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Elfrida(Ælfthryth) de Wessex, countess of Flanders ★ Ref: CF-288 |•••► #REINO UNIDO 🏆🇬🇧 #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Alfred the Great, King of Wessex
Madre:


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24 ° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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Ælfthryth, countess of Flanders is your 24th great grandmother.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges
your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz
her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna
her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate
her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra
his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina
her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique
her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza
her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna
her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo
her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel
her father → Sancha Manuel
his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes
her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona
his father → Elizabeth of Swabia
his mother → Philip of Swabia
her father → Friedrich I Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor
his father → Judith of Bavaria
his mother → Henry IX the black, duke of Bavaria
her father → Judith of Flanders
his mother → Baldwin IV the Bearded, count of Flanders
her father → Arnulf II the Young, count of Flanders
his father → Baldwin III, count of Flanders
his father → Arnulf I the Great, count of Flanders
his father → Ælfthryth, countess of Flanders
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Ælfthryth MP
French: Elfride
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 877
Wessex, England (United Kingdom)
Death: June 07, 929 (47-56)
Pas-de-Calais, West Francia, France
Place of Burial: St. Peters Abbey, Ghent, Belgium
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Alfred the Great, king of The Anglo-Saxons and Ealhswith
Wife of Baldwin II "the Bald", count of Flanders
Mother of Arnulf I the Great, count of Flanders; Adelolf, count of Boulogne; Ealswid and Ermentrud
Sister of Ethelfleda, Lady of the Mercians; Eadmund; Edward I "the Elder", king of The Anglo-Saxons; Æthelgifu, Abbess of Shaftesbury and Æthelweard
Added by: Adri Overgaauw on February 28, 2007
Managed by: Sally Gene Cole and 405 others
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English (default) edit | history
http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00018646&tree=LEO

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

They had the following issue:

Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890-964), married Adela of Vermandois

Adalulf (c. 890-933), Count of Boulogne

Ealswid

Ermentrud

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20&%20Danish%20Kings.htm#Aelfthrythdied929MBaudouinIIFlanders

ÆLFTHRYTH of Wessex ([877]-7 Jun 929, bur Ghent, St Pieter). Asser names (in order) "Ethelfled the eldest…Edward…Ethelgiva… Ethelwitha and Ethelwerd" as the children of King Alfred & his wife[1597]. "Elfthtritham" is named by Roger of Hoveden third in his list of King Alfred's daughters by Queen Ealswith[1598]. She is called "Æthelswitha" by Asser[1599]. "Elftrudis" is named as wife of Count Baudouin II in the Cartulaire de Saint-Bertin[1600]. This marriage represented the start of a long-lasting alliance between England and Flanders, founded on their common interest of preventing Viking settlements along the coast. "Elstrudis comitissa…cum filiis suis Arnulfo et Adelolfo" donated "hereditatem suam Liefsham…in terra Anglorum in Cantia" to Saint-Pierre de Gand, for the soul of "senioris sui Baldwini", by charter dated 11 Sep 918[1601]. The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 929 of "Elftrudis comitissa"[1602]. The Memorial of "filia regis Elstrudis…Balduini…domini" records her death "VII Iunii"[1603]. An undated charter, dated to [962], recording the last wishes of "marchysi Arnulfi", notes that "pater meus et mater mea" were buried in the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Gand[1604]. m ([893/99]) BAUDOUIN II "le Chauve" Count of Flanders, son of BAUDOUIN I Count of Flanders & his wife Judith of the Franks [Carolingian] ([863/65]-[10 Sep] 918, bur St Bertin, transferred 929 to Ghent, St Pieter).

-----------------------------------

Princess Of Elfthryth OF WESSEX7,10,14,20,21,27,32,33,64,81,102,103,112,113,114,115,116,117,119,530 was born in 868 in Wessex, England.20 She died on 7 Jun 929.20,81,114,115,116 Also Known As:<_aka> Ethelwida (Elfrida) /of Wessex/

1 _FA1

2 PLAC Name al so rendered "Ethelwida" or "Elfrida".

2 SOUR S286834

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: 14 Mar 1999

2 SOUR S468232

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: 27 M ar 1999

2 SOUR S430699

3 DATA

4 TEXT Date of Import: 28 Mar 1999

[l arge-G675.FTW]

AELFTHRYTH Princess of England was born about 868 in Wessex, England. She died in 920. OR: ELFRIDA. In Giles' trans of William of Malmesb ury's

Chronicles*, she is given as ETHELSWITHA: "He [Alfred] gave his daught er
Ethelswitha in marriage to Baldwin earl of Flanders, by whom he had Arnulf

and Ethelwulf."

--- William of Malmesbury, *Chronicle of the Kings of England *, c 1135,

tr John Allen Giles, London (Henry G Bohn) 1847, p 121 Parents: . Parents: West Saxon King Of Alfred ENGLAND and Queen Of Ethelswida ENGLAND.

Spouse: Count Of Flanders Baudouin II II. Count Of Flanders Baudouin II II and Princess Of Elfthryth OF WESSEX were married after 893.20,81,112,114,115,116,119 Children were: Ct De Flanders\ Arnolph I Le Grand OF FLANDERS I, FLANDERS, Adalolf Sur Mer De THEROUANNE, FLANDERS, FLANDERS.

Ælfthryth, Princess of Wessex (1)

F, #102629, d. 7 June 929

Last Edited=25 Feb 2008

Ælfthryth, Princess of Wessex was the daughter of Ælfræd, King of Wessex and Eahlwið, Princess of Mercia. (2) She married Baldwin II, Comte de Flandre, son of Baldwin I, Comte de Flandre and Judith, Princesse de France, between 883 and 899. (3)
She died on 7 June 929 at Flanders, Belgium. (3) She was buried at St. Peter's Abbey, Ghent, Belgium. (3)

Ælfthryth, Princess of Wessex was also known as Ælftrud (?).
Children of Ælfthryth, Princess of Wessex and Baldwin II, -Comte de Flandre

-1. Adelulf, Comte de Flandre d. 9333

-2. Arnulf 'the Great', Comte de Flandre+ b. bt 885 - 890, d. c 964

Forrás / Source:

http://www.thepeerage.com/p10263.htm#i102629

Daughter of Alfred "The Great" King of England and Ealswith Queen of England.

Sources:

1. W. H. Turton, "Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1928), 21.

2. Frederick Lewis Weis and Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr., "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700", 8th ed. (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004).

3. Ibid., (1-13+).

Född: Abt 875

of, , Wessex, England
Family:

1 Henry Count of Vermandois, [Count/Troyes]

Children:
• Agnes Countess of Vermandois
Princess, the daughter of King Alfred the Great. Nun. With her father’s help, she founded and served as first abbess of Shaftesbury Abbey in Dorset, England.

Daughter of Alfred the Great, in 889. (She died in 929 in Flanders.) From his castle in Bruges, Baldwin II maintained the repulse of the Norsemen. By his descent from Charlmagne on his mother’s side and marrying the daughter of the Saxon king of England, he greatly strengthened the importance of his dynasty. His wife bore two sons, Arnold (or Arnulf)the elder, and Adalulf (died young).

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders. One of their descendants, Matilda of Flanders (d. 1083), would go on to marry William the Conqueror, therefore starting the Anglo-Norman line of Kings of England. Through her descendant, Henry I of England, she is also a direct ancestor of the current monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Elizabeth II.

From www.wikipedia.org at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ælfthryth,_Countess_of_Flanders

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

Ælfthryth of Wessex, also known as Elftrudis, (died June 7, 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

[edit] Family

They had the following issue:

Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890–964), married Adela of Vermandois

Adalulf (c. 890–933), Count of Boulogne

Ealswid

Ermentrud

[edit] References

"Ælfthryth (d.929)". Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900​. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Title: Princess of England, Wessex, England

Title: Princess of Wessex, England

Alt. Birth: ABT 877 in Wessex, England

Alt. Death: ABT 920

Efthryth (daughter of King Alfred the Great)

View Family Tree

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Family Name: Given Names: Efthryth

Born: Unknown date

Unknown place Died: 929

Unknown place

Royal Blood: 100% [?] Buried: Ghent, Flanders, Belgium
Father: Alfred, King of the English (The Great) About 849 - 25 Oct 899

Mother: Ealhswyth (wife of King Alfred the Great) ? - 905

Marriage: Baldwin II, Count of Flanders 863 - 10 Sep 918

Date: Before 900 His Age: 37 Her Age: 32
Child: Arnold I, Count of Flanders 889 - 27 Mar 965

(3 others not in database)
Notes:

According to some sources, Efthryth was born in 865, but this conflicts with her parents marrying three years later.

http://www.royalist.info/execute/biog?person=1482

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders. One of their descendants, Matilda of Flanders (d. 1083), would go on to marry William the Conqueror, therefore starting the Anglo-Norman line of Kings of England. Through her descendant, Henry I of England, she is also a direct ancestor of the current monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Elizabeth II.

