| 1856 - Страниц: 568
...of Florence of Worcester, AD 938 : " Anlaf, the Pagan King of the Irish and of many islands besides, at the instigation of his father-in-law Constantine, King of the Scots, entered the mouth of tUe river Humber with a powerful fleet." The extracts are from the translations of the Rev. Joseph... | |
| 1853 - Страниц: 440
...of his sisters in marriage. AD 938. Anlaf, the pagan king of the Irish and of many islands besides, at the instigation of his father-in-law, Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the river Humber with a powerful fleet. King Aethelstan and his brother, Eadmund the etheling, met him... | |
| Anglo-Saxon chronicle - 1853 - Страниц: 448
...of his sisters in marriage. AD 938. Anlaf, the pagan king of the Irish and of many islands besides, at the instigation of his father-in-law, Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the river H umber with a powerful fleet. King Aethelstan and his brother, Eadmund the etheling, met him... | |
| Roger (of Hoveden) - 1853 - Страниц: 590
...Winchester. In the year 927, Anlaf, the pagan king of Ireland and of many of the islands, being encouraged by his father-in-law, Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the Humber with a vast fleet, amounting to six hundred and fifteen sail ; on which he was met by king Ethelstan and his... | |
| Simeon (of Durham.) - 1855 - Страниц: 428
...Winchester. AD 937. Anlaf the pagan, king of the Irishmen and of many of the islands, stirred up by his father-in-law Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the river Humber with a powerful fleet. King Ethelstan and his brother Eadmund Atheling encountered them... | |
| 1855 - Страниц: 392
...Winchester. AD 937. Anlaf the pagan, king of the Irishmen and of many of the islands, stirred up by his father-in-law Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the river Humber with a powerful fleet. King Ethelstan and his brother Eadmund Atheling encountered them... | |
| Charles Truman Wyckoff - 1897 - Страниц: 190
...order. He distinctly says that Anlaf, king of Ireland and of many islands, incited by his ally and father-in-law, Constantine, king of the Scots, entered the mouth of the Humber with a powerful fleet, and that Athelstan and his brother Edmund met them at a place called Brunanburh.1 One of the accounts... | |
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