New France Genealogy
Montjoie Saint Denis!
Cerdicingas, King Of England Edmund I[1]
921 - 946 (25 years)-
Name Cerdicingas, Edmund Prefix King Of England Suffix I Nickname The Elder Born 921 , Wessex, Wessex, England Gender Male _UID FB26711D99E7A14D92758139DEC4159E331B Died 26 May 946 , , , England Person ID I22876 NewFranceGenealogy Last Modified 16 May 2017
Father Cerdicingas, King of the Anglo-Saxons Edward I, b. Abt 3 Sep 870, Wessex, England , d. 17 Jul 924, Farndon on Dee, Cheshire, England (Age ~ 53 years) Mother Plantagenet, Queen Of England Edgiva, b. Abt 896, , , Kent, England Married Abt 917 Family ID F9911 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Cerdicingas, Queen of Wessex Elgiva, b. Abt 922, , Wessex, England , d. 944 (Age ~ 22 years) [1] _UID 24D2DFE47ADC314CB61EFD8958A871F54C62 Children 1. Cerdicingas, King Of England Eadwig, b. Abt 940, Wessex, England , d. 1 Oct 959, Gloucester, England (Age ~ 19 years) + 2. Cerdicingas, King of Northumbria Edgar I, b. 7 Aug 943, Wessex, England , d. 8 Jul 975, Winchester, Hampshire, England (Age 31 years) Last Modified 27 May 2017 Family ID F9689 Group Sheet | Family Chart
-
Notes - !Colonial and Revolutionary Lineages of America (973 D2ah) Vol. 2 He became King on the death of his half-brother, Ethelstan, on 27 Oct 940. Edmund tried to conquer the north of England. At home his civil administration appears to have been marked by efforts to enforce order. His secular laws refer to his efforts to prevent robberies and contain provisions rendering a person quilty of murder responsible for his own act rather than holding his whole family responsible, as clan-law had it. Edmund was slain in battle by a certain Liofa, who was himself slain by the King's men. After Edmund's death he was hallowed as a saint and miracles were worked at his tomb.
Md. 2) Ethelfleda, Queen of England.
Also Known os the "The Magnificent"
- !Colonial and Revolutionary Lineages of America (973 D2ah) Vol. 2 He became King on the death of his half-brother, Ethelstan, on 27 Oct 940. Edmund tried to conquer the north of England. At home his civil administration appears to have been marked by efforts to enforce order. His secular laws refer to his efforts to prevent robberies and contain provisions rendering a person quilty of murder responsible for his own act rather than holding his whole family responsible, as clan-law had it. Edmund was slain in battle by a certain Liofa, who was himself slain by the King's men. After Edmund's death he was hallowed as a saint and miracles were worked at his tomb.
-
Sources - [S353] Adam gedcom from AQ (Reliability: 0).
- [S353] Adam gedcom from AQ (Reliability: 0).