=== 関連する名前 ===
Additionallyさらに、この女神の名前は、ゲルマン人のさまざまな人名、イングランドの一連の地名(トポニム)、1958年に発見された2世紀の150以上の碑文にある「Matronae Austriahenae」(女神の名前)と結びつけられている<ref>Shaw, scholars have linked the goddess's name to a variety of Germanic personal names, a series of location names ([[toponymy|toponyms]]) in England2011, and, discovered in 1958, over 150 inscriptions from the 2nd century CE referring to the ''{{lang|la|[[matres and Matronae|matronae]] Austriahenae}}''.{{Sfn|Shaw|2011|pp=52–53}}pp52–53</ref>。
A cluster of place names in England contain and a variety of English and continental Germanic names include the element *{{lang|ang|ēoster}}, an early Old English word reconstructed by [[historical linguistics|linguists]] and potentially an earlier form of the goddess name {{lang|ang|Ēostre|italic=no}}. The [[Council of Austerfield]] called by King [[Aldfrith of Northumbria]] shortly before 704 convened at a place described in contemporary records both as {{lang|la|in campo qui {{lang|ang|Eostrefeld}} dicitur}} and {{lang|la|in campo qui dicitur {{lang|ang|Oustraefelda}}}}, which have led to the site's being identified with [[Austerfield]] near [[Bawtry]] in [[South Yorkshire]].<ref>Cubitt, Catherine (1995). ''Anglo-Saxon Church Councils c.650–c.850''. London: Leicester University Press, pp 302f. {{ISBN|0-7185-1436-X}}</ref> Such locations also include [[Eastry]] ({{lang|ang|Eastrgena}}, 788 CE) in [[Kent]], [[Eastrea]] ({{lang|ang|Estrey}}, 966 CE) in [[Cambridgeshire]], and [[Eastrington]] ({{lang|ang|Eastringatun}}, 959 CE) in the [[East Riding of Yorkshire]].{{sfn|Shaw|2011|pp=59—60}}