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Edred rebuilt Glastonbury Abbey at a vast expence, and submitted to receive discipline from the hands of Dunstan, abbot of Glastonbury, a pretended saint, 951.

He was the first who was styled King of Great Britain; reigned seven years, and was buried at Winchester.

EDWY, eldest son of King Edmund I. banished St. Dunstan, abbot of Glastonbury. He was him

self exconcated by archbishop Odo, and his

Queen used in a most barbarous manner by the clergy. Edwy died 959, aged 18, and was buried at Winchester.

EDGAR, surnamed the Peaceable, obliges his brother Edwy to resign the crown to him. He increased the royal navy to 360 ships, and maintained the dominion of the narrow seas; built Ramsay Abbey, and 47 other monasteries, 959.

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He obliged eight Princes, who were tributary to bin, torow him in a barge, over the river Dee, 960. He married Elfrida, whose husband he mur dered, 970.

Edgar imposed on the Welch Princes a tribute of wolves heads, which for three years, amounted to 300 each year. This extirpated them, and the tribute ceased, 975,9

He reigned seventeen years, and was buried at Glastonbury.or

EDWARD the Martyr, eldest son of King Edgar, ascended the throne, at 12 years of age; was nurdered, May 18th, near Corfe Castle, by Queen: Elfrida, his step-mother. He reigned four years, and was buried first at Warham, and afterwards removed to Shaftsbury.

ETHELRED 11. son to Elfrida, is crowned at Kingston. The first coronation oath in England.

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Juries instituted. The first land-tax. Figures in arithmetic first introduced into England. The Danes invade the Kingdom. Ethelred pays them £10,000 to depart, 991.

They return again four or five times, and receive from Ethelred, at one payment, about £30,000, raised by a land-tax called Danegelt, 999.

The Danes grew so imperious as to be called Lord Danes: this induced Ethelred to order a general massacre of them, which began at Welwin, in Hertfordshire, 1002.

In revenge for this treachery, Swain, King of Denmark, landed on the coast of Devon; also ou the coast of Norfolk, and destroyed Norwich and Thetford, and received from Ethelred, £36,000.

The Danes, who had plundered the Kingdom for some years, receive £48,000 from Ethel-: red. In those ravages they destroyed Oxford, and all studies ceased there for upwards of one hundred years, 1012.

Swain returns, is proclaimed King of England, and Ethelred retires to the Isle of Wight, 1013.

Swain was killed at Thetford, in Norfolk. Canute his son, proclaimed King. Ethelred returns, and Canute leaves England; but soon returns with a fleet of 200 sail, and lands at Sandwich. Ethelred. avoided giving the Danes battle, which displeased his subjects. He reigned thirty-five years, and was buried at St. Paul's..

EDMUND II. surnamed Ironside, third son of Ethelred, is acknowledged as King by the city of London, and one part of the nation, while the other part acknowledges Canute. They fight several battles, and at length agree to divide the Kingdom. Edmund is murdered by Duke Edrick. He reigned but nine months, and was buried at Glastonbury.

DANISH KINGS.

CANUTE, was acknowledged King of all England, and crowned in London; married Emma, widow of Ethelred; kept up a body of Danish troops, for whose subsistence he exacted, in one year nearly £100,000. The city of London paid £11,000 per annum land-tax, 1018.

Canute goes to Denmark, subdues Norway, and is styled King of England, Denmark, and Nor way, 1019.

Canute entered on a war with Sweden, sailed for Denmark, seized on the crown of Sweden, and took the title of King of England, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. He was afterwards surnamed the Great. Canute reigned nineteen years, died at Shaftsbury, and was buried at Winchester.

HAROLD I. Son of Canute, by his first wife, was crowned at Oxford. Queen Emma formed a party in favour of her children, and persuaded Alfred and Edward, her sons by Ethelred II. to come to England. Alfred on his arrival, was treacherously murdered by Earl Goodwin, at Guilford, in Surry. Edward escaped, and went into Normandy, Queen Emma was banished, and went to Bruges, in Flanders, to reside, 1037.

Harold reigned three years, and was buried at Winchester.

HardiCanute, son of King Canute and Queen Emma, succeeds on the death of Harold. Many heavy taxes were imposed to defray the expences of the Danish fleet. Hardicanute reigned two years, and was buried at Winchester.

SAXON KINGS RESTORED.

EDWARD, surnamed the Confessor, son of King Ethelred II. and Queen Emma, mounts the throne. Earl Godwin and his sons are banished. William the Bastard, Duke of Normandy, visited Edward, who gave him a promise (as it is said), that the crown of England should descend to him. Earl Godwin returns, and is reconciled with the King.

One day, as the King and the Earl were at table, Edward accused him of being his brother's assassin, but the Earl asserted his innocence by adding, "May this be the last morsel I shall ever swallow, if I am guilty;" but no sooner had he put it into his mouth, than he fell down, and expired.

St. Peter's Church, Westminster, rebuilt by Edward. The charter of privileges granted to it, and said to be the first that had a great seal of England. This church was afterwards demolished by Henry III. and the present one built. Edward caused the Saxon laws and customs to be written in Latin, and collected them into a body, thence called the Laws of Edward the Confessor. He also caused the original Doomsday- Book to be made. Edward was born at Islip, in Oxfordshire, reigned twenty-three years, died January 5th, 1066, and was buried at Westminster.

HAROLD, second son of Godwin, Earl of Kent, seized the throne, and was crowned at Oxford. But William, Duke of Normandy, claiming the crown, made a descent upon the coast of Sussex and engaged Harold near Hastings, whose army. was routed, and himself slain, October 14th. He was buried at Waltham Abbey, in Essex, 1066.

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WILLIAM the Conqueror crowned King at Westminster. William Fitz-Osborne created Earl of Hereford; the first Earl created in England. The King re-established the tax called Danegelt. Curfew bell, on the ringing of which, at eight o'clock every one extinguished fire and candle, 1068. Waltheof, Earl of Northumberland, beheaded for rising in arms against William. He was the first English Nobleman so put to death, 1075. King William laid the foundation of the tower of London, 1078.

Introduced the Norman Laws and Language, destroyed thirty-six parish churches; dispeopled Hampshire for above thirty miles, to enlarge New Forest, and laid waste the country for sixty miles, between the Humber and the Tees, 1085.

Norwich Cathedral built, 1087.

William was born at Falaise in Normandy, 1025, died at Hermentrude, September 9th, 1087, and was buried at Caen.

WILLIAM II. surnamed Rufus, who had usurped the crown from his brother Robert, embarks for Normandy, and makes war upon him. Robert mortgages Normandy to William, and goes to the Holy War. The first decision by single combat. Westminster Hall built by William Rufus, 1098.

An inundation of the sea overflowed the lands of Goodwin, Earl of Kent, now called Goodwin's Sands. William, hunting in the New Forest, is slain accidentally by an arrow, shot at a stag by his bow bearer, Sir Walter Tyrrell. He was buried at Winchester, 1100.

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