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Which king died over 1,000 years ago?

Inevitably remembered as 'the Unready', Æthelred died exactly 1,000 years ago on 23 April 1016 – 50 years before the Norman Conquest.
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What happened to King Ethelred?

In early January 871, Æthelred was defeated at the Battle of Reading. Four days later, he scored a victory in the Battle of Ashdown, but this was followed by two defeats at Basing and Meretun. He died shortly after Easter.
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Who was the English king who killed the Vikings?

King Æthelred ordered the massacre of Danes in England on November 13th, 1002. Why St Brice became so popular in Anglo-Saxon England is a mystery.
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How was Ethelred the Unready related to Alfred the Great?

Aethelred was the great-great grandson of Alfred the Great and born c. 968. His father was Edgar the Peaceable, King of England and his mother was Queen Aelfthryth.
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Is Queen Elizabeth related to Alfred the Great?

Genealogy. Every English monarch down to Queen Elizabeth II is a direct descendant of William the Conqueror as well as Alfred the Great and King Coel (Old King Cole of the nursery rhyme.)
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"The Ruler Who Lived 1000 Years Before Jesus Christ!" | Tutankhamun with Dan Snow | Channel 5

Who ruled England after Ethelred the Unready?

Ethelred was succeeded by his son Edmund II Ironside (ruled 1016); one of his other sons ruled England as Edward the Confessor from 1042 to 1066.
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Was King Ethelred murdered?

Æthelred (/ˈæθəlrɛd/; c. 762 – 18 April 796), was the king of Northumbria from 774 to 779 and again from 790 until he was murdered in 796.
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What problems did Ethelred face during his time as a king?

And he was a ruler at the time of great anxiety throughout western Europe as he reigned during the millennium (1000 A.D.). One of Ethelred's biggest problems was the latest round of Viking raids which had largely died out during the first three quarters of the 10th century.
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Who is the greatest Viking king of all time?

Ragnar Lodbrok is considered to be the most famous Viking by many historians and the wider public. This is largely because of his lead role in the History Channel show, Vikings. However, he also had a prominent role in many Viking sagas that detailed his raids on what is now France and England.
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What ended the Viking Age?

The events of 1066 in England effectively marked the end of the Viking Age. By that time, all of the Scandinavian kingdoms were Christian, and what remained of Viking “culture” was being absorbed into the culture of Christian Europe.
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What was King Ethelred famous for?

Known as the Un-raed, 'redeless' or 'Unready' (meaning 'no counsel', or that he was unwise), Ethelred failed to win or retain the allegiance of many of his subjects. In 1002, he ordered the massacre of all Danes in England to eliminate potential treachery.
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Who kills Lord Aethelred?

Cause of Death

Neck snapped by Eardwulf.
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Who was the first king of all England?

The first king of England

It was Edward's son, Æthelstan, who first controlled the whole area that would form the kingdom of England. Æthelstan's sister had married Sihtric, the Viking ruler of the Northumbrians. When Sihtric died in 927, Æthelstan succeeded to that kingdom.
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What is Mercia called today?

Mercia (Old English: Mierce, "border people"; IPA: [ˈmɜːʃiə]) was one of the kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon heptarchy, centred on the valley of the River Trent and its tributaries in what is now the Midlands of England.
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What is modern day Mercia?

Mercia originally comprised the border areas (modern Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, and northern West Midlands and Warwickshire) that lay between the districts of Anglo-Saxon settlement and the Celtic tribes they had driven to the west.
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What is Aethelflaed sickness?

Eadith calls Aethelflaed's condition “canker”, which was an Old English term for cancer, used until the 1600s. The word is derived from the Latin for 'crab' (as in the astrological star sign), and thought to come from the Greek word 'Karkinos' which describes the crab limb-like veins that can surround a tumour.
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Was King Canute a Viking?

He was the first Viking leader to be acknowledged by the Pope as a Christian king and in 1027 embarked on a pilgrimage to Rome, demonstrating his faith and piety.
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How was King Ethelred related to King Alfred?

Finally, in 870 the Danes attacked the only remaining independent Anglo-Saxon kingdom, Wessex, whose forces were commanded by King Aethelred and his younger brother Alfred.
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Was King Edmund defeated by the Vikings?

Born on Christmas Day 841 AD, Edmund succeeded to the throne of East Anglia in 856. Brought up as a Christian, he fought alongside King Alfred of Wessex against the pagan Viking and Norse invaders (the Great Heathen Army) until 869/70 when his forces were defeated and Edmund was captured by the Vikings.
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Did England ever have a Viking king?

So the Vikings were not permanently defeated – England was to have four Viking kings between 1013 and 1042. The greatest of these was King Cnut, who was king of Denmark as well as of England.
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How far back does the British royal bloodline go?

Follow the family tree of the Kings and Queens of England, from 871 to the present day. The origins of kingship in England can be traced to the second century BC when Celtic and Belgic tribesmen, emigrated from continental Europe and settled in Britain displacing or absorbing the aboriginal inhabitants.
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