Cerdicing, King Edgar II

Male 1036 - 1126  (90 years)


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  1. 1.  Cerdicing, King Edgar II was born in 1036 in Kingdom of Wessex (England) (son of Aetheling, Edward and Aetheling, Princess of England Agatha); died in 1126 in London, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Between 15 Oct and 10 Dec 1066, England; Disputed King of England


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Aetheling, EdwardAetheling, Edward was born on 23 Sep 1016 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was christened in 1016 in England (son of of England, Edmund II and of England, Queen Ældgyth); died on 19 Apr 1057 in London, London, England; was buried after 19 Apr 1067 in St Paul Cathedral, London, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: England; Prince of England
    • FSID: K24W-VR4

    Notes:

    Edward the Exile
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Edward the Exile, the Outlaw, the Confessor (1016 – late August 1057), also called Edward Ætheling, was the son of King Edmund Ironside and of Ealdgyth. He spent most of his life in exile following the defeat of his father by Canute the Great.

    Exile
    After the Danish conquest of England in 1016, Canute had Edward, said to be only a few months old, and his brother, Edmund, sent to the Swedish court of Olof Skötkonung (who was either Canute's half-brother or stepbrother), supposedly with instructions to have the children murdered. Instead, the two boys were secretly sent either to Kiev, where Olof's daughter Ingigerd was the Queen, or to Poland, where Canute's uncle Bolesław I Chrobry was duke. Later Edward made his way to Hungary, probably in the retinue of Ingigerd's son-in-law, András in 1046, whom he supported in his successful bid for the Hungarian throne.

    Return
    On hearing the news of his being alive, Edward the Confessor recalled him to England in 1056 and made him his heir. Edward offered the last chance of an undisputed succession within the Saxon royal house. News of Edward's existence came at a time when the old Anglo-Saxon monarchy, restored after a long period of Danish domination, was heading for catastrophe. The Confessor, personally devout but politically weak and without children, was unable to make an effective stand against the steady advance of the powerful and ambitious sons of Godwin, Earl of Wessex. From across the Channel William, Duke of Normandy, also had an eye on the succession. Edward the Exile appeared at just the right time. Approved by both king and by the Witan, the Council of the Realm, he offered a way out of the impasse, a counter both to the Godwinsons and to William, and one with a legitimacy that could not be readily challenged.

    Edward, who had been in the custody of Henry III, the Holy Roman Emperor, finally came back to England at the end of August 1057. But he died within two days of his arrival. The exact cause of Edward's death remains unclear, but he had many powerful enemies, and there is a strong possibility that he was murdered, although by whom is not known with any certainty. It is known, though, that his access to the king was blocked soon after his arrival in England for some unexplained reason, at a time when the Godwinsons, in the person of Harold, were once again in the ascendant. This turn of events left the throne of England to be disputed by Earl Harold and Duke William, ultimately leading to the Norman Conquest of England. He was buried in Old St Paul's Cathedral.

    Family
    Edward's wife was named Agatha, whose origins are disputed. Their children were:

    Edgar Ætheling (c. 1051 - c. 1126) - Elected King of England after the Battle of Hastings but submitted to William the Conqueror.
    Saint Margaret of Scotland (c. 1045 - 16 November 1093) - Married King Malcolm III of Scotland.
    Cristina (c. 1057 - c. 1093) - Abbess at Romsey Abbey.
    Edward's grandchild Edith of Scotland, also called Matilda, married King Henry I of England, continuing the Anglo-Saxon line into the post-Conquest English monarchy.

    Ancestors
    Edward the Exile was a direct descendant of a line of Wessex kings dating back, at least on the pages of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, to the arrival of Cerdic of Wessex in 495AD, and from Alfred the Great in the English monarchs family tree. Of his more immediate ancestors, all four of Edward's male-line ancestors shown in the diagram below were Kings of England before Cnut the Great took the crown and sent Edward into exile.

    Edward married Aetheling, Princess of England Agatha on 13 Jul 1040 in London, London, England. Agatha was born on 13 Jul 1024 in Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergom, Hungary; died on 13 Jul 1066 in Newcastle Upon Tyne, Northumberland, England; was buried after 13 Jul 1066. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Aetheling, Princess of England Agatha was born on 13 Jul 1024 in Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergom, Hungary; died on 13 Jul 1066 in Newcastle Upon Tyne, Northumberland, England; was buried after 13 Jul 1066.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Princess consort of England
    • Appointments / Titles: Princess of Hungary
    • FSID: LY6V-8G3

    Notes:

    The following from Chip Kalb

    Agatha, the wife of Prince Edward of Wessex.  She was originally listed as a German princess from the House of Billung, the daughter of a Frisian markgrave.

    But it has been pointed out that her name, Agatha, was not German.  It was not even popular in the Holy Roman Empire at the time of her birth.  So where did Prince Edward find her?  Either Hungary or Kyivska Rus’ ( now the Ukraine ).  In those countries, Agatha was a popular name for Christian girls.  It was a Greek name and it came from the Byzantine Empire, where Greek was the language of both the courts and churches at that time.  For Hungary and Kyivska Rus’, Constantianople ( now Istanbul ), as the capital of the Byzantium, was like Rome so the Greek names were popular there.  So how did Prince Edward get his bride from there?  He didn’t have a choice — his father, King Edmund II “Ironsides” of the English, died in 1016 and Canute, the King of the Danelaw, had an army strong enough to put him on the throne and the King’s sons out of Wessex.

    These facts are indisputable but what happened afterwards are not.  The new King was supposed to have sent the old King’s sons to his half-brother ( or stepbrother ), the King of Sweden, Olof Skötkonung, in the hope that that King would have them killed.  But King Olof was apparently peeved at being saddled with such an unpleasant task because he had the sons shipped off to either Poland, where Canute’s uncle was the Duke, or Kyivska Rus’, where Olof’s daughter was the Queen.  Either way, the boys ended up in Hungary and that’s where Edward left in 1057 to go back to England.  So which country was the birthplace of Agatha — Hungary or Kyivska Rus’?  Good question.  Edward is known to have come to Hungary from Kyivska Rus’ from Hungary in 1046 but his oldest child, St Margaret of Scotland, was born about a year before.  And here things get really complicated.  There are several different theories about the ancestry of Agatha and they would make a very long article, like the one for her at the English Wikipedia ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agatha,_wife_of_Edward_the_Exile ).  But it’s pretty clear, from the naming patterns of her descendants, that Agatha was from either an Hungarian or a Kyivskan and that, as the contemporaries had claimed, she was a relative of the Holy Roman Emperors — Otto III, his cousin Conrad II, and the latter’s son Henry III.

    And Edward could have stayed in Hungary for the rest of his life but he was always loyal to King András.  However, in 1057, things got hairy between the King and his brother Prince Béla over the succession.  Kyivska Rus’ was just chilln’ at that time so Edward could have gone there with his wife and children.  But, at that moment, when the fur was flying through the air from all the places, Edward got the invitation from the King of England, the childless Edward the Confessor, to come home and be the Crown Prince.  He decided that it was too good an opportunity to ignore so he high-tailed out of here with his wife and children.  Unfortunately, he died as soon as he came home and that set off England’s own crisis of succession.  He did have a son and heir, Edgar, but he was smart enough to know why the winner, William of Normandy, was called “The Conqueror” so he submitted — and lived to tell the tale.

    Children:
    1. Aetheling, Queen of Scotland and Saint Margaret was born on 8 Sep 1045 in Castle Reka, Mecseknádasd, Baranya, Hungary; died on 16 Nov 1093 in Edinburgh Castle and Portsburgh, Midlothian, Scotland; was buried on 18 Nov 1093 in Dunfermline Abbey, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland.
    2. 1. Cerdicing, King Edgar II was born in 1036 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in 1126 in London, London, England.
    3. Cerdicing, Princess Christine was born in 1044 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in DECEASED in England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  of England, Edmund IIof England, Edmund II was born in 988 in Kingdom of Wessex (England) (son of of England, Æthelred and of York, Queen Consort Ælfgifu); died on 30 Nov 1016 in London, London, England; was buried on 6 Dec 1016 in Glastonbury Abbey, Glastonbury, Somerset, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: King
    • Nickname: Ironsides
    • FSID: LJKD-Q1Q
    • Appointments / Titles: Apr 1016, Old St Paul's Cathedral, London, London, England; King of England

    Notes:

