Northumber

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Middle English Northhumbre, from Old English Norþhymbre, variant of Norþanhymbre.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

Northumber (plural Northumbers)

  1. (obsolete) A Northumbrian.
    • 1821, Alban Butler, The lives of the fathers, martyrs, and other principal saints[1], volume 8, John Murphy, pages 546–547:
      From this monastery, all the churches of Bernicia, or the northern part of the kingdom of the Northumbers from the Tine to the Firth of Edinburgh, had their beginning ; as had some also of those of the Deïri, who inhabited the southern part of the same kingdom from the Tine to the Humber.
    • 1839, Charles Dodd, Mark Aloysius Tierney, Dodd's Church History of England [] [2], Charles Dolman, page 32:
      Some years after Alla's reign, when Ethelfred was king of the Northumbers, he made war with the British Christians that inhabited Wales, and was the author of that terrible slaughter of the monks of Bangor.
    • 1842, Joseph Strutt, J. B. Planché, The Regal and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of England [] [3], Henry G. Bohn, page 133:
      All our historians agree that Oswald was a man of much piety, and of an amiable disposition. By his valour he united the kingdoms of Bernicia, and Deira, and made himself sole monarch over all the Northumbers.