-
identical names. It is
commonplace for the
later kings to be
referred to as
subkings, but the
actual rank used is
always rex,
never regulus (except for a late...
-
these territories were
given to Ecgberht's son Æthelwulf to rule as a
subking under Ecgberht. When
Ecgberht died in 839, Æthelwulf
succeeded him; the...
- Mercia. In the 770s, the
kings of Kent were
resisting their demotion to
subkings.
According to the
chronicler Henry of Huntingdon, the
Mercians were victorious...
-
Hetha with the rest of the
Danish lands. Saxo then
describes the
different subkings and
their adventures.
Fourteen Danish kings later, in book 9, Saxo presents...
-
argues that
Uldin is
actually a
title and that he was
likely merely a
subking.
Priscus calls Attila "king" or "emperor" (βασιλέυς), but it is unknown...
- Trondheim). The
rulers of all the
areas might be
called petty kings, herser,
subkings,
kings or
earls depending on the source. A
number of
small communities...
-
regions of Scotland,
including Galloway and Moray,
periodically had
kings or
subkings,
similar to
those in
Ireland during the
Middle Ages. The
Scottish monarch...
-
There is weak
evidence for
joint kingships, and
stronger evidence of
subkings reigning under a
dominant ruler in Wes****, not long
before his time. Ine...
-
Frithuwold on the
throne of Surrey. The
charter is
witnessed by
three other subkings,
named Osric, Wigheard, and Æthelwold;
their kingdoms are not identified...
- king Demetrius, and is
sometimes believed to have been his
brother and/or
subking. The
scarcity of his
coinage indicates a
short reign.
Known evidence suggests...