    Edmund

    Reign 23 April – 30 November 1016
    Predecessor Æthelred the Unready
    Successor Cnut the Great
    Died 30 November 1016
    Oxford or London, England
    Burial Glastonbury Abbey
    Spouse Ealdgyth
    Issue Edward the Exile
    Edmund
    House Wessex
    Father Æthelred the Unready
    Mother Ælfgifu of York
    Religion Catholicism
    Edmund Ironside
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Edmund II (died 30 November 1016), usually known as
    Edmund Ironside, was King of England from 23 April to 30
    November 1016. He was the son of King Æthelred the
    Unready and his first wife, Ælfgifu of York. Edmund's reign
    was marred by a war he had inherited from his father, his
    cognomen "Ironside" was given to him "because of his
    valour" in resisting the Danish invasion led by Cnut the
    Great.[1]
    Edmund was not expected to be King of England; however,
    by 1014 two elder brothers had died, making him the oldest
    male heir. His father, Æthelred, was usurped by Sweyn
    Forkbeard in that same year, but Sweyn died shortly
    thereafter, paving the way for Æthelred and his family to
    return to the throne, which they did but not without
    opposition. In the process they forced Sweyn's son, Cnut,
    back to Denmark, where he assembled an invasion force to
    re-conquer England. It would not arrive for another year.
    After regaining the throne, the royal family set about
    strengthening its hold on the country with the assistance of
    Eadric Streona (Edmund's brother-in-law). People who had
    sided with the Danes in 1014 were punished, and some were
    killed. In one case, two brothers, Morcar and Sigeferth, were
    killed and their possessions, along with Sigferth's wife, were
    taken by Edmund. Edmund unofficially became the Earl of
    the East Midlands and took Ealdgyth for his wife.
    Cnut returned to England in August 1015. Over the next few
    months, Cnut pillaged most of England. Edmund joined
    Æthelred to defend London, but he died on 23 April 1016,
    making Edmund King. It was not until the summer of 1016
    that any serious fighting was done: Edmund fought five
    battles against the Danes, ending in his defeat on 18 October
    at the Battle of Assandun, after which they agreed to divide
    the kingdom, Edmund taking Wessex and Cnut the rest of the
    country. Edmund died shortly afterwards on 30 November, leaving two sons, Edward and Edmund; however,
    Cnut became the king of all England, and exiled remaining members of the royal family.
    Contents
    1 Early life
    2 Warrior prince
    3 King of England
    4 Death
    5 Reputation
    6 Descendants
    7 Ancestry
    8 In culture
    9 See also
    10 Citations
    11 Sources
    12 External links
    Early life
    The exact date of Edmund's birth is unclear, but it could have been no later than 993 when he was a signatory to
    charters along with his two elder brothers. He was the third of the six sons of King Æthelred the Unready and
    his first wife, Ælfgifu, who was probably the daughter of Earl Thored of Northumbria. His elder brothers were
    Æthelstan (died 1014) and Egbert (died c. 1005), and younger ones, Eadred, Eadwig and Edgar.[1] He had four
    sisters, Eadgyth (or Edith), Ælfgifu, Wulfhilda, and the Abbess of Wherwell Abbey. His mother died around
    1000,[2] after which his father remarried, this time to Emma of Normandy, who had two sons, Edward the
    Confessor and Alfred and a daughter Goda.
    Æthelstan and Edmund were close, and they probably felt threatened by Emma's ambitions for her sons.[3] The
    Life of Edward the Confessor, written fifty years later, claimed that when Emma was pregnant with him, all
    Englishmen promised that if the child was a boy they would accept him as king.[1] However that claim may just
    be propaganda.
    Warrior prince
    When Sweyn Forkbeard seized the throne at the end of 1013 and Æthelred fled to Normandy, the brothers do
    not appear to have followed him, but stayed in England. Æthelstan died in June 1014 and left Edmund a sword
    which had belonged to king Offa of Mercia.[1] His will also reflected the close relationship between the
    brothers and the nobility of the east midlands.[4]
    Sweyn died in February 1014, and the Five Boroughs accepted his son Cnut, who married a kinswoman of
    Sigeferth and Morcar, as king. However, Æthelred returned to England and launched a surprise attack which
    defeated the Vikings and forced Cnut to flee England. In 1015 Sigeferth and Morcar came to an assembly in
    Oxford, probably hoping for a royal pardon, but they were murdered by Eadric Streona. King Æthelred then
    ordered that Sigeferth's widow, Ealdgyth, be seized and brought to Malmesbury Abbey, but Edmund seized and
    married her in defiance of his father, probably to consolidate his power base in the east midlands.[5] He then
    received the submission of the people of the Five Boroughs. At the same time, Cnut launched a new invasion of
    England. In late 1015 Edmund raised an army, possibly assisted by his wife's and mother's links with the
    midlands and the north, but the Mercians under Eadric Streona joined the West Saxons in submitting to Cnut. In
    early 1016 the army assembled by Edmund dispersed when Æthelred did not appear to lead it, probably due to
    illness. Edmund then raised a new army and in conjunction with Earl Uhtred of Northumbria ravaged Eadric
    Streona's Mercian territories, but when Cnut occupied Northumbria Uhtred submitted to him, only to be killed
    by Cnut. Edmund went to London.[1]
    King of England
    Æthelred died on 23 April 1016, and the citizens and councillors in London chose Edmund as king and
    probably crowned him. He then mounted a last-ditch effort to revive the defence of England. While the Danes
    laid siege to London, Edmund headed for Wessex, where the people submitted to him and he gathered an army.
    He fought inconclusive battles against the Danes and their English supporters at Penselwood in Somerset and
    Sherston in Wiltshire. He then raised the siege of London and defeated the Danes near Brentford. They renewed
    the siege while Edmund went to Wessex to raise further troops, returning to again relieve London, defeat the
    Danes at Otford, and pursue Cnut into Kent. Eadric Streona now went over to Edmund, but at the decisive
    Battle of Assandun on 18 October, Eadric and his men fled and Cnut decisively defeated Edmund. There may
    have been one further battle in the Forest of Dean, after which the two kings negotiated a peace dividing the
    country between them. Edmund received Wessex while Cnut took Mercia and probably Northumbria.[1]
    Death
    On 30 November 1016, Edmund died. The location of his death is uncertain though it is generally accepted that
    it occurred in London, rather than in Oxford where Henry of Huntingdon claimed it to be in his sordid version
    of events, which included Edmund’s murder by suffering multiple stab wounds whilst on a privy, while tending
    to a call of nature.[6] Geoffrey Gaimar states a similar occurrence with the weapon being a crossbow, but with a
    number of other medieval chroniclers including the Encomium Emmae Reginae not mentioning murder, it is
    thought Edmund’s cause of death may possibly have been caused by wounds received in battle or by some
    disease, but it is certainly a possibility that he was murdered.
    Edmund was buried near his grandfather Edgar at Glastonbury Abbey in Somerset, however the abbey was
    destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, any remains of a monument or crypt
    would have been plundered and the location of his remains is unclear.
    Reputation
    In the view of M. K. Lawson, the intensity of Edmund's struggle against the Danes in 1016 is only matched by
    Alfred the Great's in 871, and contrasts with Æthelred's failure. Edmund's success in raising one army after
    another suggests that there was little wrong with the organs of government under competent leadership. He was
    "probably a highly determined, skilled and indeed inspiring leader of men". Cnut visited his tomb on the
    anniversary of his death and laid a cloak decorated with peacocks on it to assist in his salvation, peacocks
    symbolising resurrection.[1]
    Descendants
    Edmund had two children by Ealdgyth, Edward the Exile and Edmund. According to John of Worcester, Cnut
    sent them to the king of Sweden where he probably hoped they would be murdered, but the Swedish king
    instead forwarded them, together with his daughter, on to Kiev. It has more recently been alleged that the two
    sons were sent to Poland and subsequently from there to Hungary.[7] The two boys eventually ended up in
    Hungary where Edmund died but Edward prospered. Edward "the Exile" returned to England in 1057 only to
    die within a few days of his arrival.[8] His son Edgar the Ætheling was briefly proclaimed king after the Battle
    of Hastings in 1066, but later submitted to William the Conqueror. Edgar would live a long and eventful life;
    fighting in rebellion against William the Conqueror from 1067-1075; fighting alongside the Conqueror's son
    Robert of Normandy in campaigns in Sicily (1085-1087); and accompanying Robert on the First Crusade
    (1099-1103). He eventually died in England in 1126.
    In 1070 Edward the Exile's daughter, Margaret, became Queen consort to Malcolm III of Scotland. Through her
    and her decedents, Edmund is the direct ancestor of every subsequent Scottish monarch, every English monarch
    from Henry II onward, and every monarch of Great Britain and of the United Kingdom, down to the present.
    Ancestry
    Ancestors of Edmund Ironside
    Edward the Elder
    Edmund I
    Eadgifu of Kent
    Edgar the Peaceful
    Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury
    Wynflaed
    Æthelred the Unready
    Ordgar
    Ælfthryth
    Edmund Ironside
    Gunnar
    Thored
    Ælfgifu of York
    In culture
    Edmund Ironside is an Elizabethan play about him, which some critics believe to be a very early work by
    William Shakespeare.
    Edmund is played by John Horn in the 1970 television movie The Ceremony of Innocence.
    Edmund is one of the main characters in Justin Hill's novel Shieldwall (2011), first in the Conquest
    Trilogy.
    See also
    House of Wessex family tree
    Citations
    1. M. K. Lawson, Edmund II, Oxford Online DNB, 2004 (http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8502?docPos=1)
    2. Simon Keynes, Æthelred the Unready, Oxford Online DNB, 2009 (http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8915/?back
    =,8502)
    3. Ryan Lavelle, Aethelred II: King of the English, The History Press, 2008, pp. 172-173
    4. Lavelle, op. cit., p. 172
    5. Lavelle, op. cit., pp. 169-172
    6. Henry of Huntingdon 2002, p. 15.
    7. MichaelAnne Guido and John P. Ravilious, "From Theophanu to St. Magraret of Scotland: A study of Agatha's
    ancestry", Foundations, vol. 4(2012), pp. 81-121.
    8. M. K. Lawson, Edward Ætheling, Oxford Online DNB, 200 4(http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/37387/?back=,85
    02)
    Sources
    Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
    Clemoes, Peter. The Anglo-Saxons: Studies Presented to Bruce Dickins, 1959
    Henry of Huntingdon History of the English People 1000 - 1154
    External links
    Edmund 24 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
    Regnal titles
    Preceded by
    Æthelred the Unready
    King of the English
    1016
    Succeeded by
    Cnut the Great
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Edmund_Ironside&oldid=781380892"
    Categories: Monarchs of England before 1066 10th-century births 1016 deaths
    Burials at Glastonbury Abbey 10th-century English people 11th-century English monarchs
    Christian monarchs House of Wessex
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    Edmund married of England, Queen Ældgyth between Jun and Aug 1015 in Malmesbury, Wiltshire, England. Ældgyth was born in 986 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in 1024 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  of England, Queen Ældgyth was born in 986 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in 1024 in England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Lady
    • Appointments / Titles: Queen
    • Death: 6 Dec 1016, Oxford Chapel Vere St, London, England

