Ælfred was born in 0849 in Wantage Rural District, Berkshire, England , the son of Æthelwulf and Osburh of Wight.
He died on 26 OCT 0899 in England.
His wife was Ealswith or Alswitha de Gainsborough, who he married in 0868. The place has not been found. Their four known children were Ælfthryth (c0877-0929), Edward I (0871/72-0924/25), Elfgifu (?-?) and Æthelflæd (0874-0917).
Ælfred of Wessex |
Æthelwulf |
Egbert III |
Ealhmund de Wessex |
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NN de Kent |
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saint Rædburh of Wessex |
Theodoric IV de Narbonne |
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saint Aude de France |
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Osburh of Wight |
Osiac de Hampshire |
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Event | Date | Details | Source | Multimedia | Notes | ||
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Birth | 0849 |
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Death | 26 OCT 0899 |
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Burial | 0899 |
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Burial | 0901 |
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Burial | AFT 1079 |
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Attribute | Date | Description | Details | Source | Multimedia | Notes |
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Nobility Title | FROM 0871 TO 0899 | King of Wessex |
Note 1
King of Wessex (871-899), sometimes called Alfred the Great. He shared his father's piety. When his brother AEthelred took the Wessex throne (865), Alfred aided him in battles against the Danes, who threatened to overrun England. Unable to establish a clear victry, Alfred rid Wessex of the Danes by paying the Danegeld when he became king in 871. In 878, however, the Danes returned, and Alfred's flight to Somerset at that time is the basis for the legend about the king and a peasant woman's burned cakes. In May 878, Alfred triumphed over the Danes at Edington. This victory produced relative security, and Alfred began to institute reforms, including a code of laws combining Christian doctrine with a strong, centralized monarchy. His greatest achievements were the creation of a navy, the revival of learning among clergy, the education of youths and nobles at court, the establishment of Old English literary prose, his own English translation of Latin works and his influence on the extant form of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle