daughter-of- brother on Serbian is “brat-anica”.

- Old Sarum (Serbia dunumj,)

*** Serbo- dun means Serb’s walls, because “duvar (duwar)” means wall, but
one who built houses and walls is “dun-djer”.Same meaning is for celtic Dun
Sorvio, Wall of Serbs, because Serbian “dundjers”made it.

- The original name of Old Sarum is said to have been Caer-Sarflog, or " The
Citadel of the Service Tree," and it is first recorded as the residence of Ergen,
daughter of Caradoc, who was married to the Chief Ruler of the City.
It has also been called Caer Caradoc..

*** Holly three of Serbs is still oak, and oaks’ sort called CER (CAER), specially for
festivity of new-sun-born on Decembar 25th..so “citadel of the Serbian Tree” means holly
place around cer-tree…CER tree was “klada”,”idol” of Perun, ThunderGod.

Na srpskom jeziku se izuetno jasno razume “svetilište srpskog drveta”nazvano CER..po


svetom drvetu ceru, vrsti hrasta, dakle Perunovom svetilištu.
Annals of the coinage of Britain and its
dependencies: from the ..., Том 4
Аутор: Rogers Ruding

http://books.google.co.uk/books?pg=PA402&dq=Old%20Sarum
%20serb&ei=8GFETbKZBKeAhAeFt4SjAg&ct=result&id=gKgCAAAAYAAJ&hl=sr&
output=text

OLD SARUM.

Dr. Stukeley discovered that Carausius struck Coins in Old Sarum, on his passing
through that City1; but for this discovery he produced no authority except his own
assertion, founded upon the letter s in the Exergue.

On a Coin of iEthelredll is found SEARBE; and on others of Cnut SAEBER, or SEBER, or SER,
or SERE m.

In the Description of the Cathedral Church of Salisbury is given an Engraving of a


Coin of Edward the Confessor. It is of the' Sovereign type, and reads on the Obverse
EADWEARD REX NGLO ; on the Reverse, GODRIC ON SEARRVM.

In the description of this Coin it is said that " Dr. Mead had in his Cabinet a Coin of
Edward the Confessor, having on the Reverse GODRIC ON SEA, with the Arms of that
Monarch. Very few Antiquarians could tell what to make of this particular abbreviation
till the Coin before us was discovered, which was found at Old Sarum some years ago,
and is now in the possession of Mr. John White, of Newgate Street in London.

" This is the first instance we have met with of Sarum's being written in this manner,
and differs very little from the spelling of our times." n

1 Medallick History of Carausius, Part I. pp. 90, 193. m Salisbury was written by the
Anglo-Saxons 8eapbyj>i5, 8eanobypij,, Seapbepi, and Saeperbepi. Saxon Chronicle. ■
Description of Cathedral Church of Salisbury, p. 50. VOL. IV. D D

As the Coin itself has never appeared publickly, those who are acquainted with the
culpable ingenuity which was in so many instances exercised by the person in whose
possession it is stated to be, will have little hesitation in pronouncing it to be a forgery.
The description is so much in his manner that 1 have no doubt but that it was drawn up
by him. It contains a reference to a genuine Coin, whose inscription was rendered obscure
by abbreviation ; and the conclusion of the abbreviated word was artfully introduced
upon the Coin before us. Thus, as was his custom, he erected a spurious superstructure
upon a legitimate foundation, and gave to airy nothing a local habitation and a name.

It is probable that Henry I. had a Mint here, for a Penny of his has SERBI on the
Reverse; as had also Henry II., on whose Coins SAL, SALE, and SALEB occur °.

Modern Salisbury seems to have arisen from Old Sarum, in the reign of Henry III. P

It is not known that any Mint was ever established in the new City.

………..

