Normandig
Normandig is stede in Franclande, be Franclandes norðan. Hit wæs gesetlod fram Norþmenn.
Hit wæs ēac land hƿanon cōm Willelm Bastard tō Englalande.
Innungbred
Landwaru[adihtan | ādihtan fruman]
Normandig hæfþ 3.2 þūsenda þūsenda landbūenda, mid landware þiccnesse 107/km2. Þæt is hwega under þǣm gemǣnan rīme Franclandes, and in uferran Normandige gǣþ þæt rīm tō 145. Þā hēafodbyrg sind: Roðem (on Frencisce: Rouen) (385,000 burgwara, mid underburgum), se hēafod uferran Normandiges and gēo þæs hālan landdǣles; Le Havre (247,000); Caþum (on Frencisce: Caen (200,000), þæt hēafod niðeran Normandiges; and Kiæresburh (on Frencisce: Cherbourg) (89,000).
Ōðere tūnas sind:
- Alençon
- Arromanches
- Avranches
- Baius (on Frencisce: Bayeux)
- Coutances
- Dieppe
- Doudeville
- Eureus (on Frencisce: Évreux)
- Falaise
- Honfleur
- Houlgate
- Lisieux
- Moretoin (on Frencisce: Mortain)
- Sant Laudan (on Frencisce: Saint-Lô)
- Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte
- Sainte-Mère-Église
- Villers-Bocage
Landāscrīfung[adihtan | ādihtan fruman]
Se landscipe bebyrdeþ andlang þāra norðernra rimena þā Sūþsǣ. Þā sind granitisc cleofu west and cealcstānes cleofu ēast. Þā sind ēac lang sporu riman in þǣm middan þæs landscipes. The bocage, patchwork of small fields with high hedges, typical of the western areas caused problems for the invading forces in the Battle of Normandy. There are meanders of Sigene as it approaches its estuary which form a notable feature of the landscape.
Landscipas[adihtan | ādihtan fruman]
- Se Suisse normande (Normanisc Swissland), in the south, presents hillier terrain.
- Se Pays d'Auge is considered typical of the rich agricultural landscape of central Normandy.
- Se Roumois
- Se Lieuvin
- Se Cotentin Peninsula
- Se Pays de Caux
- Se Bessin
- Se Pays d'Ouche
- Se Norman Vexin
- Se Pays de Bray
Ēa[adihtan | ādihtan fruman]
Ēa in Normandig sind:
- sēo Sigen
- sēo Orne
- sēo Vire
- sēo Eure
- sēo Risle
- sēo Robec
- sēo Touques
- sēo Couesnon, þe traditionally getǣcenþ sēo mearc betƿeonum þæm Ducdom Lidwic and þæm Ducdom Normandige.
The Pont de Normandie crossing the estuary of the Seine is regarded as a feat of modern engineering.