Kings and Queens of England Flashcards
The first monarch to establish a stable and extensive rule over all of Anglo-Saxon England. After returning from exile at the court of Charlemagne in 802, he regained his kingdom of Wessex. Following his conquest of Mercia in 827, he controlled all of England south of the Humber. After further victories in Northumberland and North Wales, he was recognised by the title Bretwalda (Anglo-Saxon, “ruler of the British”. A year before he died aged almost 70, he defeated a combined force of Danes and Cornish at Hingston Down in Cornwall.
EGBERT 827 – 839
King of Wessex, son of Egbert and father of Alfred the Great. In 851 he defeated a Danish army at the battle of Oakley while his eldest son Althelstan fought and beat the Danes at sea off the coast of Kent, in what is believed to be the first naval battle. A highly religious man, he travelled to Rome with his son Alfred to see the Pope in 855.
AETHELWULF 839-856
The eldest son of Aethelwulf, he was born around 834. He was crowned at Kingston-upon-Thames in southwest London, after forcing his father to abdicate upon his return from pilgrimage to Rome. Following his father’s death in 858, he married his widowed stepmother Judith, but under pressure from the church the marriage was annulled after only a year.
AETHELBERT 860 – 866
He succeeded his brother Aethelbert. His reign was one long struggle with the Danes who had occupied York in 866, establishing the Viking kingdom of Yorvik. When the Danish Army moved south Wessex itself was threatened, and so together with his brother Alfred, they fought several battles with the Vikings at Reading, Ashdown and Basing. He suffered serious injuries during the next major battle at Meretun in Hampshire; he died of his wounds shortly after.
AETHELRED I 866 – 871
Born at Wantage in Berkshire around 849, he was well educated and is said to have visited Rome on two occasions. He had proven himself to be a strong leader in many battles, and as a wise ruler managed to secure five uneasy years of peace with the Danes, before they attacked Wessex again in 877. he was forced to retreat to a small island in the Somerset Levels and it was from here that he masterminded his comeback, perhaps ‘burning the cakes‘ as a consequence. With major victories at Edington, Rochester and London, he established Saxon Christian rule over first Wessex, and then on to most of England. To secure his hard won boundaries he founded a permanent army and an embryonic Royal Navy. To secure his place in history, he began the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles.
ALFRED THE GREAT 871 – 899
Succeeded his father Alfred the Great. He retook southeast England and the Midlands from the Danes. Following the death of his sister Aethelflaed of Mercia, he united the kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia. In 923, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles record that the Scottish King Constantine II recognised him as “father and lord”. The following year, he was killed in a battle against the Welsh near Chester.
EDWARD (The Elder) 899 – 924
Son of Edward the Elder, he extended the boundaries of his kingdom at the Battle of Brunanburh in 937. In what is said to be one of the bloodiest battles ever fought on British soil, he defeated a combined army of Scots, Celts, Danes and Vikings, claiming the title of King of all Britain. The battle saw for the first time individual Anglo-Saxon kingdoms being brought together to create a single and unified England.
ATHELSTAN 924 – 939
Succeeded his half-bother Athelastan as king at the tender age of 18, having already fought alongside him at the Batlle of Brunanburh two years earlier. He re-established Anglo-Saxon control over northern England, which had fallen back under Scandinavian rule following the death of Athelstan. Aged just 25, and whilst celebrating the feast of Augustine, he was stabbed by a robber in his royal hall at Pucklechurch near Bath. His two sons, Eadwig and Edgar, were perhaps considered too young to become kings.
EDMUND 939 – 946
The son of Edward the Elder by his third marriage to Eadgifu, he succeeded his brother Edmund following his premature death. He followed in the family tradition of defeating Norsemen, expelling the last Scandinavian King of York, Eric Bloodaxe, in 954. A deeply religious man, he suffered a serious stomach ailment that would eventually prove fatal. He died in his early 30s, unmarried and without an heir.
EADRED 946 – 955
The eldest son of Edmund I, he was about 16 when he was crowned king at Kingston-upon-Thames in southeast London. Legend has it that his coronation had to be delayed to allow Bishop Dunstan to prise him from his bed, and from between the arms of his “strumpet” and the strumpets’ mother. Perhaps unimpressed by the interruption, he had Dunstan exiled to France. He died in Gloucester when he was just 20, the circumstances of his death are not recorded.
EADWIG 955 – 959
The youngest son of Edmund I, he had been in dispute with his brother concerning succession to the throne for some years. Following Eadwig’s mysterious death, he immediately recalled Dunstan from exile, making him Archbishop of Canterbury as well as his personal adviser. Following his carefully planned (by Dunstan) coronation in Bath in 973, he marched his army to Chester, to be met by six kings of Britain. The kings, including the King of Scots, King of Strathclyde and various princes of Wales, are said to have signalled their allegiance to him by rowing him in his state barge across the River Dee.
EDGAR 959 – 975
Eldest son of Edgar, he was crowned king when aged just 12. Although supported by Archbishop Dunstan, his claim to the throne was contested by supporters of his much younger half-brother Aethelred. The resulting dispute between rival factions within the church and nobility almost led to civil war in England. His short reign ended when he was murdered at Corfe Castle by followers of Aethelred, after just two and half years as king. The title ‘martyr’ was a consequence of him being seen as a victim of his stepmother’s ambitions for her own son Aethelred.