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

Nederlands:

Aelfryth van Wessex, ook Elfrida (Wessex, 868 - 7 juni 929) was een dochter van Alfred de Grote en van Aelhswyth van de Gaini. Zij trouwde in 884 met graaf Boudewijn II van Vlaanderen, en werd de moeder van:

1. Arnulf I de Grote
2. Adelulf (of Adalolf) (890 - 933), graaf van Boulogne en van Thérouanne
3. Ealswid
4. Ermentrude
5. Albert, bisschop van Parijs
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86lfthryth%2C_Countess_of_Flanders

http://www.mathematical.com/elfridaofalfred.html

Ælfrida Princess of England

born about 0877 Wessex, England

died 0920

father:

Alfred "the Great" King of England
born 0849 Wantage, Berkshire, England

died 26 October 0901 Winchester, Hampshire, England

mother:

Alswitha (Ealswitha) of Mercia
born 0852

died 5 December 0905

married 0868

siblings:

Æthelfleda born about 0869 Wessex, England
died 12 June 0918 St. Peter's, Gloucestershire, England

Edward the Elder "The Unconquered" King of England
born 0870 died 0924 Forndon, Northhamptonshire, England

Edmund

Æthelgifu Abbess of Shaftsbury

Ethelweard

spouse:

Baudouin II (Baldwin) "the Bald" Count of Flanders
born about 0864 Flanders, Nord, France

died 10 September 0918

married about 0888

children:

Arnoul I Count of Flanders
born Abt 0889 Flandres

died 27 March 0964

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders. One of their descendants, Matilda of Flanders (d. 1083), would go on to marry William the Conqueror, therefore starting the Anglo-Norman line of Kings of England. Through her descendant, Henry I of England, she is also a direct ancestor of the current monarch of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Elizabeth II.

Name suggested as Elfridam or Ethelgiva

Birth Date suggested as c. 877 or c. 875

Ælfthryth of Wessex, also known as Elftrudis, (died June 7, 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

Family

They had the following issue:

* Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890–964), married Adela of Vermandois
* Adalulf (c. 890–933), Count of Boulogne
* Ealswid
* Ermentrud
A History of the English Speaking People Winston S Churchill Vol I The Birth of Britain Dodd Mead & Co 1956 p128: "Edward's sister had been, as we have seen, married to Earl Ethelred of Mercia. Ethelred died in 911, and his widow, Ethelfleda, succeeded and supassed him. In those savage times the mergence of a woman ruler was enough to betoken her possession of extraordinary qualities. Edward the Elder, as he was afterwards called, and his sister, the Lady of the Mercians,' conducted the national war in common, and carried its success to heights which Alred never knew. The policy of the two kingdoms, thus knit by blood and need, marched in perfect harmony, and the next onslaught of Danes was met with confident alacrity and soon broken. The victors then set themselves deliberately to the complete conquest of the Danelaw and its Five Boroughs. This task occupied the next ten years, brother and sister advancing in concert upon their respective lines, and fortifying towns they took at every stage. In 918, when Edward stormed Tempsford, near Bedford, and King Guthrum was killed, the whole resistance of East Anglia collapsed, and all the Danish leaders submitted to Edward as their protector and lord. They were granted in return their estates and the right to live according to their Danish customs. At the same time the Lady of the Mercians' conquered Leicester, and received even from York offers ofsubmission. In this hour of success Ethelfleda died, and Edward, hastening to Tamworth, was invited by the nobles of Mercia to occupy the vacant throne."

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1981, Micropaedia, Vol III, p799, Edward the Elder: "[Edward's]sister, the Mercian ruler Aethelflaed, constructed a complementary series of fortresses in the northwest Midlands. In 917 Edward and Aethelflaed launched a massive offensive, quickly overwhelming the entire Danish army of East Anglia. Upon Aethelflaed's death in June 918, Edward assumed control of Mercia..."

Vol I, p116, Aethelflaed: "also Ethelfleda, called Lady of the Mercians, Died 12 Jun 918 Tamworth (now in Staffordshire), Anglo-Saxon ruler of Mercia in England. The daughter of Alfred the Great,...Aethelflaed became the effective ruler of Mercia some years before the death (911) of her husband, Aethelred, Ealdorman of the Mercians...captured Derby occupied Leicester but died before the campaign was successfully completed. Edward then claimed his sister's kingdom and completed the subjugation of the Danes. Because Aethelflaed had extended her influence into Wales and Northumbria, Edward was able to assert his authority over these regions as well. Thus, almost all of England came under his control."

The New Columbia Encyclopedia, 1975, p175, Athelstan: "...As a youth he lived in the household of his aunt, Aethelflaed, Lady of the Mercians..."

From Alfred to Henry III 871-1272, Christopher Brooke, 1961, Norton Library History of England, p43: "...In 886 [Alfred] captured London, and put it in charge of his close ally, Ethelred, Ealdorman of the Mercians, who shortly after married Alfred's daughter, Aethelflaed..."

p50: "...Ethelred,Ealdorman of Mercia, died in 911, but co-operation did not cease with his death. His place was filled by his wife, Edward's sister, Aethelflaed, Lady of the Mercians', who continued her husband's work in close association with her brother until her own death in 918; from then on Wessex and Mercia were united..."

"...After the Ealdorman Ethelred's death in 911, Edward took over London and the south-east Midlands, leaving the rest of English Mercia to Aethelflaed. The building offortresses and the advance east and north went on steadily through the following years. In 914 Aethelflaed built a fortress at Eddisbury (Cheshire) and at Warwick; in 917 she captured Derby; in 918 Leicester, and but for her death that year she might have received the submission of York. In 912 Edward built a burh at Herford, and prepared for campaigns to east and north. In 914 and 915 he received the submission of Bedford and Northampton; in 916 he built a burh at Maldon in Essex;in 917 he and his followers defeated a great counteroffensive mounted by the Danes, and occupied Essex and East Anglia, restoring the burh at Colchester. In 918 he was at Stamford and Nottingham. These places had been two of the crucial Danishcentres of power south of the Humber; it is likely that a third, Lincoln, also submitted to Edward in thsi year. By these surrenders he became lord of the Danelaw up to the line of the Humber; by his sister's death he was lord of Mercia; and inthe same year the kings of several leading Welsh kingdoms accepted his overlordship.

"The offer by the Danes of York to submit to Aethelflaed- an offer not repeated to Edward after her death- was partly inspired by the progress of anotherViking power, this time of Norse origin and leadership..."

The Formation of England 550-1042, HPR Finberg, 1977, Paladin, p127: "...In 885 the Danes in East Anglia broke the peace. Alfred reacted strongly, and in the following year took London by storm. London had long been a Mercian town, and Alfred refrained from annexing it to his own kingdom. Ceolwulf II, the last English king of Mercia, being now presumably dead, the part of Mercia not under Danish rule was governed by an ealdorman named Ethelred. Alfred entrusted the government of London to him and gave him his daughter Aethelflaed in marriage. Thus far Mercian independence was respected, but Ethelred never assumed the kingly title, and was content to reign as Alfred's viceroy...

p145: "The possibility that [the Norwegian immigrants crossing from Ireland and settling in the north-west] might make common cause with the independent Danish forces in eastern England naturally alarmed the government of English Mercia. The ealsorman Ethelred, as loyal to King Edward as he had been to Edward's father, was now a sick man, and responsibility devolved upon his wife, Alfred's daughter Aethelflaed. In 907 she repaired the walls of Chester and placed a garrison there to control disaffection in Wirral..."

"In 911 Ethelred of Mercia died, and Aethelflaed acquiesced when Edward annexed London and Oxford to his own kingdom. The doughty princess, half Mercian by descent on her mother's side, was known as the Lady of the Mercians. For the rest of her life she collaborated loyally and effectively with her brother in a campaign to subdue the independent Danish armies in England.

"The key to their strategy was the extension of the system devised by Alfred, of building fortresses, boroughs', to protect English territory from Danish inroads and to serve as bases for operations against the enemy... Meanwhile Aethelflaed fortified Sceargeat, a place as yet unidentified, and Bridgenorth on the Severn, a favourite crossing place of Danish war-bands. In 913 she built fortresses at Tamworth to protect the Mercian border from attack by the Danes of Leicester, and at Stafford to bar entry into the valley of the Trent. Next year she repaired a prehistoric camp at Eddisbury from which a garrison could intercept raiders landing from the Mersey. She also fortified Warwick...In 915 Aethelflaed secured her frontier with mid-Wales by a fort at Chirbury and guarded the head of the Mersey with one at Runcorn. By 916 a line of fortresses from Essex to the Mersey, eleven of them built or repaired by Aethelflaed, sixteen by Edward, menaced the Danes, who hurled themselves against them in vain. The last known Danish king of East Anglia perished in battle. Within a year the army of Northampton surrendered, Huntingdon was occupied, the armies of Cambridge and East Anglia submitted to Edward, and Derby, the first of the five principal Danish boroughs, was taken by Aethelflaed. There remained Leicester, Nottingham, Stamford, and Lincoln. In 918 Edward advanced to Stamford and overawed the Danes there into submission, while Aethelflaed made her entry unopposed into Leicester. Before the end of the year Nottingham had surrendered and all England south of the Humber acknowledged Edward as its master.

