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Battle Of Brunanburh




This poorly recalled battle is actually one of the most important in British history since Athelstan's crushing defeat of the combined Norse-Celtic force facing him irrevocably confirmed England as an Anglo-Saxon kingdom, forcing the Celtic kingdoms to consolidate in the fringe positions they occupy today. The battle, one of the bloodiest of the period, saw the death of five British kings and seven earls on the Celtic side and numerous Saxon casualties including two of Athelstan's cousins Alfric and Athelwin and a prominent Saxon bishop.

The location of Brunanburh has not yet been definitively identified though possible sites in Northumbria have been suggested as well as Bromborough in Merseyside and Tinsley wood near Sheffield .

Our chief sources for the details of the battle come from the Anglo-Saxon poem of the same name, the writings of Anglo-Norman historian William Of Malmesbury , the Annals of Tigernach, the '' Brut Y Tywysogion '' and Icelandic Sagas such as the Saga Of Eigil Skallagrimson , who fought for Athelstan .

The '' Anglo-Saxon Chronicle '' records the event as follows:

937:

Here, King Athelstan, leader of warriors,

ring-giver of men, and also his brother,

the aetheling Edmund, struck life-long glory

in strife around 'Brunanburh'


REFERENCES

Wood, Michael (2001). Tinsley Wood. In ''In Search of England: Journeys into the English past'', pp203–221. Penguin Books Ltd (University of California Press in the United States). ISBN 0-520-23218-6