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  1. 13 de nov. de 2022 · Æthelmær the Stout or Æthelmær Cild (died 1015) was ealdorman of the western provinces (or south-western England) from c. 1005 to 1015. He was the son of Æthelweard the historian, and descended from King Æthelred I.

  2. A separate theory, first proposed by Alfred Anscombe in 1913, and advocated since by the genealogist Lundie W. Barlow in 1957 and the Mayanist scholar and genealogist David H. Kelley in 1989 suggests that this Æthelmær was the same person as Æthelmær the Stout, who himself was the son of Æthelweard, a historian, and he a descendant of Æthelred I of Wessex.

  3. Æthelmær the Stout or Æthelmær the Fat (died 1015) a leading thegn from the 980s, discðegn (dish-bearer or seneschal) to King Æthelred the Unready, and briefly ealdorman of the Western Provinces in 1013.

  4. Though the Worcester chronicler gives his Agelmær a different father from the known father of Ealdorman Æthelmær, and Anscombe points out its inherent chronological problems, he argues that, though flawed, the pedigree retains the memory of a father-son relationship between Æthelmær the Stout and Wulfnoth Cild. Æthelmær was the son of ...

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  6. Æthelmær the Stout and Æthelnoth (archbishop of Canterbury) · See more » Æthelweard (historian) Æthelweard (also Ethelward; d. c. 998), descended from the Anglo-Saxon King Æthelred I of Wessex, the elder brother of Alfred the Great, was an ealdorman and the author of a Latin version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle known as the Chronicon Æthelweardi.

  7. Wulfnoth Cild was a South Saxon thegn who died around the year 1014. He is recognized by historians as the likely father of Godwin, Earl of Wessex, making him the grandfather of King Harold II. The substantial landholdings of the Godwin family in Sussex serve as strong evidence to support the identification of this Wulfnoth as the South Saxon ...