- Æthelstan or
Athelstan (/ˈæθəlstæn/; Old English: Æðelstān [ˈæðelstɑːn]; Old Norse: Aðalsteinn; lit. 'noble stone'; c. 894 – 27
October 939) was King of...
-
nunnery in Polesworth,
North Warwickshire, England. In 925, the
sister of
Ethelstan, and
repudiated wife of Sihtric, king of Northumbria, came to live at...
- Also
spelled Godrum and Guthorm; also
known as Æthelstan, Athelstan, or
Ethelstan This
explanation for the army's move
north has been challenged, and it...
- a
gravestone with a
Celtic cross possibly commemorating Cwgan son of
Ethelstan, a
Welsh prince of the 11th century. The
parish is best
known for its...
-
Bishop of
Dorchester with his
sister Aelfwen (or 980 by Alfwen, wife of
Ethelstan, Earl of the East Angles); destro**** 1306-10;
dissolved 3
September 1538;...
- September 13, 2013 (2013-09-13)
Prime Minister Tillman Thomas Succeeded by
Ethelstan Angus Friday Grenada Amb****ador to
Mexico In
office August 2010 (2010-08) –...
- King of Wes**** (839-856) fl. 839 to 851 Æðelstan I
Edelstan rex
Kancie Ethelstan Rex Aeðelstan rex
Aedelstan rex
jointly with his
father Æðelwulf fl. 855...
-
locations within the area
although there is no
evidence of any settlement.
Ethelstan the Etheling, son of
Ethelred the Unready, left "land at Mordune" to the...
- town of March, Cambridgeshire, and he may have been a
relative of King
Ethelstan.
Wendreda Farmer,
David Hugh, The
Oxford Dictionary of
Saints (New ed...
-
Hambledon Press. ISBN 978-1-85285-044-9. Hart,
Cyril (2004). "Æthelstan [
Ethelstan, Æthelstan Half-King] (fl. 932–956)".
Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography...