Edward the Confessor King of PLANTAGENET, ENGLAND HRH

Birth:
Abt 1004
Islip, Oxfordshire, England
Death:
4 Jan 1065/66
Westminster, England
Burial:
6 Jan 1066
Westminster Abbey, London, England
Marriage:
23 Jan 1044/45
Notes:
                   	2  GIVN St. Edward the
	2  SURN CONFESSOR


Reigned from 1042 to 1066.
Source(s) include, but are not limited to;
The English House of Wessex; Including Danes and Norman descent, apart of
Bloodline of the Holy Grail, by Laurence Gardner (1996) page 416;ISBN
1-85230-870-2.
Catholic Online Saints
St. Edward the Confessor
Feastday: October 13
Edward the Confessor was the son of King Ethelred III and his Norman wife, Emma, daughter of Duke Richard I of Normandy. He was born at Islip, England, and sent to Normandy with his mother in the year 1013 when the Danes under Sweyn and his son Canute invaded England. Canute remained in England and the year after Ethelred's death in 1016, married Emma, who had returned to England, and became King of England. Edward remained in Normandy, was brought up a Norman, and in 1042, on the death of his half-brother, Hardicanute, son of Canute and Emma, and largely through the support of the powerful Earl Godwin, he was acclaimed king of England. In 1044, he married Godwin's daughter Edith. His reign was a peaceful one characterized by his good rule and remission of odious taxes, but also by the struggle, partly caused by his natural inclination to favor the Normans, between Godwin and his Saxon supporters and the Norman barons, including Robert of Jumieges, whom Edward had brought with him when he returned to England and whom he named Archbishop of Canterbury in 1051. In the same year, Edward banished Godwin, who took refuge in Flanders but returned the following year with a fleet ready to lead a rebellion. Armed revolt was avoided when the two men met and settled their differences; among them was the Archbishop of Canterbury, which was resolved when Edward replaced Robert with Stigand, and Robert returned to Normandy. Edward's difficulties continued after Godwin's death in 1053 with Godwin's two sons: Harold who had his eye on the throne since Edward was childless, and Tostig, Earl of Northumbria. Tostig was driven from Northumbria by a revolt in 1065 and banished to Europe by Edward, who named Harold his successor. After this Edward became more interested in religious affairs and built St. Peter's Abbey at Westminster, the site of the present Abbey, where he is buried. His piety gained him the surname the Confessor. He died in London on January 5, and he was canonized in 1161 by Pope Alexander III. His feast day is October 13
                  
Edith (Eadgyth) of WESSEX, QUEEN OF ENGLANDHRH
Birth:
Abt 1020
Wessex, England
Death:
18 Dec 1075
Burial:
Westminster, Abbey, London, England
Notes:
                   Source(s) include, but are not limited to;
The English House of Wessex; Including Danes and Norman descent, apart of
Bloodline of the Holy Grail, by Laurence Gardner (1996) page 416;ISBN
1-85230-870-2.
                  
Children
Marriage
No Children Recorded
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Edward the Confessor King of Plantagenet, England Hrh - Edith (Eadgyth) of Wessex, Queen of EnglandHRH

Edward the Confessor King of Plantagenet, England Hrh was born at Islip, Oxfordshire, England Abt 1004. His parents were Ethelred II the Redeless King of England, Hrh and Emma Queen of England, Normandy Hrh.

He married Edith (Eadgyth) of Wessex, Queen of EnglandHRH 23 Jan 1044/45 . Edith (Eadgyth) of Wessex, Queen of EnglandHRH was born at Wessex, England Abt 1020 daughter of Godwin Earl of Kent Wessex, Sir and Gytha Thorgilsson .

Edward the Confessor King of Plantagenet, England Hrh died 4 Jan 1065/66 at Westminster, England .

Edith (Eadgyth) of Wessex, Queen of EnglandHRH died 18 Dec 1075 .