- The
Battle of
Brunanburh was
fought in 937
between Æthelstan, King of England, and an
alliance of Olaf Guthfrithson, King of Dublin;
Constantine II, King...
- The "Battle of
Brunanburh" is an Old
English poem. It is
preserved in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a
historical record of
events in Anglo-Saxon
England which...
- in 937 they
invaded England. Æthelstan
defeated them at the
Battle of
Brunanburh, a
victory that gave him
great prestige both in the
British Isles and...
- Dyfnwal, King of Strathclyde, but they were
defeated at the
battle of
Brunanburh. In 943,
Constantine abdicated the
throne and
retired to the Céli Dé (Culdee)...
-
invaded England. Æthelstan
secured a
decisive victory at the
Battle of
Brunanburh,
cementing his
dominant position in Britain.
Benedictine monasticism had...
- Livingston,
Michael (2011). "The
Roads to
Brunanburh". In Livingston,
Michael (ed.). The
Battle of
Brunanburh: A Casebook.
University of
Exeter Press....
-
themselves with Amlaíb mac
Gofraid against the
English at the
Battle of
Brunanburh. It is
possible that
Owain is
identical to the
unnamed ****brian king recorded...
-
allies head to face Anlaf, who has am****ed his
forces at
Brunanburh. At the
Battle of
Brunanburh,
Uhtred and Aethelstan's
forces are
heavily outnumbered...
-
Constantine were
defeated by the
English led by Æthelstan at the
Battle of
Brunanburh in 937. Olaf
returned to
Ireland in 938 but
after Æthelstan's
death the...
- poetry, a
spine of
historical truth. Egil also
fought at the
Battle of
Brunanburh in the
service of King Æthelstan; his
brother Þórólfr died there, for...