"Throughout this masterly campaign, brilliantly conceived and prosecuted with unwavering determination, the Lady of the Mercians acted in perfect accord with her brother. Both of them displayed generalship of the highest order. By contrast, the lack of cohesion between the various Danish armies weakened their resistance to the victorious pair. But Aethelflaed did not live to see the final triumph. She died on 12 June 918, leaving one child, a daughter Aelfwynn. To forestall any separatist tendency, Edward promptly occupied Tamworth, received the submission of the Mercians, and took command of their levies. Then he completed Aethelflaed's defences of her northern frontier by building a new fortress at Thelwall, and repairing the Roman fortifications of Manchester, meanwhile allowing Aelfwynn to exercise nominal authority in her mother's place. But the arrangement lasted less than a twelvemonth. In the winter of 919 Edward deported his niece into Wessex, where she presumably ended her days in a convent. This masterful act may or may not have been welcome to the Mercians, but it swept away thelast vestige of their independence."

ANCESTRAL FILE

Ancestral File Ver 4.10 FLGQ-66 Ethelfleda Princess of ENGLAND Born Abt 869 Wessex England Mar Ethelred Duke of MERCIA (AFN:GXQD-R9) Died 12 Jun 918 St Peters Gloucestershire England, HESP Ethelfleda, EBMicro Aethelflaed.

BOOKS

Kings and Queens of Great Britain, Genealogical Chart, Anne Taute and Romilly Squire, Taute, 1990: "Aethelflaed The Lady of Mercia,Mar Aethelred Ealdorman of Mercia, Died 918."

A History of the English Speaking People Winston S Churchill Vol I The Birth of Britain Dodd Mead & Co 1956 p128: "Edward's sister had been, as we have seen, married to Earl Ethelred of Mercia. Ethelred died in 911, and his widow, Ethelfleda, succeeded and supassed him. In those savage times the mergence of a woman ruler was enough to betoken her possession of extraordinary qualities. Edward the Elder, as he was afterwards called, and his sister, the Lady of the Mercians,' conducted the national war in common, and carried its success to heights which Alred never knew. The policy of the two kingdoms, thus knit by blood and need, marched in perfect harmony, and the next onslaught of Danes was met with confident alacrity and soon broken. The victors then set themselves deliberately to the complete conquest of the Danelaw and its Five Boroughs. This task occupied the next ten years, brother and sister advancing in concert upon their respective lines, and fortifying towns they took at every stage. In 918, when Edward stormed Tempsford, near Bedford, and King Guthrum was killed, the whole resistance of East Anglia collapsed, and all the Danish leaders submitted to Edward as their protector and lord. They were granted in return their estates and the right to live according to their Danish customs. At the same time the Lady of the Mercians' conquered Leicester, and received even from York offers ofsubmission. In this hour of success Ethelfleda died, and Edward, hastening to Tamworth, was invited by the nobles of Mercia to occupy the vacant throne."

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1981, Micropaedia, Vol III, p799, Edward the Elder: "[Edward's]sister, the Mercian ruler Aethelflaed, constructed a complementary series of fortresses in the northwest Midlands. In 917 Edward and Aethelflaed launched a massive offensive, quickly overwhelming the entire Danish army of East Anglia. Upon Aethelflaed's death in June 918, Edward assumed control of Mercia..."

Vol I, p116, Aethelflaed: "also Ethelfleda, called Lady of the Mercians, Died 12 Jun 918 Tamworth (now in Staffordshire), Anglo-Saxon ruler of Mercia in England. The daughter of Alfred the Great,...Aethelflaed became the effective ruler of Mercia some years before the death (911) of her husband, Aethelred, Ealdorman of the Mercians...captured Derby occupied Leicester but died before the campaign was successfully completed. Edward then claimed his sister's kingdom and completed the subjugation of the Danes. Because Aethelflaed had extended her influence into Wales and Northumbria, Edward was able to assert his authority over these regions as well. Thus, almost all of England came under his control."

The New Columbia Encyclopedia, 1975, p175, Athelstan: "...As a youth he lived in the household of his aunt, Aethelflaed, Lady of the Mercians..."

From Alfred to Henry III 871-1272, Christopher Brooke, 1961, Norton Library History of England, p43: "...In 886 [Alfred] captured London, and put it in charge of his close ally, Ethelred, Ealdorman of the Mercians, who shortly after married Alfred's daughter, Aethelflaed..."

p50: "...Ethelred,Ealdorman of Mercia, died in 911, but co-operation did not cease with his death. His place was filled by his wife, Edward's sister, Aethelflaed, Lady of the Mercians', who continued her husband's work in close association with her brother until her own death in 918; from then on Wessex and Mercia were united..."

"...After the Ealdorman Ethelred's death in 911, Edward took over London and the south-east Midlands, leaving the rest of English Mercia to Aethelflaed. The building offortresses and the advance east and north went on steadily through the following years. In 914 Aethelflaed built a fortress at Eddisbury (Cheshire) and at Warwick; in 917 she captured Derby; in 918 Leicester, and but for her death that year she might have received the submission of York. In 912 Edward built a burh at Herford, and prepared for campaigns to east and north. In 914 and 915 he received the submission of Bedford and Northampton; in 916 he built a burh at Maldon in Essex;in 917 he and his followers defeated a great counteroffensive mounted by the Danes, and occupied Essex and East Anglia, restoring the burh at Colchester. In 918 he was at Stamford and Nottingham. These places had been two of the crucial Danishcentres of power south of the Humber; it is likely that a third, Lincoln, also submitted to Edward in thsi year. By these surrenders he became lord of the Danelaw up to the line of the Humber; by his sister's death he was lord of Mercia; and inthe same year the kings of several leading Welsh kingdoms accepted his overlordship.

"The offer by the Danes of York to submit to Aethelflaed- an offer not repeated to Edward after her death- was partly inspired by the progress of anotherViking power, this time of Norse origin and leadership..."

The Formation of England 550-1042, HPR Finberg, 1977, Paladin, p127: "...In 885 the Danes in East Anglia broke the peace. Alfred reacted strongly, and in the following year took London by storm. London had long been a Mercian town, and Alfred refrained from annexing it to his own kingdom. Ceolwulf II, the last English king of Mercia, being now presumably dead, the part of Mercia not under Danish rule was governed by an ealdorman named Ethelred. Alfred entrusted the government of London to him and gave him his daughter Aethelflaed in marriage. Thus far Mercian independence was respected, but Ethelred never assumed the kingly title, and was content to reign as Alfred's viceroy...

p145: "The possibility that [the Norwegian immigrants crossing from Ireland and settling in the north-west] might make common cause with the independent Danish forces in eastern England naturally alarmed the government of English Mercia. The ealsorman Ethelred, as loyal to King Edward as he had been to Edward's father, was now a sick man, and responsibility devolved upon his wife, Alfred's daughter Aethelflaed. In 907 she repaired the walls of Chester and placed a garrison there to control disaffection in Wirral..."

"In 911 Ethelred of Mercia died, and Aethelflaed acquiesced when Edward annexed London and Oxford to his own kingdom. The doughty princess, half Mercian by descent on her mother's side, was known as the Lady of the Mercians. For the rest of her life she collaborated loyally and effectively with her brother in a campaign to subdue the independent Danish armies in England.

"The key to their strategy was the extension of the system devised by Alfred, of building fortresses, boroughs', to protect English territory from Danish inroads and to serve as bases for operations against the enemy... Meanwhile Aethelflaed fortified Sceargeat, a place as yet unidentified, and Bridgenorth on the Severn, a favourite crossing place of Danish war-bands. In 913 she built fortresses at Tamworth to protect the Mercian border from attack by the Danes of Leicester, and at Stafford to bar entry into the valley of the Trent. Next year she repaired a prehistoric camp at Eddisbury from which a garrison could intercept raiders landing from the Mersey. She also fortified Warwick...In 915 Aethelflaed secured her frontier with mid-Wales by a fort at Chirbury and guarded the head of the Mersey with one at Runcorn. By 916 a line of fortresses from Essex to the Mersey, eleven of them built or repaired by Aethelflaed, sixteen by Edward, menaced the Danes, who hurled themselves against them in vain. The last known Danish king of East Anglia perished in battle. Within a year the army of Northampton surrendered, Huntingdon was occupied, the armies of Cambridge and East Anglia submitted to Edward, and Derby, the first of the five principal Danish boroughs, was taken by Aethelflaed. There remained Leicester, Nottingham, Stamford, and Lincoln. In 918 Edward advanced to Stamford and overawed the Danes there into submission, while Aethelflaed made her entry unopposed into Leicester. Before the end of the year Nottingham had surrendered and all England south of the Humber acknowledged Edward as its master.

"Throughout this masterly campaign, brilliantly conceived and prosecuted with unwavering determination, the Lady of the Mercians acted in perfect accord with her brother. Both of them displayed generalship of the highest order. By contrast, the lack of cohesion between the various Danish armies weakened their resistance to the victorious pair. But Aethelflaed did not live to see the final triumph. She died on 12 June 918, leaving one child, a daughter Aelfwynn. To forestall any separatist tendency, Edward promptly occupied Tamworth, received the submission of the Mercians, and took command of their levies. Then he completed Aethelflaed's defences of her northern frontier by building a new fortress at Thelwall, and repairing the Roman fortifications of Manchester, meanwhile allowing Aelfwynn to exercise nominal authority in her mother's place. But the arrangement lasted less than a twelvemonth. In the winter of 919 Edward deported his niece into Wessex, where she presumably ended her days in a convent. This masterful act may or may not have been welcome to the Mercians, but it swept away thelast vestige of their independence."

