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The origins of the name
Dreingau are disputed; it might derive either from a medieval term denoting a "fertile land," or might describe a "dry land". Considering that the Saxon pagi still held extensive marshlands at this time, both interpretations might well be equivalent.
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Although the sources are frequently inconsistent or ambiguous in assigning various places to the
Dreingau, the consensus is that the
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in 16 AD mark the period when the
Dreingau area was either a staging point or a battlefield. It figured centrally in the
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The
Dreingau had been a theatre of war even before it got its name. In the times of the expansionist drive of the
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Notable places mentioned in medieval documents in the context of the
Dreingau include the village
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Soekelland B: Ueber die Straßen der Römer und
Franken zwischen der Ems und Lippe. Münster, 1825
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as the anchor point in the North. Close to the Lippe river was the large forest
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Former states and territories of North Rhine-Westphalia
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