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  1. Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. Fantasy. Æthelgifu of Bebbenburg was a character in The Saxon Stories novel series. She was a Mercian noblewoman and the birth mother of Uhtred. (To Be Added) Æthelgifu was a noble; she was a Mercian noblewomen and later married the ealdorman of Bebbenburg.

  2. 7 de oct. de 2017 · Learn how to say Aelfgifu with EmmaSaying free pronunciation tutorials.Definition and meaning can be found here:https://www.google.com/search?q=define+Aelfgi...

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  3. When the Anglo-Saxon noblewoman, Wynflæd, wrote her will in the 10th century, she included instructions regarding the fate of her slaves. The will specified that, 'at Faccombe, Eadhelm and Man and Johanna and Sprow and his wife … and Gersand and Snel are to be freed'. However, Wynflæd did not free two of her seamstresses, Eadgifu (Edgyfu ...

  4. www.shaftesburyabbey.org.uk › historyHISTORY | abbey

    Grander Norman buildings replaced the Saxon ones between 1080 and 1120 and through grants of land over the centuries, the Abbey came to own large estates in Dorset, Wiltshire and beyond. When leaving the Abbey most of the land you see before you would have been owned by it. Its wealth and power attracted royal visitors – including King Canute ...

  5. The first wife of king Æthelred II, mother among others of Eadmund Ironside, has no clear historical identity. Even her name is uncertain, and accounts of her parentage are contradictory. There is also a possibility that the elder children of Æthelred were by more than one earlier wife [Freeman (1870-9), 1: 688; Stafford (1997), 72, 85 ...

  6. Æthelgifu, pronounced [ˈæðeljivu] in Old English, was active during the 870s to 890s and is recognized as a daughter of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex. Born as the third surviving child from the union of Alfred and Ealhswith in 868, she entered monastic life.

  7. Ieldra Æthelgifu was the Ieldra of London until the eve of the English Civil War in 1642, when she vanished to Edinburgh to seize power there. Daugher of Æthelstan, the first King of England who ruled from 924 to 927[1], Æthelgifu became Ieldra at some point between 1066 to 1450, during the High Medieval Period.[2] The Ieldra was securely on the throne by the time of the War of the Roses ...