Site Navigation
Categories:
Anglo-Saxon monarchs
895 births
939 deaths

Summary Of: Æthelstan

but before Æthelstan and he could fight... s chronicle suggests that Æthelstan faced opposition from Constantine... William states that Æthelstan stood godfather to a son of Constantine... Æthelstan followed up his advances in the north by securing the recognition of the Welsh kings...

Encyclodia Page On: Æthelstan

These Are Links To Other Documents
Athelstan (disambiguation) | King of the English | The tomb of King Athelstan in Malmesbury Abbey | Malmesbury Abbey | August 2 | 924 | October 27 | 939 | Edward the Elder | Ælfweard | Edmund | Edward the Elder | Egwina | Wessex | England | Malmesbury Abbey | October 27 | 939 | King of England | Edward the Elder | Ethelfleda | Mercia | Constantine II | King of Scots | Treaty of Eamont Bridge | Battle of Brunanburh | Britain | Alfred the Great | Edmund | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle | Battle of Brunanburh | Edmund | Europe | Annals of Flodoard | Francia | Chronicle of Nantes | William of Malmesbury | Michael Wood | charters | laws | law codes | coins | Britain | St Cuthbert's | | | plinth | Coronation Stone | Kingston upon Thames | Edward the Elder | Alfred the Great | Kingdom of the Anglo-Saxons | Æthelflæd | Mercia | Humber | West Saxon | King of Mercia | Ælfweard | Edwin | Sihtric Cáech | Viking | Jórvík | Christianity | Gofraid | Dublin | England | British Isles | Firth of Forth | Great Britain | Bamburgh | Hywel, King of the West Welsh | Constantine II | King of Scots | Owain | King of the people of Gwent | Ealdred | Anglo-Saxon Chronicle | Owain | Strathclyde | Hereford | Cornish | Exeter | Cornwall | River Tamar | John of Worcester | William of Malmesbury | Olaf Cuaran | Eamont Bridge | 12 July | 927 | Hywel Dda | Indulf | Henry of Huntingdon | Symeon of Durham | Winchester | 28 May | 927 | Nottingham | 7 June | Chester-le-Street | Caithness | Sutherland | Annals of Clonmacnoise | Buckingham | 13 September | 934 | Cirencester | Christmas | Constantine's | Olaf Guthfrithson, King of Dublin | battle of Brunanburh | Bromborough | Wirral | 27 October | 939 | Malmesbury | Edmund the Elder | England | Vikings | Wales | Cornwall | Athelstan | Ealdorman | Anglo-Saxon | Norman Conquest | Patrick Wormald | Anglo-Saxon England | Simon Keynes | Welsh | Asser | Dyfed | Hywel Dda | Welsh law | Chester | Holy Roman Emperor Otto | Henry I of Saxony | Egill Skallagrímsson | Icelandic | Egils Saga | Alan II, Duke of Brittany | Haakon | Harald | Norway | Louis | Charles the Simple | basileus | William of Malmesbury | Constantine | Charlemagne | Wessex | Gloucester | Winchester | Dissolution of the Monasteries | King Henry VIII | Abbey | Malmesbury | half-brother | Edmund of England | Egbert of Wessex | Æthelwulf of Wessex | Redburga | Alfred the Great | Osburga | Edward the Elder | Ealhswith | Ecgwynn | House of Wessex family tree | Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames | List of monarchs of England | Kingdom of England | Malmesbury, Wiltshire | ISBN 0-7524-2566-8 | Edward the Elder | Ælfweard | King of England | Edmund | v | d | English Monarchs | Monarchs Pre-Conquest | | Alfred the Great | Edward the Elder | Ælfweard | Edmund the Magnificent | Eadred | Eadwig the Fair | Edgar the Peaceable | Edward the Martyr | Ethelred the Unready | Sweyn Forkbeard | Edmund Ironside | Canute the Great | Harold Harefoot | Harthacanute | Edward the Confessor | Harold Godwinson | Edgar the Ætheling | Monarchs Post-Conquest | | William I | William II | Henry I | Stephen | Matilda | Henry II | Richard I | John | Henry III | Edward I | Edward II | Edward III | Richard II | Henry IV | Henry V | Henry VI | Edward IV | Edward V | Richard III | Henry VII | Henry VIII | Edward VI | Jane | Mary I | Elizabeth I | James I | Charles I | Commonwealth | Charles II | James II | William III | Mary II | William III | Anne | Britain | Ireland | Scotland | Categories | Anglo-Saxon monarchs | 895 births | 939 deaths |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Æthelstan".