| ULANBATOR | Anglicised name for Mongolia's capital |
| OPORTO | The anglicised name for Portugal's secondlargest city (6) |
| SKEANDHU | Anglicised name for a dagger used as part of traditional Highland costume |
| CADERIDRIS | Anglicised name for one summit in the Welsh Three Peaks Challenge |
| KIEV | Anglicised name of Ukraine's capital city (4) |
| SOLANGE | ___ Luyon, 17th Century French baker whose Anglicised name, Sally Lunn, became the name of a bread product (7) |
| URGA | Former name of Mongolia's capital (4) |
| TARQUIN | Anglicised name of fifth legendary king of Rome who reigned from 616-578BC (7) |
| REDMOSCOW | Anglicised name of Krasnaya Moskva, the first Soviet-made perfume |
| CLAYMORE | Anglicised name of a two-handed Gaelic broadsword formerly used in battle by Scottish Highlanders (8) |
| GLENDOWER | Known as the Welsh Braveheart, the anglicised name of the chieftain who led a revolt against Henry IV and declared himself Prince of Wales in 1400 (9) |
| CABOT | John -; anglicised name of an Italian explorer who set sail from Bristol in 1497 in his caravel Matthew (5) |
| CONNAUGHT | Anglicised name of the province of the counties of Galway, Leitrim, Mayo, Roscommon and Sligo (9) |
| ARCHANGEL | The building of St Petersburg in 1703 ended this city's status as Russia's chief seaport (Anglicised name) (9) |
| SWAZI | Anglicised name of the southern African people who, under Sobhuza I and his son Mswati II, established a nation now known as Eswatini in the early 19th century (5) |
| AGNES | The original (anglicised) name of Mother Teresa was ___ Gonxha Bojaxhiu (5) |
| DUNCAN | The anglicised name of two Scottish kings (1034-40, 1094),the latter of whom married Ethelreda of Northumbria (6) |
| BLAVEN | Anglicised name of the rocky isolated peak of the Black Cuillin of Skye (6) |
| OWENGLENDOWER | Anglicised name of the Welsh chieftain who led a revolt against Henry IV and Henry V between 1400 and 1415 (4,9) |
| ULAN | -- Bator (Mongolia's capital) |