Ælfthryth of Wessex, also known as Elftrudis, (died June 7, 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

[edit] Family

They had the following issue:

* Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890–964), married Adela of Vermandois
* Adalulf (c. 890–933), Count of Boulogne
* Ealswid
* Ermentrud
[edit] References

* "Ælfthryth (d.929)". Dictionary of National Biography, 1885–1900​. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Ælfthryth, Countess of Flanders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other persons of the same name, see Ælfthryth.

Ælfthryth, also known as Elfrida, (died 929), was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (d. 918), Count of Flanders.

[edit]Family

They had the following issue:

Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890-964), married Adela of Vermandois

Adalulf (c. 890-933), Count of Boulogne

Ealswid

Ermentrud

From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps05/ps05_042.htm

various other spellings: Elstrude, Alfritha, or Elfrida, called Ethelwida

References: [RFC],[Weis1]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86lfthryth,_Countess_of_Flanders
Ælfthryth of Wessex (died June 7, 929), also known as Elftrudis, was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. She had four or five siblings, including King Edward the Elder and Ethelfleda.

Ælfthryth married Baldwin II (died 918), Count of Flanders.

bout (AElfthryth) Ælfthryth Countess of Flanders Ælfthryth of Wessex (877 – June 7, 929), also known as Elftrudis(Elftrude, Elfrida), was an English princess and a countess consort of Flanders. She was the last child of Alfred the Great, the Saxon King of England and his wife Ealhswith. Ælfthryth married Baldwin II, Count of Flanders. They had the following issue: Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890–964), married Adela of Vermandois Adalulf (c. 890–933), Count of Boulogne Ealswid Ermentrud Ælfthryth was a direct ancestor of Matilda of Flanders, who married William the Conqueror, first monarch from the House of Normandy, granting a descendant of the House of Wessex to be king of England, even after the Norman conquest of England.
Courtesy of fantastically full family tree cf.:
Hughes of Gwerclas 1/2/3/4:

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_1.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_2.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_3.htm

http://www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk/burke1/Royal%20Descents/hughesofgwerclas_4.htm

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Alfred the Great, King of Wessex ♛ Ref: KW-286 |•••► #REINO UNIDO 🏆🇬🇧 #Genealogía #Genealogy

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Alfred the Great, king of The Anglo-Saxons is your 25th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges
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his father → Judith of Bavaria
his mother → Henry IX the black, duke of Bavaria
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his mother → Baldwin IV the Bearded, count of Flanders
her father → Arnulf II the Young, count of Flanders
his father → Baldwin III, count of Flanders
his father → Arnulf I the Great, count of Flanders
his father → Ælfthryth, countess of Flanders
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Alfredo el Grande
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Para otros usos de este término, véase San Alfredo.
Alfredo el Grande
Rey de Wessex y de los anglosajones
Statue d'Alfred le Grand à Winchester.jpg
Estatua de Alfredo el Grande por Hamo Thornycroft en Winchester.
Rey de los Anglosajones
(886–899)
Predecesor El mismo como rey de Wessex
Sucesor Eduardo el Viejo
Rey de Wessex
(871–886)
Predecesor Etelredo I
Sucesor El mismo como rey de los anglosajones
Información personal
Nacimiento 847–849
Wantage, Berkshire
Fallecimiento 26 de octubre de 899 (aged 50 or 51)
Entierro Hyde Abbey, Winchester, Hampshire
Familia
Casa real Casa de Wessex
Padre Ethelwulfo, rey de Wessex
Madre Osburga
Cónyuge Ethelswitha Mucel
Heredero Eduardo el Viejo
Descendencia
Ethelfleda reina consorte de Mercia
Eduardo príncipe de Wessex
Ethelgiva abadesa de Shaftesbury
Elfrida condesa de Flandes
Ethelweard de Wessex
[editar datos en Wikidata]
Alfredo el Grande, también llamado Ælfred, del anglosajón: Ælfrēd (849 - 26 de octubre de 899) o san Alfredo el Grande, fue rey de Wessex desde 871 hasta su muerte. Se hizo célebre por defender su reino contra los vikingos, convirtiéndose como resultado de esto en el único rey de su dinastía en ser llamado «El Grande» o Magno por su pueblo. Fue también el primer rey de Wessex que se autoproclamó rey de los anglosajones. Su vida se conoce gracias a Asser, cronista galés. Hombre culto y letrado, ayudó mucho a la educación y a mejorar el sistema de leyes de su reino. Si bien no ha sido canonizado1​ (y no es mencionado por el elenco oficial de santos de la Iglesia católica, el Martirologio romano), fue considerado santo con su fiesta el 26 de octubre.2​3​


Índice
1 Inicios
2 Matrimonio y descendencia
3 Primeras acciones
4 Ascenso al trono y nuevas dificultades
5 Leyendas del período
6 Victoria decisiva
7 Nuevos problemas
7.1 Acción de Alfredo contra los daneses
7.2 Acciones de Alfredo
8 Gobierno posterior
9 Fallecimiento
10 Literatura
11 Filmografía
12 Música
13 Enlaces externos y fuentes
14 Referencias
Inicios
Nació en la localidad de Wantage, condado de Berkshire, en el año 849 y fue el quinto y menor de los hijos varones —seis en total— de Ethelwulfo, rey de Wessex, y de su primera esposa, Osburga.

En 855, al morir su madre, acompañó a su padre a un peregrinaje a Roma, y a su regreso pasó una temporada en la corte del rey Carlos el Calvo de Francia; entonces Ethelwulfo se casó en segundas nupcias con la hija del rey francés, Judit.

Ethelwulfo muere el 13 de enero de 858 y es sucedido por su segundo hijo, Ethelbaldo, quien se casa con su madrastra Judit.

Nada se sabe de los siguientes años de Alfredo durante los reinados de sus dos hermanos mayores, Ethelbaldo y Ethelberto que se sucedieron rápidamente. Fue en el reinado del tercer hermano —cuarto en orden de nacimiento—, Etelredo I, cuando el joven Alfredo comenzó su vida pública y brillante carrera militar contra los vikingos. Según el cronista Asser, gracias a sus éxitos militares le fue concedido el título de secundarius o correy, siendo posiblemente aprobado en este cargo por el Consejo Real para evitar problemas en la sucesión en caso de que el rey muriera en batalla, aunque con ello se desheredaba a los dos hijos de Etelredo.

Matrimonio y descendencia
Se casó en la localidad de Winchester, en el año 868, con Ethelswhita, hija de Etelredo, señor de Gainsborough y descendiente de los reyes de Mercia por línea materna. De este matrimonio nacieron seis hijos:

Ethelfleda ( 869-Tamworth, Staffordshire, 12 de junio de 918), reina de Mercia al suceder a su marido (911); casada con el rey Etelredo II de Mercia (m. 911).
Eduardo (872-Farndon-on-Dee, 17 de julio de 924), apodado «el Viejo», sucede a su padre como rey de Wessex.
Ethelgiva (875-896), monja, abadesa en Shaftesbury (Dorset).
Elfrida (877-7 de junio de 929), casada con Balduino II, conde de Flandes (864-918) e hijo del tercer matrimonio de la madrastra de su padre, Judit.
Æthelweard (880-26 de octubre de 920), padre de tres hijos. Los dos mayores, Elfwine y Ethelwine, murieron en la batalla de Brunanburgh en 937, y el menor, Thurcytel, fue abad de Croyland (Lincolnshire).
Primeras acciones
En 869, luchando al lado de su hermano Etelredo, hizo una tentativa fracasada de aliviar a Mercia de la presión de los daneses. Durante casi dos años Wessex disfrutó de una tregua. Pero a finales de 870 se reanudan las hostilidades, y el año siguiente sería conocido como el «año de las batallas de Alfredo». Nueve batallas se libraron con variada fortuna, aunque el lugar y la fecha de dos de ellas no se han registrado. Una escaramuza acertada en la batalla de Englefield (en Berkshire, 31 de diciembre de 870) fue seguida por una derrota severa en la batalla de Reading (4 de enero de 871), para, cuatro días más tarde, lograr una brillante victoria en la batalla de Ashdown, cerca de Compton Beauchamp, en Shrivenham Hundred.

El 22 de enero de 871, los daneses derrotaron de nuevo a los anglosajones en Basing, y el 23 de abril del mismo año en Marton (Wiltshire), donde muere el rey Etelredo I; las dos batallas no identificadas quizás ocurrieron en el intervalo entre ambas.


San Alfredo el Grande
Ikon of King St. Alfred the Great.jpg
Icono del rey Alfredo
Rey de Wessex
Nacimiento 849 Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Wantage (Reino Unido) Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Padres Ethelwulfo Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata y Osburga Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Hijos Ethelfleda de Wessex, Eduardo el Viejo, Elfrida de Wessex, Æthelweard, Æthelgifu, Elfleda (?) y Edmund Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Fallecimiento c. 26 de octubre de 899jul. y 900 Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Winchester (Reino Unido) Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Venerado en Iglesia ortodoxa, Iglesia anglicana
Festividad 26 de octubre
[editar datos en Wikidata]
Ascenso al trono y nuevas dificultades
Habiendo muerto Etelredo I en batalla, Alfredo sube al fin al trono de Wessex y es coronado en Kingston upon Thames el mismo día.