I have never seen this Coin; but it is engraven in " A Description of that admirable
Structure, the Cathedral Church of Salisbury," London, 1774, 4to. It is of the Sovereign
type, and reads EADVVEARD REX NGLO. Rev. GODRIC. ON. SEARRVM. See page 50 of the
account of Old Saruni, where it is said to have been found some years since at that place,
and to be now (x. e. in 1774) in the possession of Mr. White of Newgate Street j who
discovered from this Coin the meaning of SEA on a Penny of Dr. Mead's, which had
puzzled many Antiquaries. Qu. whether it were not made for the express purpose of that
discovery ?

http://books.google.com/books?
id=GJYCAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA395&lpg=PA395&dq=Godric+On+Searrvm.&source=bl
&ots=XnrG0AdoFg&sig=7ngtg5TzhEAPH4alFcL-
eTzzD5g&hl=sr&ei=HolETdvfDZOKhQfeouXlAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&r
esnum=1&ved=0CBcQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Godric%20On%20Searrvm.&f=false

T. J Northy.

The popular history of Old & New Sarum


http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/t-j-northy/the-popular-history-of-old--
new-sarum-tro/page-2-the-popular-history-of-old--new-sarum-tro.shtml

These latter arrivals were known as the Neolithic, or men of the New Stone Age, their
stone implements being polished and of a more efficient type than those of the
Palaeolithic men. In addition to being possessed of superior implements, they enjoyed an
altogether higher degree of civilization. They brought with them a number of domestic
animals, manufactured a rude kind of pottery, and grew corn and other crops, and the "
lynchets " or terraces to be found in various parts of Wiltshire are pointed out as
the work of these people, or, at any rate, the doings of agriculturists of very early days.
The Neolithic men were followed by hordes of fresh settlers known as the Celts,
who belonged to a group of races sometimes called the Aryan group, to which Teutons,
Slavonians, Italians, Greeks, and the chief ancient races of Persia and India also belong.
Bands of these people sailed up the Wiltshire Avon, and taking up their quarters on the
fertile and convenient lands by the banks of the stream, drove the people
they found already there on to the downs and the hill tops, where they constructed their
rude villages, and probably fortified them with mounds and ditches.*

Of the Celts there are reminders in the nomenclature of the district. Whilst the Teutons
in later times left traces of their identity in the names of towns and villages along the
banks, the flowing stream and the adjacent hill have the Celtic designation, and thus
testify to that very early occupation of the district. The late Mr. Stevens finds the Celtic
origination in the name of the Avon (which literally means a river), the word Durnford
(formerly Dur-en-ford) which means the water-ford ; the Wylye, which signifies a " flow
or flood," &c.

The next hordes attracted to this island in whom we are most interested locally were the
Belgii3, who, three and a half centuries before Christ, inhabited parts which inckided the
modern counties of Wilts, Hants, and Dorset, and part of Somerset. Celtic scholars differ
very widely as to the identity of these people, but a very general view that they belonged
to the Gallic branch of the Celtic stock, and had migrated to Britain from north-eastern
Gaul…

The original name of Old Sarum is said to have been Caer-Sarflog, or " The Citadel of
the Service Tree," and it is first recorded as the residence of Ergen, daughter of
Caradoc, who was married to the Chief Ruler of the City.
It has also been called Caer Caradoc, by the unreliable Jeffery of Monmouth, but Caer
Caradoc is believed really to have been situated near Amesbury. When the Komans
arrived in this Island they seized upon Old Sarum, in common with other British
earthworks and fortifications that came in their way, and duly appreciating its advan-
tageous position they made it a station for troops in connection witli other posts, which
were united by military roads, the latter being either constructed by the Romans,
or were British ways which they adopted- As a defensive position Old Sarum was
retained when many other camps such as Ogbury (near Amesbury), Chlorus's Camp* (at
Three Mile Hill) and Clearbury were abandoned, and this may have been due to the
circumstance that it (Old Sarum) lay in the direct line of traffic in early times.

There are six of these Eoman roads that are known to have led out of Old Sarum : —
One, South West, passing near Bemerton Church, crossing the Wily by the Parsonage
Barn, over Lord Pembroke's Warren, to Tony Stratford, Woodyates Inn, and Badbury
Bings to Dorchester ; a second. East, crossing the London-road, near King Chlorus's
Camp, by Ford, Winterslow Mill, Buckholt Farm, and Bossington, to Winchester ; a
third. North East, running to Silchester ; a fourth. North, towards Kennet ; a fifth. North
West, by Bishopstrow, and Yarnbury, Scratchbury and Battlesbury Castles, to Aquae
Solis (Bath) ; and a sixth, West, to Ilchester. The second and third named roads can easily

be traced at the present time.

