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  1. Eadred Ætheling (Old English Eadred Æþeling) (died c. 1012) was the fourth of the six sons of King Æthelred the Unready by his first wife Ælfgifu. He witnessed charters between 993 and 1012 or 1013, [2] but died before his father was forced to flee to Normandy in late 1013.

  2. Edgar Atheling (1053-1126) fue el último miembro en línea masculina de la Casa de Cerdic. Su apodo " Atheling " (o escrito en su lengua original, " Æþeling "), significa "hombre de alta cuna, jefe, o líder", y fue la designación dada habitualmente a los hijos del rey .

  3. Æthelred II ( Old English: Æþelræd, [n 1] pronounced [ˈæðelræːd]; Old Norse: Aðalráðr; c. 966 – 23 April 1016), known as Æthelred the Unready, was King of the English from 978 to 1013 and again from 1014 until his death in 1016. [1] .

  4. 27 de jun. de 2024 · Was the Anglo-Saxon ætheling the model for this Welsh constitutional innovation? It is my purpose in the present paper to discuss the position of the ætheling in matters of royal succession during the Anglo-Saxon period.

  5. 26 de may. de 2018 · A later tenth century diploma, of King Eadred, illustrates the interchangeability of 'clito' and 'ætheling'; Eadred's nephew, Eadwig, is referred to as 'Eadwig.cliton', but his other nephew, Edgar, is referred to as 'Eadgar.ætheling'.

  6. Edgar The Aetheling (born, Hungary—died c. 1125) was an Anglo-Saxon prince, who, at the age of about 15, was proposed as king of England after the death of Harold II in the Battle of Hastings (Oct. 14, 1066) but instead served the first two Norman kings, William I, Harold’s conqueror, and William II. His title of aetheling (an Anglo-Saxon ...

  7. Edgar's sons, the half-brothers Edward (975-8) and iEthelred (978-1016), reigned in turn; iEthelred's son Edmund was king in 1016, but after his death the introduction of a foreign dynasty complicates the picture for the remain- ing fifty years of the Anglo-Saxon state.