    Notes:

    From LifeSketch

    Eadmond of Wessex "Ironside" m (Malmesbury, Wiltshire [Jun/Aug] 1015) as her second husband, ÆLDGYTH, widow of SIGEFERTH, daughter of --- . The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "prince Edmund…abducted [Siferth's widow] against the king's will and made her his wife" but does not name her[1888]. Simeon of Durham records that Edmund married "Algitha widow of Sigeferth" in 1015[1889]. According to Ronay, she was the daughter of Olof "Skotkonung" King of Sweden and his concubine Edla of Vindland, but the author cites no primary source to support this suggestion[1890]. If the assertion is correct, it is surprising that Ældgyth is not mentioned with the Swedish king's other children in the Saga of Olaf Haraldson[1891]. In addition, there would be no explanation for Ældgyth's first marriage to an obscure Northumbrian nobleman, especially as King Olof's two known daughters made high-profile marriages with the Grand Prince of Kiev and the king of Norway. Simeon of Durham records that, after Ældgyth's first husband was murdered on the orders of Eadric "Streona/the Acquisitor" Ealdorman of Mercia, Ældgyth was arrested and brought to Malmesbury on the orders of King Æthelred II who had confiscated her husband's properties in the north of England[1892]. She was abducted and married, against the king's wishes, by her second husband who proceeded to take possession of her first husband's properties. No mention has been found of Queen Ældgyth after the death of her second husband.
    King Edmund "Ironside" & his wife had two children:

    Ealdgyth
    Ældgyth of England Morcarsdottir
    Algitha widow of Sigeferth
    Queen consort of England
    Tenure 23 April 1016 – 30 November 1016
    Born c. 992
    Died After 1016
    Spouse(s) Sigeferth
    Edmund, King of England
    Issue Edward the Exile
    Edmund Ætheling
    Ealdgyth (floruit 1015–1016)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Ealdgyth (circa 992 – after 1016), modern English Edith
    may have been the name of the wife of Sigeferth son of
    Earngrim, thegn of the Seven Burghs, and later of King
    Edmund Ironside. She was probably the mother of Edmund's
    sons Edward the Exile and Edmund Ætheling.
    The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Sigeferth and his
    brother Morcar, described as "foremost thegns of the Seven
    Burghs" were killed at an assembly of the English nobility at
    Oxford. Ealdorman Eadric Streona is said to have killed
    them "dishonourably" after having invited them to his rooms.
    The Seven Burghs, otherwise unknown, are presumed to
    have been the Five Burghs and Torksey and York. Following
    the killings, King Æthelred the Unready had the property of
    Sigeferth and Morcar seized and ordered that Sigeferth's widow, whose name the Chronicle does not record,
    should be detained at Malmesbury Abbey. The chronicle of John of Worcester calls her Ealdgyth.[1]
    In the late summer of 1015, at some time between 15 August and 8 September, Edmund Ironside raised a revolt
    against his father King Æthelred. Either then, or perhaps even earlier, he removed Sigeferth's widow from
    Malmesbury, against his father's wishes, and married her. Sigeferth and Morcar's friends and allies supported
    Edmund after this.[2] While two charters issued by Edmund which mention his wife survive from about this
    time, neither of them contain her name in the surviving texts.[3]
    It is generally, but not universally, supposed that Ealdgyth, if that was her name, was the mother of Edmund
    Ironside's sons.[4] These were Edmund, who died young in exile, and Edward the Exile, who returned to
    England late in the reign of his uncle King Edward the Confessor and died soon afterwards. Whether she went
    into exile with her children following Edmund's death in 1016 is unknown.
    One reason advanced for supposing that John of Worcester may have been mistaken in naming this woman
    Ealdgyth is that Sigeferth's brother Morcar had also been married to a woman named Ealdgyth.[5] This
    Ealdgyth was the daughter of Ælfthryth, and niece of Ælfhelm, Ealdorman of York and Wulfric Spot. While
    Ealdgyth is a common female name in the period, this coincidence has raised the suspicion that the Worcester
    chronicler has confused Sigeferth's widow with his sister-in-law.[6]
    Notes
    1. Stafford, Unification and Conquest, pp. 67–68; Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 145–146, Ms. E, s.a. 1015, & p.
    146, note 3; Williams, Æthelred, pp. 132–134 & p. 132, note 6.
    2. Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 146, Ms. E, s.a. 1015; Higham,D eath of Anglo-Saxon England, p. 62; Williams,
    Æthelred, p. 134.
    3. These are charters S 947 (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=947 a)nd S 948 (http://www.a
    nglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=948; )Williams, Æthelred, p. 134 & note 13.
    4. For dissent from the common view, see Howard, Ian (2003), Swein Forkbeard's Invasions and the Danish Conquest of
    England, 991–1017, Woodbridge: Boydell, p. 69, ISBN 0-85115-928-1.
    5. "Ealdgyth 1" (http://pase.ac.uk/jsp/DisplayPerson.jsp?personKey=15095. )Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England.
    6. Williams, Æthelred, p. 132, note 6. Insley
    References
    Higham, Nick (1997), The Death of Anglo-Saxon England, Stroud: Sutton, ISBN 0-7509-2469-1
    Insley, Charles (2000), "Politics, Conflict and Kinship in Early Eleventh-Century Mercia ("PDF), Midland History, XXV
    Stafford, Pauline (1989), Unification and Conquest: A Political and Social History of England in thee Tnth and Eleventh
    Centuries, London: Edward Arnold, ISBN 0-7131-6532-4
    Stenton, Frank (1971), Anglo-Saxon England (3rd ed.), Oxford: Oxford University Press,I SBN 0-19-280139-2
    Swanton, Michael (1996), The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, New York: Routledge, ISBN 0-415-92129-5
    Williams, Ann (2003), Æthelred the Unready: the ill-counselled king, London: Hambledon & London,I SBN 1-85285-
    382-4
    External links
    Anonymous 893 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England; see also Anonymous 1006, Ealdgyth 1
    Preceded by
    Sigrid the Haughty
    Queen Consort of England
    1016
    Succeeded by
    Emma of
    Normandy
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ealdgyth_(floruit_1015–1016)&oldid=785668489"
    Categories: English royal consorts Anglo-Saxon royal consorts Viking Age women
    11th-century English people 11th-century women House of Wessex
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    Children:
    1. 2. Aetheling, Edward was born on 23 Sep 1016 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was christened in 1016 in England; died on 19 Apr 1057 in London, London, England; was buried after 19 Apr 1067 in St Paul Cathedral, London, London, England.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  of England, Æthelredof England, Æthelred was born in 966 in England (son of of England, King Edgar I and of England, Ælfthryth); died in 1016 in London, London, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: King
    • Appointments / Titles: King of England
    • Nickname: The Unready
    • FSID: LT75-86P

    Notes:

    Æthelred

    King of the English
    Reign 18 March 978 – 1013 (first time)
    Predecessor Edward the Martyr
    Successor Sweyn Forkbeard
    Reign 1014 – 23 April 1016 (second time)
    Predecessor Sweyn Forkbeard
    Successor Edmund Ironside
    Born c. 966
    Died 23 April 1016 (aged about 50) London, England
    Burial Old St Paul's Cathedral, London, now lost

    Spouse Ælfgifu of York
    Emma of Normandy
    Issue
    Detail Æthelstan
    Ecgberht
    Edmund, King of England
    Eadred
    Eadwig

    Æthelred the Unready
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Æthelred II, also dubbed the Unready (Old English:
    Æþelræd (Old English pronunciation: [æðelræːd])),[1] (c. 966 –
    23 April 1016) was King of the English (978–1013 and
    1014–1016). He was the son of King Edgar the Peaceful and
    Queen Ælfthryth and was around 12 years old when his halfbrother
    Edward the Martyr was murdered on 18 March 978.
    Although Æthelred was not personally suspected of
    participation, the murder was committed at Corfe Castle by
    his attendants, making it more difficult for the new king to
    rally the nation against the military raids by Danes,
    especially as the legend of St Edward the Martyr grew.
    From 991 onwards, Æthelred paid tribute, or Danegeld, to
    the Danish king. In 1002, Æthelred ordered what became
    known as the St. Brice's Day massacre of Danish settlers. In
    1013, King Sweyn Forkbeard of Denmark invaded England,
    as a result of which Æthelred fled to Normandy in 1013 and was replaced by Sweyn. He would return as king, however, after Sweyn's death in 1014.