Mientras estaba ocupado con el entierro y las ceremonias fúnebres de su hermano, los daneses derrotaron al ejército anglosajón en su ausencia en un lugar desconocido, y una vez más en su presencia, en Wilton en el mes de mayo. Después de que fuera firmada la paz, y que por los siguientes cinco años ocuparan los daneses otras partes de Inglaterra, Alfredo se vio obligado a no realizar nuevas acciones que no fueran más allá de la observación y protección de la frontera. Las cosas cambiarán en 876, cuando los daneses, bajo un nuevo líder, Guthrum, regresen al reino y ataquen Wareham. De allí, a comienzos de 877 y bajo el pretexto de negociaciones, incursionaron hacia el oeste y tomaron Exeter. Aquí Alfredo los bloqueó, y gracias a que la flota danesa no llegó tras ser dispersada por una tormenta, los vikingos tuvieron que someterse y retirarse a Mercia. En enero de 878 los daneses volvieron a la lucha e hicieron un ataque repentino en Chippenham, una plaza fuerte que Alfredo había estado manteniendo desde Navidad, «y la mayoría de la gente fue capturada, excepto el rey Alfred, que con una pequeña tropa reunida por sí mismo logró huir... por el bosque y el pantano, y después de Pascua... construyó una fortaleza en Athelney, y desde esa fortaleza comenzó a luchar contra el enemigo» (crónica).

Leyendas del período

Este artículo o sección necesita referencias que aparezcan en una publicación acreditada.
Este aviso fue puesto el 9 de noviembre de 2016.
Una leyenda dice cómo, disfrazado como un fugitivo en los pantanos de Athelney, en Petherton, al norte de Somerset, después de la primera invasión danesa, fue visto por una campesina y ella le dio abrigo, ignorante de su identidad, y le permitió que la ayudara a hacer algunas tortas que había dejado cocinar en el fuego mientras iba a hacer otros quehaceres. Preocupado con los problemas del reino, Alfredo dejó que las tortas se quemaran y fue golpeado por la mujer cuando volvió. Una vez expuesta la identidad del rey, la mujer se disculpó profusamente, pero Alfredo insistió que él era el que debería disculparse. Toda esta historia de que Alfredo, durante su retiro en Athelney, saliera a la vista como un fugitivo y ayudara a una mujer a cocinar unas tortas, es falsa. En realidad él estaba organizando la resistencia. Al mismo tiempo, otras leyendas lo suponen disfrazado como arpista para entrar al campo de Guthrum y descubrir sus planes.

Victoria decisiva
A mediados de mayo de 878, los preparativos estaban listos y Alfredo se marchó de Athelney. En el camino se reunió con las fuerzas militares de Somerset, Wiltshire y Hampshire. Los daneses, por su lado, salieron de Chippenham y los dos ejércitos se enfrentaron en la batalla de Edington, en Wiltshire. El resultado fue una victoria decisiva para Alfredo. Los daneses fueron sometidos. Guthrum, el rey danés, y 29 de sus principales hombres se dejaron bautizar. Como resultado de esto, Inglaterra se dividió en dos tierras, la mitad al sudoeste en manos de los sajones y la mitad nororiental que se conocería ahora como el Danelaw. Al año siguiente (879) no solamente Wessex, sino también Mercia, al oeste de Watling Street, estaba libre del invasor. Éste es el arreglo conocido por los historiadores como la paz de Wedmore (878), aunque no hay documento alguno que pruebe su existencia.

Nuevos problemas
Por aquel tiempo, aunque la mitad nororiental de Inglaterra, incluyendo Londres, estaba en manos de los daneses, la verdad es que la marea había cambiado en su contra. Por aquellos años reinaba la paz en la isla, pero los daneses se mantenían ocupados en Europa. Un ataque a Kent en 884 u 885, aunque rechazado con éxito, animó a los daneses de Anglia del Este a rebelarse. Las medidas tomadas por Alfredo para reprimir esta sublevación culminan con la toma de Londres en 885 o 886, y con el tratado conocido como paz de Alfredo y de Guthrum, por el que los límites del tratado de Wedmore (con cual se confunde a menudo) fueron modificados materialmente para beneficio de Alfredo.

Acción de Alfredo contra los daneses
Una vez más y durante una época hubo calma; pero en la primavera de 892 o 893 la última tormenta se desató. Los daneses, encontrando su posición en Europa cada vez más y más precaria, cruzaron a Inglaterra en dos grupos, con unos 330 hombres en barcos, y se atrincheraron en una vasta extensión en Appledore, Kent, y otro grupo menor hizo lo mismo en Haesten, Milton, también en Kent. El hecho de que los nuevos invasores trajeran a sus esposas y niños con ellos son demostraciones de que ésta no era una simple incursión, sino que era una tentativa significativa, de acuerdo con el pueblo de Northumbria y los daneses de Anglia Oriental, de conquistar Inglaterra. Alfredo, en 893 u 894, tomó una posición desde donde podría observar ambas fuerzas. Mientras él estaba en negociaciones con Haesten, los daneses de Appledore explotaron e invadieron el norte, dirigiéndose hacia el oeste, pero fueron alcanzados por el hijo mayor de Alfredo, Eduardo, y fueron derrotados en Farnham y conducidos a un refugio en la al isla de Thorney, Hertfordshire Colne, donde fueron forzados a someterse. Entonces cae también Essex, y después de sufrir otra derrota en Benfleet, la fuerza danesa de Haesten, en Shoebury se somete a su mando.

Acciones de Alfredo
Alfredo estaba en camino para socorrer a su hijo en Thorney cuando oyó que Northumbria y los daneses de Anglia del Este sitiaban Exeter y una plaza fuerte no nombrada en la orilla norte de Devon. Alfredo inmediatamente se apresura a marchar hacia el oeste y libra del sitio a Exeter; el nombre del otro lugar no se registra. Mientras tanto la fuerza de Haesten se pone en marcha hacia el valle del Támesis, posiblemente con la idea de asistir a sus aliados en el oeste. Pero una fuerza combinada al mando de los tres grandes ealdormen ('condes') de Mercia, de Wiltshire y de Somerset, les hicieron retroceder hacia el noroeste, para finalmente ser alcanzados y bloqueados en Buttington, que algunos identifican con Buttington Tump en la desembocadura del río Wye, y otros localizan en Buttington cerca de Welshpool. Una tentativa de romper las líneas anglosajonas acabó en fracaso con grandes pérdidas en el campo danés; los que escaparon se refugiaron en Shoebury. Allí, luego de reforzarse, realizaron un ataque repentino a través de Inglaterra y ocuparon las ruinas romanas de Chester. El ejército anglosajón no intentó un bloqueo de invierno, pero destruyó todas las fuentes de provisiones en los alrededores. A principios de 894 o 895 la falta de alimento obligó a los daneses a retirarse una vez más a Essex. A fines de ese año y comienzos de 895 o 896 los daneses tomaron sus naves y navegaron por el Támesis y el Lea y se fortificaron a veinte millas de Londres. Un ataque directo contra las líneas danesas falló, pero más adelante en ese año Alfredo obtuvo los medios para obstruir el río con el fin de prevenir la salida de las naves danesas. Los daneses vieron que estaban atrapados y decidieron atacar la parte norte en Bridgenorth, sin éxito. Al año siguiente (896 o 897), se rindieron. Algunos se retiraron a Northumbria, otros a la Anglia Oriental; los que no tenían ninguna conexión en Inglaterra se retiraron al continente. La larga campaña había terminado.

Gobierno posterior

Moneda de Alfredo, rey de Wessex, acuñada en Londres, en 880 (inspirada en un modelo romano).
Al anverso se puede ver el perfil del rey con la leyenda Ælfred Rex.
Una vez terminada la lucha con los daneses, Alfredo se concentró en reforzar la marina real con diversas embarcaciones construidas de acuerdo al gusto del rey.

También decidió reconstruir la organización civil, gravemente dañada durante la invasión danesa, favoreciendo a los desamparados y ganándose el título de «Protector del Pobre» (Asser).

Asser también habla de manera grandiosa acerca de las relaciones de Alfredo con potencias extranjeras, aunque no hay mucha información disponible a este respecto. Él ciertamente sostuvo correspondencia con Elías III, patriarca de Jerusalén, y envió probablemente una misión a la India. Las embajadas a Roma que aseguraban la salvación de las almas anglosajonas al papa eran bastante frecuentes; mientras que el interés de Alfredo en países extranjeros se demuestra por las inserciones que él hizo en su traducción de Orosio.

Alrededor del año 890, Wulfstan de Haithabu emprendió un viaje de Haithabu en Jutlandia a lo largo del mar Báltico a la ciudad prusiana de Truso. Wulfstan dio detalles de su viaje a Alfredo.

Sus relaciones con los príncipes célticos en la mitad meridional de la isla están más claras. Comparativamente temprano en su reinado los príncipes de Gales, debido a la presión en ellas de Gales del norte y de Mercia, se acogieron a la protección de Alfredo. Más adelante Gales del norte siguió su ejemplo, y cooperó con el rey anglosajón en la campaña de 893 o 894. Que Alfredo enviara irlandeses a monasterios europeos se puede aceptar por la autoridad de Asser; la visita de tres peregrinos «escotos» (es decir, irlandeses) a Alfredo en 891 es indudablemente auténtica; la historia de que él mismo en su niñez fue enviado a Irlanda a que se curara por St. Modwenna, aunque mítica, puede demostrar el interés del rey en esa isla.

