England was first unified as a state by Alfred the Great of Wessex. It ceased to exist as a separate kingdom following unions with Scotland (1707) and Ireland (1801). Today, England exists as one of the regions of the United Kingdom, alongside Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, "Her (or His) Majesty's Peculiars", and a number of colonial holdings. Thus from 1707, the terms "King of England" and "Queen of England" are incorrect. Hence, this list runs up to 1707; for monarchs after that date, see List of British monarchs


Table of contents

The Saxon kings

  • Ælfred (Alfred) the Great (871-899)
  • Edward the Elder (899-924)
  • Athelstan (924-939)
  • Edmund I (939-946)
  • Edred (946-955)
  • Edwy (955-959)
  • Edgar (959-975)
  • Edward the Martyr (975-978)
  • Ethelred II (978-1016)
  • Edmund II (1016)

The Danelaw

For a period of time, both Danish and Saxon kings claimed the throne of England.

  • Svein, also King of Denmark (1013-1014)
  • Canute I (1014-1035)
  • Harold I (1035-1040)
  • Canute II (1040-1042)

The Saxon restoration

  • Edward the Confessor (1042-1066)
  • Harold II (1066)
  • Edgar Ætheling, uncrowned (1066)

The Norman kings

After the Norman Conquest in 1066, numbering of kings began anew; this affected only the Edwards.

  • William I (1066-1087)
  • William II (1087-1100)
  • Henry I (1100-1135)
  • Stephen (1135-1154)

The Angevins or Plantagenets

The House of Lancaster

The House of York

The House of Tudor

The House of Stuart

  • James I, (1603-1625), also from an earlier date King James VI of Scots
  • Charles I (1625-1649), also King of Scots

Interregnum

There was no crowned king between Charles I's execution in 1649 and the restoration in 1660.

The Stuart restoration

  • Charles II (1660-1685), also King of Scots
  • James II (1685-1688), also King James VII of Scots
  • William III and Mary II (1689-1694), as co-monarchs, also King and Queen of Scotland
  • William III (1694-1702), continued as single monarch, also King of Scotland
  • Anne (1702-1707), also Scotland, then Queen of Great Britain after 1707 until her death in 1714

William III, Mary II and Anne used the styled "of Scotland" rather than "of Scots"



Advertise your
website with
:

Irish Website
Advertising
Can you help us? Are the recent changes correct?
Hosted in Ireland at the Servecentric Dublin Colocation Datacenter
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article of the same name which can be found here