    Æthelred's nickname, "the Unready" renders Old English unræd "bad counsel, folly", more accurately (but more rarely) rendered "the Rede-less".

    Æthelred's first name, composed of the elements æðele
    "noble", and ræd "counsel, advice",[2] is typical of the
    compound names of those who belonged to the royal House
    of Wessex, and it characteristically alliterates with the names
    of his ancestors, like Æthelwulf ("noble-wolf"), Ælfred ("elfcounsel"),
    Eadweard ("rich-protection"), and Eadgar ("richspear").[
    3]

    The story of Æthelred's notorious nickname, Old English
    Unræd, goes a long way toward explaining how his
    reputation has declined through history. It is usually
    translated into present-day English as "The Unready" (less
    often, though less confusingly, as "The Redeless").[4] The
    Anglo-Saxon noun unræd means "evil counsel", "bad plan",
    or "folly".[2] It most often describes decisions and deeds, and once refers to the nature of Satan's deceit. The
    element ræd in unræd is the element in Æthelred's name which means "counsel". Thus Æþelræd Unræd is a
    pun meaning "Noble counsel, No counsel". The nickname has alternatively been taken adjectivally as "illadvised",
    "ill-prepared", "indecisive", thus "Æthelred the ill-advised".
    Because the nickname was first recorded in the 1180s, more than 150 years after Æthelred's death, it is doubtful
    that it carries any implications for how the king was seen by his contemporaries or near contemporaries.[5]
    Early life
    Sir Frank Stenton remarked that "much that has brought condemnation
    of historians on King Æthelred may well be due in the last resort to the
    circumstances under which he became king."[6] Æthelred's father, King
    Edgar, had died suddenly in July 975, leaving two young sons behind.
    The elder, Edward (later Edward the Martyr), was probably
    illegitimate,[7] and was "still a youth on the verge of manhood" in
    975.[8] The younger son was Æthelred, whose mother, Ælfthryth, Edgar
    had married in 964. Ælfthryth was the daughter of Ordgar, ealdorman of
    Devon, and widow of Æthelwold, Ealdorman of East Anglia. At the
    time of his father's death, Æthelred could have been no more than 10
    years old. As the elder of Edgar's sons, Edward – reportedly a young
    man given to frequent violent outbursts – probably would have naturally
    succeeded to the throne of England despite his young age, had not he
    "offended many important persons by his intolerable violence of speech
    and behaviour."[8] In any case, a number of English nobles took to
    opposing Edward's succession and to defending Æthelred's claim to the throne; Æthelred was, after all, the son
    of Edgar's last, living wife, and no rumour of illegitimacy is known to have plagued Æthelred's birth, as it
    might have his elder brother's.[9] Both boys, Æthelred certainly, were too young to have played any significant
    part in the political manoeuvring which followed Edgar's death. It was the brothers' supporters, and not the
    brothers themselves, who were responsible for the turmoil which accompanied the choice of a successor to the
    throne. Æthelred's cause was led by his mother and included Ælfhere, Ealdorman of Mercia and Bishop
    Æthelwold of Winchester,[10] while Edward's claim was supported by Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury
    and Oswald, the Archbishop of York[11] among other noblemen, notably Æthelwine, Ealdorman of East Anglia,
    and Byrhtnoth, ealdorman of Essex. In the end, Edward's supporters proved the more powerful and persuasive,
    and he was crowned king at Kingston upon Thames before the year was out.
    Edward reigned for only three years before he was murdered by members of his brother's household.[12]
    Though little is known about Edward's short reign, it is known that it was marked by political turmoil. Edgar
    had made extensive grants of land to monasteries which pursued the new monastic ideals of ecclesiastical
    reform, but these disrupted aristocratic families' traditional patronage. The end of his firm rule saw a reversal of
    this policy, with aristocrats recovering their lost properties or seizing new ones. This was opposed by Dunstan,
    but according to Cyril Hart, "The presence of supporters of church reform on both sides indicates that the
    conflict between them depended as much on issues of land ownership and local power as on ecclesiastical
    legitimacy. Adherents of both Edward and Æthelred can be seen appropriating, or recovering, monastic
    lands."[7] Nevertheless, favour for Edward must have been strong among the monastic communities. When
    Edward was killed at Æthelred's estate at Corfe Castle in Dorset in March 978, the job of recording the event,
    as well as reactions to it, fell to monastic writers. Stenton offers a summary of the earliest account of Edward's
    murder, which comes from a work praising the life of St Oswald: "On the surface his [Edward's] relations with
    Æthelred his half-brother and Ælfthryth his stepmother were friendly, and he was visiting them informally
    when he was killed. [Æthelred's] retainers came out to meet him with ostentatious signs of respect, and then,
    before he had dismounted, surrounded him, seized his hands, and stabbed him. ... So far as can be seen the
    murder was planned and carried out by Æthelred's household men in order that their young master might
    become king. There is nothing to support the allegation, which first appears in writing more than a century
    later, that Queen Ælfthryth had plotted her stepson's death. No one was punished for a part in the crime, and
    Æthelred, who was crowned a month after the murder, began to reign in an atmosphere of suspicion which
    destroyed the prestige of the crown. It was never fully restored in his lifetime."[13] Nevertheless, at first, the
    outlook of the new king's officers and counsellors seems in no way to have been bleak. According to one
    chronicler, the coronation of Æthelred took place with much rejoicing by the councillors of the English
    people.[14] Simon Keynes notes that "Byrhtferth of Ramsey states similarly that when Æthelred was
    consecrated king, by Archbishop Dunstan and Archbishop Oswald, 'there was great joy at his consecration’,
    and describes the king in this connection as 'a young man in respect of years, elegant in his manners, with an
    attractive face and handsome appearance'."[14] Æthelred could not have been older than 13 years of age in this
    year.
    During these early years, Æthelred was developing a close relationship to Æthelwold, bishop of Winchester,
    one who had supported his unsuccessful claim to the throne. When Æthelwold died, on 1 August 984, Æthelred
    deeply lamented the loss, and he wrote later in a charter from 993 that the event had deprived the country of
    one "whose industry and pastoral care administered not only to my interest but also to that of all inhabitants of
    the country."[14]
    Conflict with the Danes
    England had experienced a period of peace after the reconquest of the Danelaw in the mid-10th century by
    King Edgar, Æthelred's father. However, beginning in 980, when Æthelred could not have been more than 14
    years old, small companies of Danish adventurers carried out a series of coastline raids against England.
    Hampshire, Thanet and Cheshire were attacked in 980, Devon and Cornwall in 981, and Dorset in 982. A
    period of six years then passed before, in 988, another coastal attack is recorded as having taken place to the
    south-west, though here a famous battle was fought between the invaders and the thegns of Devon. Stenton
    notes that, though this series of isolated raids had no lasting effect on England itself, "their chief historical
    importance is that they brought England for the first time into diplomatic contact with Normandy."[15] During
    this period, the Normans, who remembered their origins as a Scandinavian people, were well-disposed to their
    Danish cousins who, occasionally returning from a raid on England, sought port in Normandy. This led to grave
    tension between the English and Norman courts, and word of their enmity eventually reached Pope John XV.
    The pope was disposed to dissolve their hostility towards each other, and took steps to engineer a peace
    between England and Normandy, which was ratified in Rouen in 991.
    Battle of Maldon
    Silver penny of Aethelred II
    However, in August of that same year, a sizeable Danish fleet began a sustained campaign in the south-east of
    England. It arrived off Folkestone, in Kent, and made its way around the south-east coast and up the River
    Blackwater, coming eventually to its estuary and occupying Northey Island.[14] About 2 kilometres (1 mile)
    west of Northey lies the coastal town of Maldon, where Byrhtnoth, ealdorman of Essex, was stationed with a
    company of thegns. The battle that followed between English and Danes is immortalised by the Old English
    poem The Battle of Maldon, which describes the doomed but heroic attempt of Byrhtnoth to defend the coast of
    Essex against overwhelming odds. Stenton summarises the events of the poem: "For access to the mainland
    they (the Danes) depended on a causeway, flooded at high tide, which led from Northey to the flats along the
    southern margin of the estuary. Before they (the Danes) had left their camp on the island[,] Byrhtnoth, with his