Fallecimiento
Murió en Winchester, el 26 de octubre de 899, a los 50 años de edad, y fue sepultado en la abadía de Newminster, pero luego lo trasladaron a la abadía de Hyde, en Winchester.

Literatura
Saga Sajones, vikingos y normandos, de Bernard Cornwell: Northumbria, el último reino (The Last Kingdom, 2004), Svein, el del caballo blanco (The Pale Horseman, 2005), Los señores del Norte (The Lords of the North, 2006), La canción de la espada (Sword Song, 2007), La tierra en llamas (The Burning Land, 2009), Muerte de Reyes (Death of Kings, 2013).
La Balada del Caballo Blanco (The Ballad of the White Horse, 1911), de G. K. Chesterton.
David Silvestre, Alfredo el Grande, (2017).
Filmografía
Alfredo el Grande, película de 1969 dirigida por Clive Donner, con David Hemmings en el papel de Alfredo y Michael York en el de Guthrum.
The Last Kingdom, serie de 2015 basada en las novelas de Bernard Cornwell, con David Dawson en el papel de Alfredo y Alexander Dreymon en el de Uhtred.
Vikingos, 4ª temporada, serie de televisión creada para The History Chanel, aparece un Alfredo niño y peregrino.
Vikingos, 5ª temporada, serie de televisión creada para The History Chanel, en el noveno capítulo se produce su coronación, sucediendo a su padrastro el rey Aethelwulf .
Música
Alfredo il Grande, ópera de Gaetano Donizetti representada por vez primera en el Teatro San Carlo de Nápoles en 1823.
Enlaces externos y fuentes
 Wikimedia Commons alberga una categoría multimedia sobre Alfredo el Grande.
Biografía, Universidad de Valencia.
Historia de Inglaterra
«Alfredo O Grande: un Rei Saxao No Esope de Marie de France», revista Brathair, núm. 2 (1), 2002. En portugués y formato PDF.

Predecesor:
Etelredo I Rey de Wessex
871-886 Sucesor:
Título abolido
Predecesor:
Título de nuevo cuño Rey de los anglosajones
886-899 Sucesor:
Eduardo el Viejo
Referencias
 «THE LIFE OF THE HOLY AND RIGHTEOUS KING OF THE ENGLISH ALFRED THE GREAT. Chapter: ALFRED AND CANONIZATION TODAY».
 «Sant' Alfredo il Grande Re del Wessex 26 ottobre».
 «King Alfred of England--an Orthodox Saint?».
Control de autoridades
Proyectos WikimediaWd Datos: Q83476Commonscat Multimedia: Alfred the Great
IdentificadoresWorldCatVIAF: 10639246ISNI: 0000 0001 1594 5283BNE: XX1186395BNF: 12212704s (data)GND: 118637681LCCN: n80069041NDL: 00620256NKC: jn20010525340NLA: 35003154CiNii: DA04345718SNAC: w6zk5dt0SUDOC: 030780098ULAN: 500227156BIBSYS: 90550377ICCU: IT\ICCU\CFIV\168972Open Library: OL272146ADiccionarios y enciclopediasBritannica: urlRepositorios digitalesBVMC: 73325Proyecto Gutenberg: 45846
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Ælfrēd  MP
Lithuanian: Alfredas
Gender: Male
Birth: 849
Wessex Kingdom, Modern Wantage, Berkshire, England (United Kingdom)
Death: October 26, 899 (49-50)
Winchester, Hampshire, England (Illness. Possibly Crohn's disease.)
Place of Burial: Winchester Cathedral, Winchester, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:
Son of Aethelwulf, king of Wessex and Osburga, Queen Consort of Wessex
Husband of Ealhswith
Father of Ethelfleda, Lady of the Mercians; Eadmund; Edward I "the Elder", king of The Anglo-Saxons; Æthelgifu, Abbess of Shaftesbury; Ælfthryth, countess of Flanders and 1 other
Brother of Æthelstan, king of Kent; Aethelbald, king of Wessex; Aethelbert, king of Wessex, Essex & Kent; Ethelred I 'the Pious', king of Wessex & Kent and Aethelswith, Queen of Mercia
Added by: Anders Helge Eriksson on February 2, 2007
Managed by: Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 594 others
Curated by: Jason Scott Wills
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English (default) edit | history
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p066tn9v

https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1abrpj
“Therefore a man never attains virtue and excellence through his power; rather he attains power and authority through his virtue… Study wisdom, therefore, and when you have learned it, do not neglect it, for I say to you without hesitation that you can attain authority through wisdom”. Alfred the Great
Alfred the Great (Old English: Ælfrēd[a], Ælfrǣd[b], "elf counsel" or "wise elf"; 849 – 26 October 899) was King of Wessex from 871 to 899.
Alfred successfully defended his kingdom against the Viking attempt at conquest, and by the time of his death had become the dominant ruler in England.[1] He is one of only two English monarchs to be given the epithet "the Great", the other being the Scandinavian Cnut the Great. He was also the first King of the West Saxons to style himself "King of the Anglo-Saxons". Details of Alfred's life are described in a work by the 10th-century Welsh scholar and bishop Asser.

Alfred had a reputation as a learned and merciful man of a gracious and level-headed nature who encouraged education, proposing that primary education be taught in English, and improved his kingdom's legal system, military structure and his people's quality of life. In 2002, Alfred was ranked number 14 in the BBC's poll of the 100 Greatest Britons.

In 868, Alfred married Ealhswith, daughter of a Mercian nobleman, Æthelred Mucil, Ealdorman of the Gaini. The Gaini were probably one of the tribal groups of the Mercians. Ealhswith's mother, Eadburh, was a member of the Mercian royal family.[126]

They had five or six children together, including Edward the Elder who succeeded his father as king, Æthelflæd who became Lady (ruler) of the Mercians in her own right, and Ælfthryth who married Baldwin II the Count of Flanders. His mother was Osburga daughter of Oslac of the Isle of Wight, Chief Butler of England. Asser, in his Vita Ælfredi asserts that this shows his lineage from the Jutes of the Isle of Wight. This is unlikely as Bede tells us that they were all slaughtered by the Saxons under Cædwalla. In 2008 the skeleton of Queen Eadgyth, granddaughter of Alfred the Great was found in Magdeburg Cathedral in Germany. It was confirmed in 2010 that these remains belong to her — one of the earliest members of the English royal family.[127]

Osferth was described as a relative in King Alfred's will and he attested charters in a high position until 934. A charter of King Edward's reign described him as the king's brother, "mistakenly" according to Keynes and Lapidge, but in the view of Janet Nelson, he probably was an illegitimate son of King Alfred.[128][129]

Source
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_the_Great
Further Reading:
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20&%20Danish%20Kings.htm#Alfreddied899B
http://www.friesian.com/perifran.htm#saxons1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_the_Great
http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00000123&tree=LEO
http://archaeology.org/issues/100-features/lost-tombs/1091-alfred-old-minster-hyde-abbey-st-bartholemew
http://www.britroyals.com/kings.asp?id=alfred
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Who_was_Alfred_the_Great
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01309d.htm
http://satucket.com/lectionary/Alfred.htm
http://historymedren.about.com/od/alfredthegreat/a/bio_alfred.htm
http://archive.org/details/asserslifeofking00asseiala
Videos
Time Team S01-E01 The Guerrilla Base of the King
Time Team S10-E08 Athelney,.Somerset
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royaltythrutheagesOctober 26, 899 – Death of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex; buried at Hyde Abbey in  Winchester, England
Alfred was the youngest son of King Æthelwulf of Wessex. His father died when he was young and three of Alfred's brothers reigned in turn. Taking the throne after the death of his brother Æthelred, Alfred spent several years dealing with Viking invasions. After a decisive victory in the Battle of Edington in 878 Alfred made an agreement with the Vikings, creating what was known as Danelaw in the North of England. Alfred also oversaw the conversion of the Viking leader, Guthrum.
Alfred successfully defended his kingdom against the Viking attempt at conquest, and by the time of his death had become the dominant ruler in England. He was also the first King of the West Saxons to style himself "King of the Anglo-Saxons".
Alfred had a reputation as a learned and merciful man of a gracious and level-headed nature who encouraged education, proposing that primary education be conducted in English rather than Latin, and improved his kingdom's legal system, military structure, and his people's quality of life. He was given the epithet "the Great" during and after the Reformation in the sixteenth century; the only other king of England given this epithet is Cnut the Great.