EDWARD THE MARTYR 975 – 978
He was unable to organise resistance against the Danes, earning him the nickname ‘unready’, or ‘badly advised’. He became king aged about 10, but fled to Normandy in 1013 when Sweyn Forkbeard, King of the Danes invaded England. Sweyn was pronounced King of England on Christmas Day 1013 but died just 5 weeks later. He returned in 1014 after Sweyn’s death, and the remainder of his reign was one of a constant state of war with Sweyn’s son Canute.
AETHELRED II THE UNREADY 978 – 1016
The son of Aethelred II, he had led the resistance to Canute’s invasion of England since 1015. Following the death of his father, he was chosen king by the good folk of London. But the Witan (the king’s council) elected Canute. Following his defeat at the Battle of Assandun, Aethelred made a pact with Canute to divide the kingdom between them. He died later that year, probably assassinated.
EDMUND II IRONSIDE 1016 – 1016
He became king of all England following the death of Edmund II. The son of Sweyn Forkbeard, he ruled well and gained favour with his English subjects by sending most of his army back to Denmark. In 1017, he married Emma of Normandy, the widow of Aethelred II and divided England into the four earldoms of East Anglia, Mercia, Northumbria and Wessex. Perhaps inspired by his pilgrimage to Rome in 1027, legend has it that he wanted to demonstrate to his subjects that as a king he was not a god, he ordered the tide not to come in, knowing this would fail.
CANUTE (CNUT THE GREAT) THE DANE 1016 – 1035
Also known as Harefoot, in recognition of his speed and skill as a hunter. He was the illegitimate son of Canute and claimed the English crown on the death of his father whilst his half-brother Harthacanute, the rightful heir, was in Denmark fighting to protect his Danish kingdom. He died three years into his reign, just weeks before Harthacanute was due to invade England with an army of Danes. He was buried in Westminster Abbey before Harthacanute had his body dug up, beheaded, and thrown into the Thames. His bits were later gathered and re-buried.
HAROLD I 1035 – 1040
The son of Cnut the Great and Emma of Normandy, he sailed to England with his mother, accompanied by a fleet of 62 warships, and was immediately accepted as king. Perhaps to appease his mother, the year before he died, he invited his half-brother Edward, Emma’s son from her first marriage to Aethelred the Unready, back from exile in Normandy. He died at a wedding whilst toasting the health of the bride; he was aged just 24 and was the last Danish king to rule England.
HARTHACANUTE 1040 – 1042
Following the death of Harthacanute, he restored the rule of the House of Wessex to the English throne. A deeply pious and religious man, he presided over the rebuilding of Westminster Abbey, leaving much of the running of the country to Earl Godwin and his son Harold. He died childless, eight days after the building work on Westminster Abbey had finished. With no natural successor, England was faced with a power struggle for control of the throne.
EDWARD THE CONFESSOR 1042-1066
Despite having no royal bloodline, he was elected king by the Witan (a council of high ranking nobles and religious leaders), following the death of Edward the Confessor. The election result failed to meet with the approval of one William, Duke of Normandy, who claimed that his relative Edward had promised the throne to him several years earlier. He defeated an invading Norwegian army at the Battle of Stamford Bridge in Yorkshire, then marched south to confront William of Normandy who had landed his forces in Sussex. His death at the Battle Of Hastings meant the end of the English Anglo-Saxon kings and the beginning of the Normans.
HAROLD II (Godwin) 1066
Also known as The Bastard (but not normally to his face!), he was the illegitimate son of Robert the Devil, whom he succeeded as Duke of Normandy in 1035. He came to England from Normandy, claiming that his second cousin Edward the Confessor had promised him the throne, and defeated Harold II at the Battle of Hastings on 14th October 1066. In 1085 the Domesday Survey was begun and all of England was recorded, so he knew exactly what his new kingdom contained and how much tax he could raise in order to fund his armies. He died at Rouen after a fall from his horse whilst besieging the French city of Nantes.
WILLIAM I (The Conqueror) 1066- 1087
He was not a popular king, given to extravagance and cruelty. He never married and was killed in the New Forest by a stray arrow whilst out hunting, maybe accidentally, or possibly shot deliberately on the instructions of his younger brother Henry. Walter Tyrrell, one of the hunting party, was blamed for the deed.
WILLIAM II (Rufus) 1087- 1100
He was the fourth and youngest son of William I. Well educated, he founded a zoo at Woodstock in Oxfordshire to study animals. He was called the ‘Lion of Justice’ as he gave England good laws, even if the punishments were ferocious. His two sons were drowned in the White Ship so his daughter Matilda was made his successor. She was married to Geoffrey Plantagenet. When he died of food poisoning, the Council considered a woman unfit to rule and so offered the throne to Stephen, a grandson of William I.
HENRY I (Beauclerc) 1100-1135
He was a very weak king and the whole country was almost destroyed by the constant raids by the Scots and the Welsh. During his reign the Norman barons wielded great power, extorting money and looting town and country. A decade of civil war known as The Anarchy ensued when Matilda invaded from Anjou in 1139. A compromise was eventually decided, under the terms of the Treaty of Westminster Matilda’s son Henry Plantagenet would succeed to the throne when he died.
STEPHEN 1135-1154
He was a strong king and brilliant soldier who extended his French lands until he ruled most of France. He laid the foundation of the English Jury System and raised new taxes (scutage) from the landholders to pay for a militia force. He is mostly remembered for his quarrel with Thomas A Becket, and Becket’s subsequent murder in Canterbury Cathedral on 29th December 1170. His sons turned against him, even his favourite John.
HENRY II (of Anjou) 1154-1189