List of monarchs of Wessex

List of monarchs of Wessex
Lists of the kings of Anglo-Saxon England
British isles 802.jpg
This article is part of a series
Essex Mercia
East Anglia Kent
Northumbria Sussex
Wessex

This is a list of monarchs of Wessex until 924. For later monarchs, see the list of monarchs of England. While the details of the later monarchs are confirmed by a number of sources, the earlier ones are in many cases obscure.

The names are given in modern English form followed by the names and titles (as far as is known) in contemporary Anglo-Saxon English and Latin, being the prevalent 'official' languages of the time.

This was a time when spellings varied widely, even within a document. A number of variations of the details below exist. Amongst these are the preference between the runic letter "Thorn" (Þ) and the letter "Eth" (Ð), both of which are pronounced "Th" and were interchangeable. They were used indiscriminately for voiced and unvoiced sounds, unlike modern Icelandic. Thorn tended to be more used in the south (Wessex) and eth in the North (Mercia and Northumbria). "Th" was preferred in the earliest period in Northern texts.

The character "7" was used as the ampersand (&) in contemporary Anglo-Saxon writings. The era pre-dates the emergence of some forms of writing accepted today, notably rare were lower case and the letters "W" and "U". W was occasionally rendered "VV", but the runic letter "wynn" (Ƿ) was the normal way of writing the "W" sound. Again, in the earliest period, the Angles/Engle preferred 'VV', whilst the West Saxons preferred the letter derived from a rune. (Compare "Thorn" and "Eth")

Except in manuscripts, runic letters were an Anglian phenomenon. (The early Engle restricted the use of runes to monuments, whereas the Saxons adopted Wynn and Thorn for sounds which did not have a Latin equivalent. Otherwise they were not used in Wessex).

Monarchs of the West Saxons (Wessex)

Reign Incumbent Notes
The Kingdom of the Gewissae
Cerdicing Dynasty
519 to 534 Cerdic CERDIC ELESING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CERDIC REX GEVVISSÆ
Celtic, Brythonic, name
534 to 560 Cynric CYNRIC CERDICING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CYNRIC REX GEVVISSÆ
Possibly Celtic, Brythonic name
560 to 591 Ceawlin CEAVVLIN CYNRICING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CEAVVLIN REX GEVVISSÆ
Celtic, Brythonic, name
591 to 597 Ceol CEOL CVÞING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CEOL REX GEVVISSÆ
597 to 611 Ceolwulf CEOLVVLF CVÞING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CEOLVVLF REX GEVVISSÆ
611 to 643 Cynegils CYNEGILS CEOLING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CYNEGILS REX GEVVISSÆ
c. 626 to 636 Cwichelm CVVICHELM CYNEGILSING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CVVICHELM REX GEVVISSÆ
643 to 645 Cenwalh CENVVALH CYNEGILSING GEVVISSÆ CYNING
CENVVALH REX GEVVISSÆ
Deposed
Mercian Dynasty
645 to 648 Penda PENDA PYBBING MIERCNA 7 GEVVISSÆ CYNING
PENDA REX MIERCNA ET GEVVISSÆ
The Kingdom of the West Saxons
fl. 571 Cuthwulf CVÞVVLF VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CVÞVVLF REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Invaded Midland Britain and conquered the Britons in 571 at the Battle of Bedford (see also Bedford Castle and Bedford), probably under King Cadrod of Calchfynedd. Probably an associate of Ceawlin.
Cerdicing Dynasty
648 to 674 Cenwalh CENVVALH CYNEGILSING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CENVVALH REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Restored; reigned jointly with his wife Queen Seaxburh 672 to 674
672 to 674 Queen Seaxburh SEAXBVRG VVESTSEAXNA CVEN
SEAXBVRH REGINA SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Reigned jointly with her husband Cenwalh until his death 674
674 to 674 Cenfus CENFVS CENFERÞING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CENFVS REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
674 to 676 Æscwine ÆSCVVINE CENFVSING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆSCVVINE REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
676 to 685 Centwine CENTVVINE CYNEGILSING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CENTVVINE REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Deposed by Cædwalla
685 to 688 Caedwalla CÆDVVALLA CENBRYHTING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CÆDVVALLA REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Usurper; abdicated, possibly of British origin
688 to 726 Ine (Ina) INE CENREDING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
INE REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Abdicated
726 to 740 Æthelheard ÆÞELHEARD VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆÞELHEARD REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
740 to 756 Cuthred CVÞRED VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CVÞRED REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
756 to 757 Sigeberht SIGEBRYHT VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
SIGEBRYHT REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Deposed (and killed?) by Cynewulf
757 to 786 Cynewulf CYNEVVLF VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
CYNEVVLF REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Assassinated by Cyneheard, brother of Sigeberht
786 to 802 Beorhtric BEORHTRIC VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
BEORHTRIC REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
802 to 839 Egbert ECGBRYHT EALHMVNDING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ECGBRYHT REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
839 to 856 Æthelwulf ÆÞELVVLF ECGBRYHTING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆÞELVVLF REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
856 to 860 Æthelbald ÆÞELBALD ÆÞELVVLFING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆÞELBALD REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
860 to 865 Æthelbert ÆÞELBRYHT ÆÞELVVLFING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆÞELBRYHT REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
865 to 871 Æthelred ÆÞELRED ÆÞELVVLFING VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆÞELRED REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
871 to 899 Alfred (the Great) ÆLFRED ÆÞELVVLFING ÐE GREAT VVESTSEAXNA CYNING
ÆLFRED MAGNVS REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
The only English monarch to be given the nickname "The Great". First King of the united Anglo Saxons
899 to 924 Edward (the Elder) EADVVEARD ÆLFREDING ÐE ELDRA WESTSEAXNA CYNING
EADVVEARD REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Died 17 July 924
924 to 924 Ælfweard Second son of Edward the Elder. Died 2 August 924, possibly before coronation
925 to 939 Athelstan ÆÞELSTAN EADVVEARDING WESTSEAXNA CYNNING
ÆÞELSTAN REX SAXONVM OCCIDENTALIVM
Became first King of England