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Indice de Personas

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miércoles, 27 de mayo de 2020

Blanca De Navarra, Reina Consorte De Castilla ♔ Ref: RC-285 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: García Vi El Restaurador, Rey De Navarra
Madre: Marguerite de l'Aigle


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17° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
 (Linea Materna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->Blanca de Navarra, reina consorte de Castilla is your 17th great grandmother.
You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Morella Álamo Borges
your mother →  Belén Borges Ustáriz
her mother →  Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna
her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate
her father →  María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra
his mother → Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina, Teniente Coronel
her father →  Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique
her mother →  Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza
her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna
her mother →  Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo
her mother →  Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel
her father → Sancha Manuel
his mother →  Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes
her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona
his father →  Ferdinand "the Saint", king of Castile and León
his father →  Berenguela I la Grande, reina de Castilla
his mother →  Alfonso VIII el Noble, rey de Castilla
her father →  Blanca de Navarra, reina consorte de Castilla
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Blanca de Navarra, reina consorte de Castilla MP
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 1137
Death: August 12, 1156 (15-23)
Place of Burial: Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Nájera, Nájera, Rioja, Rioja, Spain
Immediate Family:
Daughter of García VI el Restaurador, rey de Navarra and Marguerite de l'Aigle
Wife of Sancho III el Deseado, rey de Castilla
Mother of Alfonso VIII el Noble, rey de Castilla
Sister of Sancho VI el Sabio, rey de Navarra and Margherita di Navarra, regina consorte di Sicilia
Half sister of Rodrigo García; Vela Ladrón de Guevara and Sancha de Navarra, vizcondesa consorte de Narbona
Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 9, 2007
Managed by:   Doctor Leopoldo José Briceño-Iragorry Calcaño, MD and 171 others
Curated by: Victar
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La infanta Blanca Garcés, también conocida como Blanca de Navarra (d. 1133 en Laguardia - † ¿12 de agosto? de 1156) hija de García Ramírez de Navarra y Margarita de Águila.

Su padre encontrándose en aprietos debido al acoso de sus tierras por parte del ejército de Alfonso VII y tras no haber sido reconocido por la autoridad pontificia como rey, tuvo que firmar en 1140 las paces con Alfonso VII, pero siguió la guerra con Ramón Berenguer IV hasta que en 1149 firmo también las paces con él, tras prometer darle a su hija Blanca en matrimonio, estando ésta ya prometida con Sancho III "El Deseado", primogénito del rey Alfonso VII y futuro rey de Castilla. Este paso diplomático no fue prudente y finalmente Blanca casó con Sancho III el 30 de enero de 1151 en Calahorra.

Fruto de este matrimonio tendrían como hijo a Alfonso VIII de Castilla futuro rey de Castilla.

Sepulcro
Fue enterrada en el Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Nájera.

Su sepulcro es una joya del románico europeo

En la cara principal está esculpida la muerte de Blanca, mientras su alma representada por un niño desnudo, es elevada al Cielo por dos ángeles. A los lados, tras unos árboles, el rey es consolado por cortesanos.

Obtenido de "http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blanca_Garc%C3%A9s_de_Navarra"

Blanca of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García VI of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle.

Blanca married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

Blanca Garcés of Navarre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other persons of this name, see Blanca of Navarre.

Blanca of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García VI of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle.

Blanca married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

Blanca of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García VI of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle.

Blanca married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

[edit] References

Lament for a lost queen: the sarcophagus of Dona Blanca in Najera. The Art Bulletin, June, 1996 by Elizabeth Valdez del Alamo [1]

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blanca_Garc%C3%A9s_of_Navarre"

Categories: 1130s births | 1156 deaths | Women of medieval Spain | Deaths in childbirth | 12th-century Spanish people

Hija de García VI Ramírez de Navarra, "el Restaurador" y Margarita de L'Aigle Rotrou —descendiente de los Reyes Capetos de Francia y los Carolingios—; García Ramírez era hijo de Ramiro Sánchez de Navarra —ver Reyes de Navarra— y Cristina Rodríguez de Vivar, hija del Cid Campeador)

Casó el 30-I-1150/51 con Sancho III "el Deseado", rey de Castilla, y tuvieron por hijo a Alfonso VIII de Castilla.

Blanca of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García VI of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle.

Blanca married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

Blanca (in English: Blanche) of Navarre died before her husband Sancho's accession as sole ruler of Castilla in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155, she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera, where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the Queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

Blanche of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García Ramírez of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle.
Blanche married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph.

Sancho donated money to the Monastery of Santa María la Real of Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century. -----------------------------------------------------------------------

Individual Record FamilySearch™ Pedigree Resource File

Search Results | Print

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BLANCA DE NAVARRA Compact Disc #135 Pin #3766625 Pedigree

Sex: F
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Event(s)

Birth: abt 1130/40 ,,NAVARRA,Spain Death: bef 1230 ,,CASTILLA,Spain
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Parents

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Marriage(s)

Spouse: Sancho III DE CASTILLA Y BERENGUEL Disc #135 Pin #3766624 Marriage: abt 1155 ,,CASTILLA,Spain
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Notes and Sources

Notes: None Sources: None
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Submitter

Ruben F. VERGARAY
763 E 50 South Provo UT 84606

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Submission Search: 4324722-0314107184449

URL:
Blanca of Navarre (aft. 1133, Pamplona – August 12, 1156). She was the daughter of king García VI of Navarre, "The Restorer", and Marguerite de l'Aigle. Blanca married Sancho III of Castile, co-king of Castile (with his father) on January 30, 1151 in Catahorra, Logroño; however, she died before her husband's accession as sole ruler in 1157. She had several children who did not survive and are buried in the church of San Pedro in Soria. On November 11, 1155 she gave birth to the future king Alfonso VIII. There appears to be no record of her activities thereafter, except for her death on August 12, 1156. While it had been suggested that she might have died from the complications of a new pregnancy, Valdez maintains that she died from sequelae of the birth of her son. That her death was caused by a pregnancy is recorded in an epitaph. Sancho donated money to the monastery of Santa María la Real in Najera where she is buried. The sarcophagus of the queen is regarded as a primary example of the ability to express artistically human emotions in the 12th century.

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Blanca Garcés de Pamplona
 Reina consorte de Castilla Riquilda de Polonia Margarita de l'Aigle
De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Blanca Garcés de Pamplona
Reina consorte de Castilla

Reina consorte de Castilla
1151-1156
Predecesor Riquilda de Polonia
Sucesor Leonor Plantagenet
Información personal
Otros títulos Infanta de Navarra
Nacimiento 1137
Laguardia
Fallecimiento 12 de agosto de 1156
Entierro Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Nájera
Familia
Dinastía Dinastía Jimena
Padre García Ramírez de Pamplona
Madre Margarita de l'Aigle
Cónyuge Sancho III de Castilla
Descendencia Véase Descendencia
[editar datos en Wikidata]
Para otras damas llamadas Blanca de Navarra, véase Blanca de Navarra.
Blanca Garcés de Navarra (Laguardia, 1137 – 12 de agosto de 1156). Reina consorte de Castilla por su matrimonio con Sancho III de Castilla, rey de Castilla. Hija del rey García Ramírez de Pamplona y de Margarita de l'Aigle.

Aunque nunca fue reina efectiva de Castilla, pues falleció antes de que su esposo Sancho III ocupase el trono, recibió el tratamiento de reina por su matrimonio con el infante Sancho, a quien le fue concedido, al igual que a su hermano el infante Fernando, el título de rey en vida de su padre, Alfonso VII el Emperador, rey de León.

Ascendientes
Fue hija de García Ramírez de Pamplona, rey de Navarra, y de Margarita de l'Aigle. Por parte materna eran sus abuelos Gilberto de l'Aigle y su esposa Juliana de Mortagne, mientras que por parte paterna eran sus abuelos Ramiro Sánchez de Pamplona, señor de Monzón, y su esposa Cristina Rodríguez, hija de Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, el Cid Campeador.

Biografía
Se desposó en 1141, y posteriormente contrajo matrimonio el día 0 de enero de 1151 en Laguardia según cuenta la tradición, con el infante Sancho de Castilla, hijo de Alfonso VII, rey de Castilla y de León]]. Su matrimonio contribuyó a sellar la paz entre los reinos de Castilla y de Navarra.[a]​

La infanta Blanca Garcés falleció el 12 de agosto de 1156, después de haber dado a luz a su hijo Alfonso, que reinaría en Castilla a la muerte de su padre como Alfonso VIII de Castilla.

