Wellae
Wellae[1] (vulgo Wells) est urbs Somersetensis comitatus, in Anglia occidentali sita, et ab anno 909 sedes dioeceseos Bathoniensis et Wellensis (hodie in ecclesia Anglicana), ubi nundinae tenentur ab anno 1180, mercatus autem ab anno 1166.[2] Nostro tempore hominum fere 12 000 ibi habitant. "Wellas, villam ... pro copia fonticulorum ita ebullentium ita dictam": his verbis etymologiam Anglosaxonicam toponymi Guillelmus Malmesburiensis explanavit.[1]
Ecclesia Cathedralis Wellensis quam hodie visitatur, sancto Andrea consecrata, inter annos 1175 et 1490 constructa est.
Notae
Bibliographia
- D. S. Andrews, Bath and Wells: a sketchbook. Londinii: A. & C. Black, 1919
- "Wells" in John Collinson, The History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset (3 voll. Bathoniae, 1791) vol. 3 pp. 375-411
- Clare Gathercole, An archaeological assessment of Wells. Taunton: Somerset County Council, 2003
- "Wells[nexus deficit]" in Samuel Lewis, ed., A Topographical Dictionary of England (7a ed. 1848. ~)
- "Wells" in Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England: North Somerset and Bristol (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1958) pp. 278-331
- "Wells" in Arthur L. Salmon, Ernest W. Haslehust, Bath and Wells (Novi Eboraci: Dodge [1900?]) pp. 30-49
- "Colleges: the cathedral of Wells" in Victoria History of the Counties of England (Londinii, 1901- ~) Somerset vol. 2 (1911) pp. 162-169
- Horace B. Woodward, "Notes on the geology of the neighbourhood of Wells, Somerset" in Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society's Proceedings vol. 19 (1873)
Nexus externi