Wiktionary
n. (surname: English)
Wikipedia
Blagden may refer to:
- Charles Blagden (1748–1820), British physician and scientist
- Charles Otto Blagden (1864–1949), English linguist
- Claude Martin Blagden (1874–1952), Anglican bishop of Peterborough
- George Blagden Westcott (1753–1798), Royal Navy officer
- Joanna Noëlle Blagden Levesque or JoJo (singer) (born 1990), American singer-songwriter and actress
- Matthew Blagden Hale (1811–1895), first bishop of Perth, later bishop of Brisbane
- Paddy Blagden (born 1935), British Army officer and UN expert on mine clearance
Usage examples of "blagden".
Ay, dark are the powers of Pel Blagden, but that night he missed his prey.
Pel Blagden seeks to augment his army by the vile means you know, Cuinmeans he has not troubled to practice these hundred years or more.
He broke camp and rode slowly around the rim of Blagden Pit, desperate for some sign of reassurance.
Pel Blagden would strive for better advantage before he came to grips with Bevan again.
Thus Pel Blagden had spread terror from time to time through many eras of men, and between times he had let terror be.
And so short is the memory of man that only some few folk in Isle realized the meaning of the preparations of the mantled lord: that Bevan of Eburacon had set his will against Blagden, and that in the spring he would summon the chieftains of Isle to uphold him in his challenge.
Pel Blagden is a god, it is true, but he has spurned his right to reverence, and even an immortal can be slain.
Argent Crown of Eburacon awaits me at Blagden, where the mantled lord bore it after the sack of my fair city.
By mid-morning the ruins of Blagden loomed fireless and bleak in the gray filtered light of the Pit The charred and ragged stump of the oak jutted from the lifeless shale.
Pel Blagden is laid low, but forget not that the Stone has spoken of worse to come.
That way lay Blagden Pit, a place strong men chose not to muse on overmuch.
So they rode back to what had been Blagden in the golden light of late afternoon, with Cuin on a borrowed horse and Ellid on the dapple-gray before Bevan.
But battle led to battle, and then friends who remembered him from Blagden had upheld him and named him their High King.