Old Sarums history is as old as Stonehenge although it is not that well known.

http://erien.the-blues-brothers.net/oldsarum_eng.html

The second Belgic conquest may have included the downs of Hants and South
Wiltshire. The narrow valleys that intersect the latter meet in the neighbourhood of Old
Sarum (Sorbiodunum), which must always have been, what in military language might be
termed, the key of the district. The Hampshire downs appear to have been called by the
Britons the Gwent, or champaign. No natural frontier separates these two tracts of down,
but their northern boundary is indented,

The archaeological journal, Том 8


Аутор: British Archaeological Association.

http://books.google.co.uk/books?
pg=PA146&dq=sorbiodunum&ei=FZRETfyNCMaeOpGQvIIC&ct=result&id=cDQGA
AAAQAAJ&hl=sr&output=text

OLD SARUM.

Dr. Stukeley discovered that Carausius struck coins in Old Sarum, on his passing
through that city:1 but for this discovery he produced no authority except his own
assertion, founded upon the letter s in the exergue.
On a coin of ./Ethelred II. is found SEARBE; and on others of Cnut, SAEBER, or SEBER, or
SER, or SERE.1 In the description of the cathedral church of Salisbury, is given an
engraving of a coin of Edward the Confessor. It is of the sovereign type, and reads on the
obverse EADWEARD REX NGLO; on the reverse,

GODRIC ON SEARRVM.

In the description of this coin it is said that "Dr. Mead had in his cabinet a coin of
Edward the Confessor, having on the reverse GODRIC ON SEA, with the arms of that
monarch. Very few antiquarians could tell what to make of this particular abbreviation till
the coin before us was discovered, which was found at Old Sarum some years ago, and is
now in the possession of Mr. John White, of Newgate Street in London.

"This is the first instance we have met with of Sarum's being written in this manner,
and differs very little from the spelling of our times."3

As the coin itself has never appeared publicly, those who are acquainted with the
culpable ingenuity which was in so many instances exercised by the person in whose
possession it is stated to be, will have little hesitation in pronouncing it to be a forgery.
The description is so much in his manner, that I have no doubt but that it was drawn up
by him. It contains a reference to a genuine coin, whose inscription was rendered obscure
by abbreviation; and the conclusion of the abbreviated word was artfully introduced upon
the coin before us. Thus, as was his custom, he erected a spurious superstructure upon a
legitimate foundation, and gave to airy nothing a local habitation and a name.*

It is probable that Henry I. had a mint here, for a penny of his has SERBI on the reverse;
as had also Henry II., on whose coins SAL, SALE, and SALEB occur.4

Modern Salisbury seems to have arisen from Old Sarum, in the reign of Henry III.4

It is not known that any mint was ever established in the new city.

http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA225&lpg=PA225&dq=coin%20revers
%20%20Searrvm.&sig=mGYgyu1EIMDEAsqPXqrha83syKA&ei=AJdETcCSComChQf
0sbzEAQ&ct=result&id=VFhDAAAAcAAJ&hl=sr&ots=llNr00l6ro&output=text

Novcici Henrija prvog sa srpskim heraldičkim simbolom


http://lunaticg.blogspot.com/2010/04/treasure-hunt-group-unearthed-178-henry.html

Pretpostavka je (iako je izlažu u knjigama istorije Rajić i Milojević) da su pripadnici


srpskog plemena Vukići,Vukovići (od starosl.vlk=wolf=vuk,Wiltzen) koji su živeli na
pbali Belog(baltičkog)mora u vreme bronzanog doba preplovili i naselili današnju južnu
Englesku.Kao i u matičnoj domovini, nastavili su svoje obrede oko drveća u lugovima I
zidanje utvrdjenih gradova..kao što je Dun Srba,Srbodun.Srbograd.

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