    retainers and a force of local militia, had taken possession of the landward end of the causeway. Refusing a
    demand for tribute, shouted across the water while the tide was high, Byrhtnoth drew up his men along the
    bank, and waited for the ebb. As the water fell the raiders began to stream out along the causeway. But three of
    Byrthnoth's retainers held it against them, and at last they asked to be allowed to cross unhindered and fight on
    equal terms on the mainland. With what even those who admired him most called 'over-courage', Byrhtnoth
    agreed to this; the pirates rushed through the falling tide, and battle was joined. Its issue was decided by
    Byrhtnoth's fall. Many even of his own men immediately took to flight and the English ranks were broken.
    What gives enduring interest to the battle is the superb courage with which a group of Byrhtnoth's thegns,
    knowing that the fight was lost, deliberately gave themselves to death in order that they might avenge their
    lord."[16] This was the first of a series of crushing defeats felt by the English: beaten first by Danish raiders, and
    later by organised Danish armies.
    England begins tributes
    In 991, Æthelred was around 24 years old. In the aftermath of Maldon,
    it was decided that the English should grant the tribute to the Danes that
    they desired, and so a gafol of £10,000 was paid them for their peace.
    Yet it was presumably the Danish fleet that had beaten Byrhtnoth at
    Maldon that continued to ravage the English coast from 991 to 993. In
    994, the Danish fleet, which had swollen in ranks since 991, turned up
    the Thames estuary and headed toward London. The battle fought there
    was inconclusive. It was about this time that Æthelred met with the
    leaders of the fleet, foremost among them Olaf Tryggvason, and
    arranged an uneasy accord. A treaty was signed between Æthelred and
    Olaf that provided for seemingly civilised arrangements between the
    then-settled Danish companies and the English government, such as
    regulation settlement disputes and trade. But the treaty also stipulated
    that the ravaging and slaughter of the previous year would be forgotten,
    and ended abruptly by stating that £22,000 of gold and silver had been
    paid to the raiders as the price of peace.[17] In 994, Olaf Tryggvason,
    already a baptised Christian, was confirmed as Christian in a ceremony at Andover; King Æthelred stood as his
    sponsor. After receiving gifts, Olaf promised "that he would never come back to England in hostility."[14] Olaf
    then left England for Norway and never returned, though "other component parts of the Viking force appear to
    have decided to stay in England, for it is apparent from the treaty that some had chosen to enter into King
    Æthelred's service as mercenaries, based presumably on the Isle of Wight."[14]
    Renewed Danish raids
    In 997, Danish raids began again. According to Keynes, "there is no suggestion that this was a new fleet or
    army, and presumably the mercenary force created in 994 from the residue of the raiding army of 991 had
    turned on those whom it had been hired to protect."[14] It harried Cornwall, Devon, western Somerset and south
    Wales in 997, Dorset, Hampshire and Sussex in 998. In 999, it raided Kent, and, in 1000, it left England for
    Normandy, perhaps because the English had refused in this latest wave of attacks to acquiesce to the Danish
    demands for gafol or tribute, which would come to be known as Danegeld, 'Dane-payment'. This sudden relief
    from attack Æthelred used to gather his thoughts, resources, and armies: the fleet's departure in 1000 "allowed
    Æthelred to carry out a devastation of Strathclyde, the motive for which is part of the lost history of the
    north."[18]
    In 1001, a Danish fleet – perhaps the same fleet from 1000 – returned and ravaged west Sussex. During its
    movements, the fleet regularly returned to its base in the Isle of Wight. There was later an attempted attack in
    the south of Devon, though the English mounted a successful defence at Exeter. Nevertheless, Æthelred must
    have felt at a loss, and, in the Spring of 1002, the English bought a truce for £24,000. Æthelred's frequent
    payments of immense Danegelds are often held up as exemplary of the incompetency of his government and
    his own short-sightedness. However, Keynes points out that such payments had been practice for at least a
    century, and had been adopted by Alfred the Great, Charles the Bald and many others. Indeed, in some cases it
    "may have seemed the best available way of protecting the people against loss of life, shelter, livestock and
    crops. Though undeniably burdensome, it constituted a measure for which the king could rely on widespread
    support."[14]
    St. Brice's Day massacr e of 1002
    Æthelred ordered the massacre of all Danish men in England to take place on 13 November 1002, St Brice's
    Day. No order of this kind could be carried out in more than a third of England, where the Danes were too
    strong, but Gunhilde, sister of Sweyn Forkbeard, King of Denmark, was said to have been among the victims. It
    is likely that a wish to avenge her was a principal motive for Sweyn's invasion of western England the
    following year.[19] By 1004 Sweyn was in East Anglia, where he sacked Norwich. In this year, a nobleman of
    East Anglia, Ulfcytel Snillingr met Sweyn in force, and made an impression on the until-then rampant Danish
    expedition. Though Ulfcytel was eventually defeated, outside Thetford, he caused the Danes heavy losses and
    was nearly able to destroy their ships. The Danish army left England for Denmark in 1005, perhaps because of
    their injuries sustained in East Anglia, perhaps from the very severe famine which afflicted the continent and
    the British Isles in that year.[14]
    An expedition the following year was bought off in early 1007 by tribute money of £36,000, and for the next
    two years England was free from attack. In 1008, the government created a new fleet of warships, organised on
    a national scale, but this was weakened when one of its commanders took to piracy, and the king and his
    council decided not to risk it in a general action. In Stenton's view: "The history of England in the next
    generation was really determined between 1009 and 1012...the ignominious collapse of the English defence
    caused a loss of morale which was irreparable." The Danish army of 1009, led by Thorkell the Tall and his
    brother Hemming, was the most formidable force to invade England since Æthelred became king. It harried
    England until it was bought off by £48,000 in April 1012.[20]
    Invasion of 1013
    Sweyn then launched an invasion in 1013 intending to crown himself king of England, during which he proved
    himself to be a general greater than any other Viking leader of his generation. By the end of 1013 English
    resistance had collapsed and Sweyn had conquered the country, forcing Æthelred into exile in Normandy. But
    the situation changed suddenly when Sweyn died on 3 February 1014. The crews of the Danish ships in the
    Trent that had supported Sweyn immediately swore their allegiance to Sweyn's son Cnut the Great, but leading
    English noblemen sent a deputation to Æthelred to negotiate his restoration to the throne. He was required to
    declare his loyalty to them, to bring in reforms regarding everything that they disliked and to forgive all that
    had been said and done against him in his previous reign. The terms of this agreement are of great
    constitutional interest in early English History as they are the first recorded pact between a King and his
    subjects and are also widely regarded as showing that many English noblemen had submitted to Sweyn simply
    because of their distrust of Æthelred.[21] According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:
    they [the counsellors] said that no lord was dearer to them than their natural (gecynde) lord, if he would
    govern them more justly than he did before. Then the king sent his son Edward hither with his
    messengers and bade them greet all his people and said that he would be a gracious (hold) lord to them,
    A charter of Æthelred's in 1003 to
    his follower, Æthelred.
    and reform all the things which they hated; and all the things which had been said and done against him
    should be forgiven on condition that they all unanimously turned to him (to him gecyrdon) without
    treachery. And complete friendship was then established with oath and pledge (mid worde and mid
    wædde) on both sides, and they pronounced every Danish king an exile from England forever.[22]
    Æthelred then launched an expedition against Cnut and his allies, the men of the Kingdom of Lindsey. Cnut's
    army had not completed its preparations and, in April 1014, he decided to withdraw from England without a
    fight leaving his Lindsey allies to suffer Æthelred's revenge. In August 1015, he returned to find a complex and
    volatile situation unfolding in England. Æthelred's son, Edmund Ironside, had revolted against his father and
    established himself in the Danelaw, which was angry at Cnut and Æthelred for the ravaging of Lindsey and was
    prepared to support Edmund in any uprising against both of them.
    Death and burial
    Over the next few months Cnut conquered most of England, while Edmund rejoined Æthelred to defend
