< England | CatalogsRevision as of 08:06, 5 November 2017 by imported>Peter Jackson
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The English monarchy is usually regarded as beginning with Egbert. The Anglo-Saxon kingdoms had acknowledged one among their number as overlord in some sense. Egbert of Wessex displaced the Mercian overlordhsip. Over the next century, the Vikings conquered most of England, destroying all the other kingdoms in the process, and Wessex then reconquered their territory. When Athelstan completed this process, he was effective king of all England, not just an overlord of independent kingdoms.
Saxons
Date of Reign
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Name
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Comment
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829-839
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Egbert
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839-855
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Ethelwulf
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abdicated
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855-860
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Ethelbald
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860-865
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Ethelbert
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865-871
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Ethelred
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871-899
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Alfred
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the Great
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899-924
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Edward
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the Elder
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924-939
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Athelstan
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939-946
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Edmund
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946-955
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Edred
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955-959
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Edwy
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959-975
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Edgar
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975-978
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Edward
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the Martyr
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978-1016
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Ethelred
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the Unready
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1016
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Edmund
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Ironside
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Danish rulers
Saxons
Date of Reign
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Name
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Comment
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1042-1066
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Edward
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The Confessor
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1066-1066
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Harold II
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House of Normandy
House of Plantagenet
House of Lancaster
House of York
House of Tudor
House of Stuart
Date of Reign
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Name
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Comment
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1603-1625
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James I
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James VI of Scotland
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1625-1649
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Charles I
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Commonwealth/protectorate
House of Stuart restored
Notes
The 16-day "reign" of Elfweard in 924 is usually ignored.
The Danish Sweyn Forkbeard seized the throne for about 6 weeks in 1013-1014.
After King Harold was killed at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, the Witan elected Edgar Atheling as king. He was never crowned, and submitted to William shortly after. He is sometimes included in the list of monarchs.
In 1141, the Church declared King Stephen deposed, but then restored and recrowned him.
Although Henry VI was deposed in London in 1461, he remained king in parts of the country till 1465. He was restored for 6 months in 1470-71.
After the death of Edward VI, the Council in London, and the local authorities in King's Lynn and Berwick-upon-Tweed, proclaimed Lady Jane Dudley (née Grey) as queen. The rest of the country supported Mary, and Jane was deposed after 9 days. She is sometimes included in the list of monarchs.
After the execution of Charles I a republic ("commonwealth") was proclaimed. The Cromwells were given the title of Lord Protector.
Faced with invasion and rebellion, James II fled the country in 1688. Parliament, meeting the following year, deemed him to have abdicated at that point.
The first English monarch known to have used a number is Henry III (on some coins). The numbering of earlier monarchs is retrospective. His son called himself Edward the First after the Conquest, establishing the conventional starting point of the numbering. However, monarchs do not usually call themselves "the First", such designations being added retrospectively when another monarch of the same name succeeds. Another exception is James I, who sometimes used the number to balance his Scottish title James VI.
Spellings of some early monarchs have been modernized.