After Æthelstan conquered Northumbria in 927, he adopted the title rex Anglorum (King of the English) becoming the first king of England.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • List of monarchs who lost their thrones before the 13th century — This is a list of monarchs who lost their thrones before the 13th century. NOTOC =A=Abkhazia* Adarnase of Abkhazia, King of the Abkhazians between 880 and 887/888, deposed and executed by Bagrat I. * Bagrat I of Abkhazia King of the Abkhazians… …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of Mercia — Lists of the kings of Anglo Saxon England This article is part of a series Essex Mercia …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of Kent — Lists of the kings of Anglo Saxon England This article is part of a series Essex Mercia …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of Northumbria — Lists of the kings of Anglo Saxon England This article is part of a series Essex Mercia …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of Hawaii — The Hawaiian Monarchy is the direct successor to the monarchies of Hawaiʻi, Oʻahu, Maui, Kauaʻi and Molokai. For those, see List of Ali i Aimoku of Hawai i, List of Ali i Aimoku of O ahu, List of Ali i Aimoku of Maui, Alii Aimoku of Kauai and… …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of East Anglia — This is a chronological list of the monarchs of East Anglia, formally known as The Kingdom of the East Angles , one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the Anglo Saxon Heptarchy. It was founded in the 6th century and ceased being independent in… …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs of Sussex — This list of kings and ealdormen of the Anglo Saxon kingdom of Sussex contains substantial gaps, and many of the dates from this time are unreliable. No authentic South Saxon king list or genealogy exists. Most kings are known only from charters …   Wikipedia

  • List of monarchs in the British Isles — This page links to lists of monarchs that have reigned the various kingdoms and other states that have existed in the British Isles throughout recorded history.*Ancient Britain **Ancient Britons (legendary)*England **Bretwaldas (overlords) **East …   Wikipedia

  • Wessex — West Saxon redirects here. For other meanings of Wessex or West Saxon see Wessex (disambiguation). Infobox Former Country native name = conventional long name = Kingdom of Wessex common name = Wessex continent = Europe region = British Isles… …   Wikipedia

  • List of English monarchs — For the various rulers of the kingdoms within England prior to its formal unification, during the so called Heptarchy, see Bretwalda. For British monarchs since the Union of England and Scotland, see List of British monarchs. For monarchs that… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”