- Ælfgar is an Anglo-Saxon
masculine personal name, from ælf "elf" and gar "spear", that may
refer to: Ælfgar of
Lichfield (died c. 947),
bishop of Lichfield...
- Ælfgar (died c. 1062) was the son of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, by his
famous wife
Godgifu (Lady Godiva). He
succeeded to his father's
title and responsibilities...
- 1035 – 14
October 1066)
Wulfnoth Godwinson (c. 1040 – died
after 1087)
Alfgar,
possibly a monk in
Rheims Edgiva Elgiva (died c. 1066) Gunhilda, a nun...
- My
Daughter Joy (1950) as Sir
Thomas McTavish The
Black Rose (1950) as
Alfgar The
Mudlark (1950) as John
Brown People Will Talk (1951) as
Shunderson Quo...
-
college founded before 946 (?)
possibly during the
reign of King
Edmund by
Alfgar who left
bequest to the
community of Stoke; land
granted to Ely by King...
-
Training was
supervised by the
nominated head of the
Czech section,
Major Alfgar Hesketh-Prichard, who
turned to
Cecil Clarke to
develop the
necessary weapon...
-
raised as a
Saxon by his
mother the Lady Hild and
maternal grandfather Alfgar, a
belted knight whose lands were
confiscated after the
Battle of Evesham...
- Cnut the
Great has been
depicted in a
number of
fictional works.
Alfgar the Dane; or the
Second Chronicle of Æscendune: a Tale of the Days of
Edmund Ironside...
-
Hawkins as
Tristram Griffen Michael Rennie as King
Edward I
Finlay Currie as
Alfgar Herbert Lom as
Anthemus Mary
Clare as Eleanor,
Countess of
Lessford Robert...
- Hungary. It was with this in mind that Lt Col
Peter Wilkinson and
Major Alfgar Hesketh-Prichard
procured Tito's
approval for the new destination. In May...