    London when Æthelred died on 23 April 1016. The subsequent war between Edmund and Cnut ended in a
    decisive victory for Cnut at the Battle of Ashingdon on 18 October 1016. Edmund's reputation as a warrior was
    such that Cnut nevertheless agreed to divide England, Edmund taking Wessex and Cnut the whole of the
    country beyond the Thames. However, Edmund died on 30 November and Cnut became king of the whole
    country.[23]
    Æthelred was buried in Old St Paul's Cathedral, London. The tomb and his monument were destroyed along
    with the cathedral in the Great Fire of London in 1666.[24] A modern monument in the crypt lists his among the
    important graves lost.
    Legislation
    Æthelred's government produced extensive legislation, which he
    "ruthlessly enforced."[25] Records of at least six legal codes survive from
    his reign, covering a range of topics.[26] Notably, one of the members of his
    council (known as the Witan) was Wulfstan II, Archbishop of York, a wellknown
    homilist. The three latest codes from Æthelred's reign seemed to
    have been drafted by Wulfstan.[27] These codes are extensively concerned
    with ecclesiastical affairs. They also exhibit the characteristics of
    Wulfstan's highly rhetorical style. Wulfstan went on to draft codes for King
    Cnut, and recycled there many of the laws which were used in Æthelred's
    codes.[28]
    Despite the failure of his government in the face of the Danish threat,
    Æthelred's reign was not without some important institutional achievements. The quality of the coinage, a good
    indicator of the prevailing economic conditions, significantly improved during his reign due to his numerous
    coinage reform laws.[29]
    Legacy
    Later perspectives of Æthelred have been less than flattering. Numerous legends and anecdotes have sprung up
    to explain his shortcomings, often elaborating abusively on his character and failures. One such anecdote is
    given by William of Malmesbury (lived c. 1080–c. 1143), who reports that Æthelred had defecated in the
    baptismal font as a child, which led St. Dunstan to prophesy that the English monarchy would be overthrown
    during his reign. This story is, however, a fabrication, and a similar story is told of the Byzantine Emperor
    Constantine Copronymus, another mediaeval monarch who was unpopular among certain of his subjects.
    Efforts to rehabilitate Æthelred's reputation have gained momentum since about 1980. Chief among the
    rehabilitators has been Simon Keynes, who has often argued that our poor impression of Æthelred is almost
    entirely based upon after-the-fact accounts of, and later accretions to, the narrative of events during Æthelred's
    long and complex reign. Chief among the culprits is in fact one of the most important sources for the history of
    the period, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which, as it reports events with a retrospect of 15 years, cannot help but
    interpret events with the eventual English defeat a foregone conclusion. Yet, as virtually no strictly
    contemporary narrative account of the events of Æthelred's reign exists, historians are forced to rely on what
    evidence there is. Keynes and others thus draw attention to some of the inevitable snares of investigating the
    history of a man whom later popular opinion has utterly damned. Recent cautious assessments of Æthelred's
    reign have more often uncovered reasons to doubt, rather than uphold, Æthelred's later infamy. Though the
    failures of his government will always put Æthelred's reign in the shadow of the reigns of kings Edgar,
    Aethelstan, and Alfred, historians' current impression of Æthelred's personal character is certainly not as
    unflattering as it once was: "Æthelred's misfortune as a ruler was owed not so much to any supposed defects of
    his imagined character, as to a combination of circumstances which anyone would have found difficult to
    control."[30]
    Origin of the jury
    Æthelred has been credited with the formation of a local investigative body made up of twelve thegns who
    were charged with publishing the names of any notorious or wicked men in their respective districts. Because
    the members of these bodies were under solemn oath to act in accordance with the law and their own good
    consciences, they have been seen by some legal historians as the prototype for the English Grand Jury.[31]
    Æthelred makes provision for such a body in a law code he enacted at Wantage in 997, which states:
    þæt man habbe gemot on ælcum wæpentace; & gan ut þa yldestan XII þegnas & se gerefa mid, &
    swerian on þam haligdome, þe heom man on hand sylle, þæt hig nellan nænne sacleasan man
    forsecgean ne nænne sacne forhelan. & niman þonne þa tihtbysian men, þe mid þam gerefan
    habbað, & heora ælc sylle VI healfmarc wedd, healf landrican & healf wæpentake.[32]
    that there shall be an assembly in every wapentake,[33] and in that assembly shall go forth the
    twelve eldest thegns and the reeve along with them, and let them swear on holy relics, which shall
    be placed in their hands, that they will never knowingly accuse an innocent man nor conceal a
    guilty man. And thereafter let them seize those notorious [lit. "charge-laden"] men, who have
    business with the reeve, and let each of them give a security of 6 half-marks, half of which shall go
    to the lord of that district, and half to the wapentake.
    But the wording here suggests that Æthelred was perhaps revamping or re-confirming a custom which had
    already existed. He may actually have been expanding an established English custom for use among the Danish
    citizens in the North (the Danelaw). Previously, King Edgar had legislated along similar lines in his
    Whitbordesstan code:
    ic wille, þæt ælc mon sy under borge ge binnan burgum ge buton burgum. & gewitnes sy geset to
    ælcere byrig & to ælcum hundrode. To ælcere byrig XXXVI syn gecorone to gewitnesse; to smalum
    burgum & to ælcum hundrode XII, buton ge ma willan. & ælc mon mid heora gewitnysse bigcge &
    sylle ælc þara ceapa, þe he bigcge oððe sylle aþer oððe burge oððe on wæpengetace. & heora ælc,
    þonne hine man ærest to gewitnysse gecysð, sylle þæne að, þæt he næfre, ne for feo ne for lufe ne
    for ege, ne ætsace nanes þara þinga, þe he to gewitnysse wæs, & nan oðer þingc on gewitnysse ne
    cyðe buton þæt an, þæt he geseah oððe gehyrde. & swa geæþdera manna syn on ælcum ceape
    twegen oððe þry to gewitnysse.[34]
    It is my wish that each person be in surety, both within settled areas and without. And 'witnessing'
    shall be established in each city and each hundred. To each city let there be 36 chosen for
    witnessing; to small towns and to each hundred let there be 12, unless they desire more. And
    everybody shall purchase and sell their goods in the presence a witness, whether he is buying or
    selling something, whether in a city or a wapentake. And each of them, when they first choose to
    become a witness, shall give an oath that he will never, neither for wealth nor love nor fear, deny
    any of those things which he will be a witness to, and will not, in his capacity as a witness, make
    known any thing except that which he saw and heard. And let there be either two or three of these
    sworn witnesses at every sale of goods.
    The 'legend' of an Anglo-Saxon origin to the jury was first challenged seriously by Heinrich Brunner in 1872,
    who claimed that evidence of the jury was only seen for the first time during the reign of Henry II, some 200
    years after the end of the Anglo-Saxon period, and that the practice had originated with the Franks, who in turn
    had influenced the Normans, who thence introduced it to England.[35] Since Brunner's thesis, the origin of the
    English jury has been much disputed. Throughout the 20th century, legal historians disagreed about whether the
    practice was English in origin, or was introduced, directly or indirectly, from either Scandinavia or Francia.[31]
    Recently, the legal historians Patrick Wormald and Michael Macnair have reasserted arguments in favour of
    finding in practices current during the Anglo-Saxon period traces of the Angevin practice of conducting
    inquests using bodies of sworn, private witnesses. Wormald has gone as far as to present evidence suggesting
    that the English practice outlined in Æthelred's Wantage code is at least as old as, if not older than, 975, and
    ultimately traces it back to a Carolingian model (something Brinner had done).[36] However, no scholarly
    consensus has yet been reached.
    Appearance and character
    "[A] youth of graceful manners, handsome countenance and fine person..."[37] as well as "[A] tall, handsome
    man, elegant in manners, beautiful in countenance and interesting in his deportment."[38]
    Marriages and issue
    Æthelred married first Ælfgifu, daughter of Thored, earl of Northumbria, in about 985.[14] Their known
    children are:
    Æthelstan Ætheling (died 1014)
    Ecgberht Ætheling (died c. 1005)[39]
    Edmund Ironside (died 1016)
    Eadred Ætheling (died before 1013)
    Eadwig Ætheling (executed by Cnut 1017)
    Edgar Ætheling (died c. 1008)[39]
    Eadgyth or Edith (married Eadric Streona)
    Ælfgifu (married Uchtred the Bold, ealdorman of Northumbria)
    Wulfhilda (married Ulfcytel Snillingr)
    Abbess of Wherwell Abbey
    In 1002 Æthelred married Emma of Normandy, sister of Richard II, Duke of Normandy. Their children were:
    Edward the Confessor (died 1066)
