Bruneswold - Soke
Soke
1. Along the Meadow Hedges Here and There
2. Gyrvii
3. A Glimpse into the Meadswael
4. Luminous Haloo
5. Gildenburgh
6. Robin Hood and Little John
7. The Crossroads of Crawthorne Lane
8. soke
9. Relatio Heddae
10. Bluebell Walk (Milton Thicket)
11. Don't you think I'm a jolly old man?
Total Time
42:11
Released
April 29, 2022
Additional Details
Running Time 42 Minutes
Written and Performed by Bruneswold
Definition of soke
1: the right in Anglo-Saxon and early English law to hold court and administer justice with the franchise to receive certain fees or fines arising from it : jurisdiction over a territory or over people
2: the district included in a soke jurisdiction or franchise
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/soke
"The older district was called the Nass or Ness of Burgh, “from its situation stretching out in the form of a promontory between the Welland and the Nene rivers from Easton to the confluence of those rivers at Croyland. It was a woody solitary country till Adulphus, Abbot of Peterborough, cut down the woods, erected manor houses and granges, and let the lands to farm for certain rents."
Peterborough Cathedral: A General, Architectural, and Monastic History, Thomas Craddock, 1864, p. 196 (J. S. Clarke)
released April 29, 2022
Cover art photography by Bruneswold (inside the hedge). Cover Illustration taken from 'Historical and Discriptive Account of Cathedrals', by John Britton, 1836, Published by London; M A Nattali.
Written and Performed by Bruneswold
Definition of soke
1: the right in Anglo-Saxon and early English law to hold court and administer justice with the franchise to receive certain fees or fines arising from it : jurisdiction over a territory or over people
2: the district included in a soke jurisdiction or franchise
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/soke
"The older district was called the Nass or Ness of Burgh, “from its situation stretching out in the form of a promontory between the Welland and the Nene rivers from Easton to the confluence of those rivers at Croyland. It was a woody solitary country till Adulphus, Abbot of Peterborough, cut down the woods, erected manor houses and granges, and let the lands to farm for certain rents."
Peterborough Cathedral: A General, Architectural, and Monastic History, Thomas Craddock, 1864, p. 196 (J. S. Clarke)
released April 29, 2022
Cover art photography by Bruneswold (inside the hedge). Cover Illustration taken from 'Historical and Discriptive Account of Cathedrals', by John Britton, 1836, Published by London; M A Nattali.
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Added By:
Aveline
August 3, 2023
Edited By:
Opsiuscato
September 21, 2023