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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Old_SaxonOld Saxon - Wikipedia

    Old Saxon ( German: altsächsische Sprache ), also known as Old Low German ( German: altniederdeutsche Sprache ), was a Germanic language and the earliest recorded form of Low German (spoken nowadays in Northern Germany, the northeastern Netherlands, southern Denmark, the Americas and parts of Eastern Europe ).

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Old_SaxonyOld Saxony - Wikipedia

    The death penalty was imposed on any man who married above his rank; the marriage of a man below his station was severely condemned; bastardy was not tolerated; intermarriage between Saxons and other Germans was frowned upon; and strangers were hated.

  3. Kidnapped and murdered 23-year-old Harvey Mad Man and 20-year-old Thomas Running Rabbit, two Native American men in the fall of 1982. 41 years, 71 days. Smith is the only Canadian on death row in the United States.

  4. Cynthia Coffman. Along with her boyfriend James Marlow, Coffman was convicted of the kidnappings, robberies and murders of Sandra Neary, Pamela Simmons, Corinna Novis and Lynel Murray on October and November 1986. Novis and Murray were sexually assaulted by Marlow. 34 years, 9 months and 2 days.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Death_rowDeath row - Wikipedia

    Death row, also known as condemned row, is a place in a prison that houses inmates awaiting execution after being convicted of a capital crime and sentenced to death.

  6. Hengist from John Speed 's 1611 "Saxon Heptarchy". Hengist and Horsa are Germanic brothers said to have led the Angles, Saxons and Jutes in their supposed invasion of Britain in the 5th century. Tradition [clarification needed] lists Hengist as the first of the Jutish kings of Kent . Modern scholarly consensus regards Hengist and Horsa as ...

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  8. The old Saxon coats of arms today lives on in the coats of arms of Lower Saxony and Westphalia.. The original Duchy of Saxony comprised the lands of the Saxons in the north-western part of present-day Germany, namely, the contemporary German state of Lower Saxony as well as Westphalia and Western Saxony-Anhalt, not corresponding to the modern German state of Saxony.

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