    Ælfred Ætheling (died 1036–7)
    Goda of England (married 1. Drogo of Mantes and 2. Eustace II, Count of Boulogne)
    All of Æthelred's sons were named after predecessors of Æthelred on the throne.[40]
    Ancestry
    Ancestors of Æthelred the Unready
    16. Alfred the Great
    8. Edward the Elder
    17. Ealhswith
    4. Edmund I of England
    18. Sigehelm, Ealdorman of Kent
    9. Edgiva of Kent
    2. Edgar the Peaceful
    5. Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury
    1. Æthelred the Unready
    6. Ordgar
    3. Ælfthryth, Queen of England
    See also
    House of Wessex family tree
    Burial places of British royalty
    Cultural depictions of Æthelred the Unready
    Notes
    1. Different spellings of this king’s name most commonly found in modern texts are "Ethelred" and "Æthelred" (or
    "Aethelred"), the latter being closer to the originaOl ld English form Æþelræd.
    2. Bosworth-Toller, An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, with Supplement. p.1124
    3. Schröder, Deutsche Namenkunde.
    4. "Ethelred the Redeless" e.g. in Thomas HodgkinT, he History of England from the Earliest Times to the Norman
    Conquest, Volume 1 (1808), p. 373 (https://books.google.ch/books?id=wUkNAAAAIAAJ&pg=AP373). While rede
    "counsel" survived into modern English, the negativeu nrede appears to fall out of use by the 15th century; c.fR ichard
    the Redeless, a 15th-century poem in reference toR ichard II of England.
    5. Keynes, "The Declining Reputation of King Æthelred the Unready", pp. 240–1. For this king's forebear of the same
    name, see Æthelred of Wessex.
    6. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 374.
    7. Hart, Cyril (2007). "Edward the Martyr" (http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8515). Oxford Dictionary of National
    Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
    8. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 372.
    9. Miller, "Edward the Martyr."
    10. Higham, The Death of Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 7–8; Stafford, Unification and Conquest, p. 58.
    11. Phillips, "St Edward the Martyr."
    12. Keynes, The Diplomas of King Æthelred 'the Unready' 978-1016, p. 166.
    13. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 373.
    14. Keynes, "Æthelred II (c. 966x8–1016)."
    15. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 375.
    References
    16. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 376–77.
    17. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 377–78.
    18. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 379.
    19. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 380.
    20. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 381–4.
    21. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 384–6.
    22. Williams, Æthelred, p. 123
    23. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 386–393.
    24. The Burial of King Æthelred the Unready at St. Paul's, Simon Keynes, The English and Their Legacy, 900-1200: Essays
    in Honour of Ann Williams, ed. David Roffe, (Boydell Press, 2012), 129.
    25. Wormald, "Æthelred the Lawmaker", p. 49.
    26. Liebermann, ed., Die Gesetze der Angelsaschen, pp. 216–70.
    27. Wormald, "Wulfstan (d. 1023)."
    28. Wormald, The Making of English Law, pp. 356–60.
    29. "Ethelred II". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009.
    30. Keynes, "A Tale of Two Kings", p. 217.
    31. Turner, "The Origins of the Medieval English Jury"p, assim.
    32. "III Æthelred" 3.1–3.2, in Liebermann, ed.,D ie Gesetze, pp. 228–32.
    33. Note that this terms specifies the north and north-eastern territories in England which were at the time glaerly governed
    according to Danish custom; no mention is made of the law's application to thheu ndreds, the southern and English
    equivalent of the Danish wapentake.
    34. "IV Edgar" 3–6.2, in Liebermann, ed.,D ie Gesetze, pp. 206–14.
    35. Turner, "The Origins of the Medieval English Jury", pp. 1–2; Wormald, The Making of English Law, pp. 4–26,
    especially pp. 7–8 and 17–18.
    36. Wormald, "Neighbors, Courts, and Kings", pp. 598–99, et passim.
    37. The Chronicle of Florence of Worcester
    38. The Gunnlaugr Saga of Gunnlaugr the Scald
    39. M. K. Lawson, Edmund II, Oxford Online DNB, 2004 (http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8502)
    40. Frank Barlow, Edward the Confessor, Yale University Press: London, 1997, p. 28 and family tree in endpap.er
    Bosworth, J., & Toller, T. N., eds., An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary (1882–98); with Supplement (1908–21) .
    Gilbride, M.B. "A Hollow Crown review". Medieval Mysteries.com "Reviews of Outstanding Historical Novels set in
    the Medieval Period". Retrieved 9 May 2012.
    Godsell, Andrew "Ethelred the Unready" in "History For All" magazine September 2000, republished in "Legends of
    British History" (2008)
    Hart, Cyril, "Edward the Martyr", in C. Matthew, B. Harrison, & L. Goldman (eds.),O xford Dictionary of National
    Biography (2007), http://www.oxforddnb.com [accessed 9 November 2008].
    Higham, Nick, The Death of Anglo-Saxon England (1997), ISBN 0-7509-2469-1.
    Keynes, Simon, "The Declining Reputation of King Æthelred the Unready", in David Hill (ed.E),t helred the Unready:
    Papers from the Millenary Conference, British Archaeological Reports, British Series 59 (1978), pp. 227–53.
    Keynes, Simon, "A Tale of Two Kings: Alfred the Great and Æthelred the Unready"T, ransactions of the Royal
    Historical Society, Fifth Series 36 (1986), pp. 195–217.
    Keynes, Simon, "Æthelred II (c. 966x8–1016)", in C. Matthew, B. Harrison, & L. Goldman (eds.),O xford Dictionary of
    National Biography (2004), http://www.oxforddnb.com [accessed 12 June 2008].
    Liebermann, Felix, ed., Die Gesetze der Angelsaschen, vol. 1 (1903).
    Miller,Sean, "Edward the Martyr", in M. Lapidge, J. Bla,i rS. Keynes, & D. Scragg (eds.),T he Blackwell Encyclopædia
    of Anglo-Saxon England (1999), p. 163. ISBN 0-631-22492-0.
    Phillips, G. E., Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Edward the Martyr". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert
    Appleton Company.
    Schröder, Edward, Deutsche Namenkunde: Gesammelte Aufsätze zur Kunde deutsche Personen- und Ortsnam e(n1944).
    Stafford, Pauline, Unification and Conquest: A Political and Social History of England in thee Tnth and Eleventh
    Centuries (1989), ISBN 0-7131-6532-4.
    Skinner, Patricia, ed, Challenging the Boundaries of Medieval History: The Legacy of iTmothy Reuter (2009), ISBN
    978-2-503-52359-0.
    Stenton, F. M. (1971). Anglo-Saxon England. The Oxford History of England.2 (3rd ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    ISBN 0192801392.
    Turner, Ralph V. (1968). "The Origins of the Medieval English Jury: Frankish, English, or Scandinavian?"T. he Journal
    of British Studies. 7 (2): 1–10. JSTOR 175292. doi:10.1086/385549.
    Wikisource has the text of
    the 1911 Encyclopædia
    Britannica article Æthelred
    II..
    Wikimedia Commons has
    media related to Æthelred.
    Further reading
    Cubitt, Catherine (2012). "The politics of remorse: penance and
    royal piety in the reign of Æthelred the Unready". Historical
    Research. 85 (228): 179–192. doi:10.1111/j.1468-
    2281.2011.00571.x.
    Hart, Cyril, ed. and tr. (2006). Chronicles of the Reign of
    Æthelred the Unready: An Edition and Translation of the Old
    English and Latin Annals. The Early Chronicles of England 1.
    Keynes, Simon (1980). The Diplomas of King Æthelred ‘the
    Unready’ 978–1016. New York: Cambridge University Press.
    ISBN 0521227186.
    Lavelle, Ryan (2008). Aethelred II: King of the English 978–1016 (New ed.). Stroud, Gloucestershire:
    The History Press. ISBN 9780752446783.
    External links
    Æthelred 32 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
    Miller, Sean. "Æthelred the Unready". Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 25 November 2007.
    Documentary – The Making of England: Aethelred the Unready
    Regnal titles
    Preceded by
    Edward the Martyr
    King of the English
    978–1013
    Succeeded by
    Sweyn Forkbeard
    Preceded by
    Sweyn Forkbeard
    King of the English
    1014–1016
    Succeeded by
    Edmund Ironside
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Æthelred_the_Unready&oldid=785907428"
    Categories: Monarchs of England before 1066 Medieval child rulers 968 births 1016 deaths
    11th-century English monarchs 10th-century English monarchs Christian monarchs House of Wessex
    Burials at St Paul's Cathedral
    This page was last edited on 16 June 2017, at 03:30.
    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may
    apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered
    trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
    Williams, Ann, Æthelred the Unready: The Ill-Counselled King (2003), ISBN 1-85285-382-4.
    Wormald, Patrick, The Making of English Law – King Alfred to the Twelfth Century, vol. 1: Legislation and its Limits
    (1999).
    Wormald, Patrick (1999). "Neighbors, Courts ,and Kings: Reflections on Michael Macnair's Vicini". Law and History
    Review. 17 (3): 597–601. JSTOR 744383. doi:10.2307/744383.
    Wormald, Patrick, "Wulfstan (d. 1023)", in C. Matthew, B. Harrison, & L. Goldman (eds.),O xford Dictionary of
    National Biography (2004), http://www.oxforddnb.com [accessed 12 June 2008].