Sepultura
Sepulcro de Blanca Garcés.Monasterio de Nájera
Sepulcro de Blanca Garcés.
Monasterio de Nájera
Después de su defunción, el cadáver de la reina Blanca Garcés de Pamplona recibió sepultura en el Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Nájera, en la cueva o capilla adyacente al Panteón Real, aunque su sepulcro se encuentra en la actualidad en la Capilla antigua de la Cruz, al lado sur de la nave de la Epístola.[2]​

En el sepulcro de la reina, realizado en arenisca y que se asemeja a una tapa de sepulcro a dos vertientes, fue esculpido un bajorrelieve que representaba a la reina tendida sobre su lecho fúnebre, y acompañada por dos ángeles que llevaban su alma al cielo, apareciendo debajo la inscripción "REGINA DONNA BLANCA".[3]​ En el lado derecho del sepulcro aparece representado Sancho III el Deseado, con corona, túnica y aspecto triste, y consolado por varios cortesanos, apareciendo a la derecha de la escena seis plañideras, mientras que en el lado izquierdo aparecen representadas dos grupos de mujeres. En la cubierta del sepulcro fue esculpido el Pantocrátor y el apostolado, siendo representados seis apóstoles a un lado de Cristo sedente, y otros seis en el opuesto, y en el sepulcro fue esculpido el siguiente epitafio, del que apenas quedan restos visibles en la actualidad:

((cita|NOBILIS HIC REGINA JACET, QUAE BLANCA VOCARI. PROMERUIT PULCHERRIMA SPECIE, CANDIDIOR NIVE, CANDORIS PRAETIUM FESTINANS, GRATIA MORUM, FOEMINEI. SEXUS HANC DABBAT ESSE DECUS IMPERATORIS NATUS REX SANCIUS ILLI, VIR FUIT, ET TANTO LAUS ERAT IPSA VIRO. PARTU PRESSA RUIT, ET PIGNUS NOBILE FUDIT, VENTRIS VIRGINEI FILIUS ASSIT EI. ERA MILLENA CENTENA NONAGESIMA QUARTA. REGINAM CONSTAT OBIISE PIAM.[b]​

En el Monasterio de Santa María la Real de Nájera existe otro mausoleo de la reina Blanca Garcés de Pamplona, que se encuentra situado en el Panteón Real, bajo el coro, y siendo el segundo desde la izquierda, consistiendo en una urna rectangular de arenisca cubierta con tapa que ha perdido su policromía, sobre la que se encuentra colocada la figura yacente de la reina, cuya cabeza aparece descansando sobre dos almohadones, y a los pies y situado entre ángeles, se encuentra colocado un epitafio en el que aparece la siguiente inscripción:«LA REINA DOÑA BLANCA DE CASTILLA, MUJER DE DON SANCHO DESEADO DE CASTILLA».[4]​}

Matrimonio y descendencia
Se casó el 30 de enero de 1151 en Calahorra. Fruto de su matrimonio con Sancho III de Castilla, hijo de Alfonso VII, nacieron tres hijos:

Hijo (1153/54-1153/55). Szabolcs de Vajay se refiere a una donación del rey Alfonso VIII al Monasterio de San Pedro de Soria, donde sepultura regum fratrum meorum...adornari cognosco, indicando que el rey tenía más de un hermano. Si esto es correcto, la cronología dicta que debe haber nacido antes que el rey Alfonso VIII.
Alfonso VIII de Castilla[5]​ (1155-1214. Heredó el trono de Castilla a la muerte de su padre.
Infante García de Castilla (1156-1156). Fue sepultado en el Monasterio de San Pedro de Soria.
No obstante, otras fuentes señalan que Sancho III el Deseado solo tuvo un hijo, el infante Alfonso, que le sucedería en el trono, y tras cuyo nacimiento falleció su madre, la reina Blanca Garcés de Navarra.[c]​


Predecesor:
Riquilda de Polonia Reina consorte de Castilla
Junto a Riquilda de Polonia
1151 - 1156 Sucesor:
Leonor Plantagenet
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Porcelos, conde de Castilla Diego ★ Ref: CC-283 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre:
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
23° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
 (Linea Materna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Diego Porcelos, conde de Castilla is your 23rd great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges
your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz
her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna
her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate
her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra
his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina
her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Andrés Manuel Ortiz de Urbina y Landaeta, I Marqués de Torrecasa
her father → Manuel Ortiz de Urbina y Márquez de Cañizares
his father → Manuel de Ortiz de Urbina y Suárez
his father → Juan Ortíz de Urbina y Eguíluz
his father → Martín Ortíz de Urbina
his father → Pedro Ortiz de Urbina
his father → Ortún Díaz de Urbina
his father → Diego López
his father → Diego I el Blanco López, III señor de Vizcaya
his father → Lope Díaz Íñiguez, II señor de Vizcaya, IV Conde de Viscaya
his father → Toda Fortúnez
his mother → Fortún Sánchez, señor de Nájera
her father → Sancho López
his father → Nuña Fernández de Castilla
his mother → Gonzalo Núñez, II Juez de Castilla
her father → Nuño Rasura Núñez
his father → Sulabella Díaz de Castilla
his mother → Diego Porcelos, conde de Castilla
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Diego 'Porcelos' Rodríguez de Castilla, conde de Castilla MP
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 810
Death: circa 885 (66-83)
Immediate Family:
Son of Rodrigo Poblador, Count of Castile and Alava and Unkown Poblador
Husband of Unknown Porcelos
Father of Gotinha Porcellos de Castilla; Marello Díaz; Asura; Gómez Díaz; Urraca Paterna Díaz de Castilla and 6 others
Added by: Enrique Maria Algorta Facio on October 20, 2007
Managed by: Erica Howton and 49 others
Curated by: Victar
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Diego I Rodríguez, conde de Castilla1

b. circa 760?

Father Rodrigo I Fruelez, conde de Castilla1 b. circa 730?, d. circa 800

Mother Sancha (?)1 b. circa 740?

Diego I Rodríguez, conde de Castilla was born circa 760?. He was the son of Rodrigo I Fruelez, conde de Castilla and Sancha (?).1
Family

Child

Urraca Paterna Díaz de Castilla+ b. c 7901,2

Citations

[S1316] Reyes y Reinos Genealogias, online www.homar.org, España - 08.A.

[S1342] Casas Reales, online http://www.abcgenealogia.com/Familias3.html, Casa de Castilla.

En el 882 hizo frente a un gran ejército árabe, pobló Burgos 884.

II Conde de Castilla.

Necesasario es, para el difcurfo defta hiftoria, y para lo que adelante fe à de feguir, hazer relacion del Tronco defte linage de Lara. Y figuiendo a los autores antiguos fu principio fue el Conde don Diego Porcelos, que poblo a Burgos en el aço de 884. Cuya hija vnica doña Sula cafò con don Nuño Belchides Cavallero Alemã de la Ciudad de Colonia, cuyos hijos fueron Nuño Rafura Iuez de Caftilla, y don Guftios Gonçalez Señor de Salas... NOBLEZA DEL ANDALVZIA Por Gonçalo Argote de Molina, Sevilla 1588. Del Origen y Principio de la Cafa de Lara, y de fus Armas. Cap. LXII. Pág. 55

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daughter

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son

Urraca Paterna Díaz de Castilla
daughter

Fernando Díaz, conde de Lantar...
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Gonzalo Díaz
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Rodrigo el Abolmondar Díaz
son

Sulabella Díaz de Castilla
daughter


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Porcellos de Castilla Gotinha ★ Ref: PC-281 |•••► #ESPAÑA 🏆🇪🇸★ #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre:
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
23° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
 (Linea Materna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Gotinha Porcellos de Castilla is your 23rd great grandmother.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges
your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz
her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna
her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate
her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra
his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina
her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza
his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique
her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza
her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna
her mother → Fernando Mathé de Luna
her father → Estefanía Rodríguez de Ceballos, señora de Vado de las Estacas y Villalba
his mother → Ruy / Rodrigo González de Ceballos
her father → Gonzalo Díaz de Ceballos y Ordóñez
his father → María Ordóñez de Aza
his mother → Diego Ordóñez de Aza, Señor de Villamayor
her father → Ordoño Garciez de Aza
his father → García Ordóñez, conde de Nájera
his father → Ordoño Ordóñez, infante de León
his father → Ordoño Ramírez de León, "El ciego". Infante de León
his father → Sancha Gómez, Reina consorte de León
his mother → Muniadona Fernández, condesa de Castilla
her mother → Fernán González, conde de Castilla
her father → Gonzalo Fernández de Lara, conde de Burgos
his father → Gotinha Porcellos de Castilla
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Gotinha Porcellos de Castilla MP
Spanish: Da. Gutina de Castilla
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 850
Castile, Spain
Death: Spain
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Diego Porcelos, conde de Castilla and Unknown Porcelos
Wife of Fernando Niger de Castrosiero Muñoz
Mother of Gonzalo Fernández de Lara, conde de Burgos; Cde. Rodrigo Fernández; Flámula and Nuño Fernández de Amaya, conde de Castilla
Sister of Marello Díaz; Asura; Gómez Díaz; Urraca Paterna Díaz de Castilla; Fernando Díaz, conde de Lantarón y Castilla and 4 others
Half sister of Nuña Nunez Niger
Added by: Ricardo Alejandro Seminario Leòn on December 16, 2007
Managed by: Erica Howton and 49 others
Curated by: Lúcia Pilla
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Gotinha Porcellos de Castilla

Daughter of Diego Rodriguez de Porcelos, Conde de Castilla and Assura Fernández.

Wife of Fernando 'Niger el Castrosiero' Nuñez.

GUTINA Díaz, daughter of [DIEGO Rodríguez "Porcelos" Conde de Castilla & his [first/second] wife ---]. Pérez de Urbel emphasises that there is no proof of Gutina's parentage. However, it is suggested by her grandson conde Fernando González confirming donations to San Félix made by conde Diego Rodríguez[93]. Fernando & his wife had [four] children:

a) GONZALO Fernández de Lara

b) NUÑO Fernández de Amaya

c) [RODRIGO Fernández

d) [FLÁMULA Fernández (-after 24 Nov 929)

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son

Flámula
daughter

Nuño Fernández de Amaya, conde...
son

Diego Porcelos, conde de Castilla
father

Unknown Porcelos
mother

Marello Díaz
brother

Asura
sister

Gómez Díaz
brother

Urraca Paterna Díaz de Castilla
sister

Fernando Díaz, conde de Lantar...
brother

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