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  1. ETHELWERD or ÆTHELWEARD ( d. 998?), chronicler, who, according to his own statement, was great-great-grandson of King Æthelred, elder brother of Alfred, wrote a short Latin chronicle in which he styles himself ‘Patricius Consul Fabius Quæstor,’ the first two titles merely signifying that he was an ealdorman, and the rest being a ...

  2. Alfred had two legitimate sons, Edward and Æthelweard. He also may have had an illegitimate son named Osferth too. Only Edward, amongst his sons was a king, ruling from 899 – 924. Edward was ...

  3. 5 de ago. de 2019 · The chronicle of Æthelweard by Ethelwerd, d. 998. Publication date 1962 Topics Great Britain -- History -- Anglo Saxon period, 449-1066 Publisher

  4. 18 de abr. de 2024 · After 975 and probably before 983, Æthelweard produced a Latin translation of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, including material not found in surviving Old English versions. Æthelweard wrote his work on request of his relative Mathilde, abbess of Essen Abbey monastery and granddaughter of emperor Otto I and Eadgyth of Wessex, to help her in the duty of keeping the remembrance of the dead relatives.

  5. 11 de ene. de 2024 · Æthelweard’s chronicle, in a rugged and distinctive Latin, covers history from Creation down to 975, just before he wrote the work. He bases it largely on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and parts of his chronicle provide valuableinformation about this Old English work, here in Æthelweard’s Latin translation or paraphrase.

  6. 18 de dic. de 2021 · Æthelweard Wessex. (abt. 880 - 922) Æthelweard "Ethelwerd" Wessex. Born about 0880 in Wessex, England. Ancestors. Son of Ælfred (Wessex) of Wessex and Ealhswith (Mercia) of Wessex. Brother of Æthelflæd (Wessex) of Mercia, Eadweard (Wessex) of England, Eadmund (Wessex) of Wessex, Æthelgifu (Wessex) of Shaftesbury and Ælfthryth (Wessex ...

  7. 3 de ago. de 2017 · Æthelweard was a tenth-century English ealdorman in the court of Æthelred “the Unready.”. The dates of his birth and death are uncertain but are estimated around his appearances as a charter witness. He was involved in negotiations with the Viking leader Olaf Tryggvason in 994 CE and was an advocate of Benedictine monasticism.