    Æthelred married of York, Queen Consort Ælfgifu. Ælfgifu (daughter of of York, Ealdorman Thored) was born in 968 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in 1002 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  of York, Queen Consort Ælfgifu was born in 968 in Kingdom of Wessex (England) (daughter of of York, Ealdorman Thored); died in 1002 in England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Queen of England
    • FSID: LJY6-1HD

    Notes:

    Ælfgifu of York
    Queen consort of England
    Tenure 980s–1002
    Born fl. c. 970
    Died c. 1002
    Spouse Æthelred the Unready
    Issue Æthelstan Ætheling
    Ecgberht of England
    Edmund Ironside
    Eadred Ætheling
    Eadwig Ætheling
    Edgar of England
    Edith, Lady of the Mercians
    Ælfgifu, Lady of Northumbria
    Wulfhilda, Lady of East Anglia
    Father Thored, Earl of southern Northumbria
    Ælfgifu of York
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Ælfgifu of York (fl. c. 970 – 1002) was the first wife of
    Æthelred the Unready (r. 968–1016), by whom she bore
    many offspring, including Edmund Ironside. It is most
    probable that she was a daughter of Thored, Earl of southern
    Northumbria.
    Contents
    1 Identity and background
    1.1 Problem of fatherhood
    2 Marriage and children
    2.1 Sons
    2.2 Daughters
    3 Life and death
    4 Notes
    5 Sources
    5.1 Primary sources
    5.2 Secondary sources
    6 External links
    Identity and background
    Her name and paternity do not surface in the sources until sometime after the Conquest. The first to offer any
    information at all, Sulcard of Westminster (fl. 1080s), merely describes her as being “of very noble English
    stock” (ex nobilioribus Anglis), without naming her,[1] while in the early 12th century, William of Malmesbury
    has nothing to report. All primary evidence comes from two Anglo-Norman historians. John of Worcester, also
    writing in the early 12th century, states that Æthelred's first wife was Ælfgifu, daughter of the nobleman
    Æthelberht (comes Agelberhtus) and the mother of Edmund, Æthelstan, Eadwig and Eadgyth.[2] Writing in the
    1150s, Ailred of Rievaulx identifies her as a daughter of earl (comes) Thored and the mother of Edmund,
    though he supplies no name.[3] Ailred had been seneschal at the court of King David I of Scotland (r. 1124–53),
    whose mother Margaret descended from King Æthelred and his first wife. Although his testimony is late, his
    proximity to the royal family may have given him access to genuine information.[4]
    Problem of fatherhood
    These two accounts are irreconcilable at the point of ascribing two different fathers to Æthelred's first wife (in
    both cases, Edmund's mother). One way out of it would be to assume the existence of two different wives
    before the arrival of Queen Emma, Æthelred's Norman wife, although this interpretation presents difficulties of
    its own, especially as the sources envisage a single woman.[5] Historians generally favour the view that John of
    Worcester was in error about the father's name, as Æthelberht's very existence is under suspicion:[6] if Latin
    comes is to be interpreted as a gloss on the office of ealdorman, only two doubtful references to one or two
    duces (ealdormen) of this name can be put forward that would fit the description.[7] All in all, the combined
    evidence suggests that Æthelred's first wife was Ælfgifu, the daughter of Earl Thored. This magnate is likely to
    have been the Thored who was a son of Gunnar and earl of (southern) Northumbria.[8]
    Marriage and children
    Based largely on the careers of her sons, Ælfgifu's marriage has been dated approximately to the (mid-)980s.[8]
    Considering Thored's authority as earl of York and apparently, the tenure of that office without royal
    appointment, the union would have signified an important step for the West-Saxon royal family by which it
    secured a foothold in the north.[9] Such a politically weighty union would help explain the close connections
    maintained by Ælfgifu's eldest sons Edmund and Æthelstan with noble families based in the northern
    Danelaw.[10]
    The marriage produced six sons, all of whom were named after Æthelred's predecessors, and an unknown
    number of daughters. The eldest sons Æthelstan, Ecgberht, Eadred and Edmund first attest charters in 993,
    while the younger sons Eadwig and Edgar first make an appearance in them in 997 and 1001 respectively.[11]
    Some of these sons seem to have spent part of their childhood in fosterage elsewhere, possibly with Æthelred's
    mother Ælfthryth.[12]
    Out of Ælfgifu's six sons, only Edmund Ironside outlived his father and became king. In 1016 he suffered
    several defeats against Cnut and in October they agreed to share the kingdom, but Edmund died within six
    weeks and Cnut became king of all England. Æthelred gave three of his daughters in marriage to ealdormen,
    presumably in order to secure the loyalties of his nobles and so to consolidate a defence system against Viking
    attacks.[13]
    Sons
    Æthelstan (born before 993, d. 1014)
    Ecgberht (born before 993, d. 1005)
    Edmund (II) Ironside (born before 993, d. 1016)
    Eadred (d. 1012 x 1015)
    Eadwig (born before 997, exiled and killed 1017)
    Edgar (born before 1001, d. 1012 x 1015)
    Daughters
    Eadgyth (born before 993), married Eadric Streona, ealdorman of Mercia.[14]
    Ælfgifu, married ealdorman Uhtred of Northumbria.[15]
    (possibly) Wulfhild, who married Ulfcytel (Snillingr) (d. 1016), apparently ealdorman of East
    Anglia.[16]
    possibly an unnamed daughter who married the Æthelstan who was killed fighting the Danes at the
    Battle of Ringmere in 1010. He is called Æthelred's aðum, meaning either son-in-law or brother-inlaw.[
    16] Ann Williams, however, argues that the latter meaning is the appropriate one and refers to
    Æthelstan as being Ælfgifu's brother.[8]
    possibly unnamed daughter, who became abbess of Wherwell.[17]
    Life and death
    Unlike her mother-in-law, Ælfthryth, Ælfgifu was not anointed queen and never signed charters.[18] She did,
    however, make at least some impression on the contemporary record. In a will issued between 975/980 and
    987, the thegn Beorhtric and his wife bequeathed to their “lady” (hlæfdige) an armlet worth 30 gold mancuses
    and a stallion, calling upon her authority to oversee the implementation of the arrangements set out by will.[19]
    In a will of later date (AD 990 x 1001), in which she is addressed as “my lady” (mire hlæfdian), the
    noblewoman Æthelgifu promised a bequest of 30 mancuses of gold.[20] Just as little is known of Ælfgifu's life,
    so the precise date and circumstances of her death cannot be recovered.[21] In any event, she appears to have
    died by 1002, possibly in childbirth, when Æthelred took to wife Emma, daughter of Count Richard of Rouen,
    who received or adopted her predecessor's Anglo-Saxon name, Ælfgifu.
    Notes
    Sources
    Primary sources
    Ailred of Rievaulx, De genealogia regum Anglorum ("On the Genealogy of the English Kings"), ed. R.
    Twysden, De genealogia regum Anglorum. Rerum Anglicarum scriptores 10. London, 1652. 1.347–70.
    Patrologia Latina 195 (711–38) edition available from Documenta Catholica; tr. M. L. Dutton and J. P.
    Freeland, Aelred of Rievaulx, The Historical Works. Kalamazoo, 2005.
    Anglo-Saxon charters
    S 1511 (possibly AD 980 x 987)
    S 1497 (c. AD 990 x 1001)
    Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, ed. D. Dumville and S. Keynes, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: a collaborative
    edition. 8 vols. Cambridge, 1983
    Tr. Michael J. Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. 2nd ed. London, 2000.
    John of Worcester, Chronicon ex Chronicis, ed. Benjamin Thorpe, Florentii Wigorniensis monachi
    chronicon ex chronicis. 2 vols. London, 1848–49
    Tr. J. Stevenson, Church Historians of England. 8 vols.: vol. 2.1. London, 1855; pp. 171–372.
    Sulcard of Westminster, Prologus de construccione Westmonasterii, ed. B. W. Scholz, “Sulcard of
    Westminster. Prologus de construccione Westmonasterii.” Traditio; 20 (1964); pp. 59–91.
    William of Malmesbury, Gesta regum Anglorum, ed. and tr. R. A. B. Mynors, R. M. Thomson and M.
    Winterbottom, William of Malmesbury. Gesta Regum Anglorum: The History of the English Kings.
    (Oxford Medieval Texts.) 2 vols.; vol 1. Oxford, 1998.
    Secondary sources
    Fryde, E. et al. Handbook of British Chronology. 3d ed. Cambridge, 1996.
    1. Sulcard of Winchester, Prologus de construccione
    Westmonasterii, ed. Scholz, pp. 74, 89; Williams,
    Æthelred the Unready, p. 169, note 30.
    2. John of Worcester, Chronicon ex Chronicis (West-
    Saxon regnal list at the end of Chronicle).
    3. '[...] cum jam de filia Torethi nobilissimi comitis filium
    suscepisset Edmundum.'--Ailred of Rievaulx,
    Genealogia regum Anglorum.
    4. Keynes, “Æthelred.”
    5. This possibility is raised, for instance, by Stafford,
    Queen Emma, p. 66 and 66 note 3. It is also
    considered, but subsequently rejected by Williams,
    Æthelred the Unready, p. 25.
    6. Williams, Æthelred the Unready, p. 25; Keynes,
    “Æthelred”; Handbook of British Chronology, p. 27.
    7. His name is only attested for an ealdorman d(ux) on the
    witness lists for two spurious royal charters relating to
    grants in Tavistock and Exeter. S 838 (AD 981) (http://
    www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=seek&query=S+83
    8) and S 954 (AD 1019) (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/
    hwaet/?do=seek&query=S+954). The latter
    subscription may be an error forÆ thelweard; see
    Williams, Æthelred the Unready. p. 169 note 29.
    8. Williams, Æthelred the Unready, p. 24.
    8. Williams, Æthelred the Unready, p. 24.
    9. Williams, Æthelred the Unready, p. 24-5.
    10. Keynes, “Æthelred”; Williams, Æthelred the Unready,
    p. 25.
    11. S 876 (AD 993), S 891 (AD 997), S 899 (AD 1001).
    12. Keynes, “Æthelred”
    13. Stafford, The Reign of Æthelred II.34-5.
    14. John of Worcester, Chronicon, AD 1009.
    15. De Obsessione Dunelmi § 2; Handbook of British
    Chronology, p. 27.
    16. Handbook of British Chronology, p. 27.
    17. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (MS E) 1048; Handbook of
    British Chronology, p. 27.
    18. Ryan Lavelle, Aethelred II: King of the English, The
    History Press, 2008, p. 56
    19. S 1511 (975 or 980 x 987).
    20. S 1497 (c. AD 990x 1001).
    21. It has been suggested that she died in giving birth.
    Trow, Cnut: Emperor of the North, p. 54.
    Keynes, Simon. “Æthelred II (c.966x8–1016).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford
    University Press, 200.4 Accessed 1 Sept 2007.
    Stafford, Pauline. "The Reign of Æthelred II. A Study in the Limitations on Royal Policy and Action." In
    Ethelred the Unready. Papers from the Millenary Conference, ed. D. Hill. BAR British series 59. Oxford,
    1978. 15-46.
    Stafford, Pauline. Queen Emma and Queen Edith: Queenship and Women’s Power in Eleventh-Century
    England. Oxford, 1997.
    Trow, M.J. Cnut: Emperor of the North. Sutton, 2005.
    Williams, Ann. Æthelred the Unready: The Ill-Counselled King. London, 2003.
    External links
    Ælfgifu 17 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
    Preceded by
    Ælfthryth
    Queen Consort of England
    980s–1002
    Succeeded by
    Emma of
    Normandy
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ælfgifu_of_York&oldid=764712817"
    Categories: English royal consorts 10th-century English people 11th-century English people
    10th-century women 11th-century women Anglo-Saxon royal consorts House of Wessex
    This page was last edited on 10 February 2017, at 14:37.
    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may
    apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered
    trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

    Children:
    1. 4. of England, Edmund II was born in 988 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died on 30 Nov 1016 in London, London, England; was buried on 6 Dec 1016 in Glastonbury Abbey, Glastonbury, Somerset, England.