earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: Royalty of Post-Roman Britain Index
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/index.html
King Hoel I Mawr. King Hoel I Mawr. King Riwal Mawr Marchou. King Peredur Paladr Hir. King Gwallawc Marchawc Trin. King Gawain Dafod Aur. King Gruffudd ap Cynan. King Tristan the Younger. King Pabo Post Prydein.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: EBK T-Shirts on Historici-T
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/tshirts.html
Early British Kingdoms History T-Shirts. Available at Our Spreadshirt Historici-T Online Shop. Click for All T-Shirts. Click for Late Celtic/Saxon. Click for Iron Age/Roman. Click for Arthurian T-Shirts. Roman Mosaic, Leadenhall Street. Roman Mosaic, Lower Basildon. St David's Cross, Nevern. St Illtud's Cross, Llantwit Major. Arthur and the Magic Mantle. Saxon Palace, Yeavering. Saxon Palace, Drayton/Sutton. St Cuthbert's Cross, Durham. Sutton Hoo Shoulder Eagles.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: Kingdoms of Post-Roman Britain Index
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/kingdoms/index.html
Early British Kingdoms AD 410-495. Early British Kingdoms AD 496-599. Early British Kingdoms AD 600-699. Early British Kingdoms AD 700-804. Early British Kingdoms AD 805-937. Britain in AD 425. Britain in AD 450. Britain in AD 475. Britain in AD 500. Britain in AD 525. Britain in AD 550. Bishops of Ergyng, Teilo and Llandaff. Britain in AD 575. Britain in AD 600. Britain in AD 625. Arthurian Britain in Medieval Literature.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: Saints of Post-Roman Britain Index
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/saints.html
Click for Anglo-Saxon Saints. Devon and Somerset Saints.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: Anglo-Saxons, Scots & Picts Index
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/adversaries/index.html
Scots and Pictish Chronology.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK for Kids Home Page
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/kids/index.html
Some Topics to Explore. The Romans in Britain. What Happened when the Romans Left. King Arthur's Life in the Story Books. Fashion, Art and Literature. The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial. When were the 'Dark Ages'? Who were the Britons? Where were the British Kingdoms? Who were the Saxons? Who were the Scots? Who were the Picts? Where were the Pictish Kingdoms? Who lived in Roman Britain? Why the Romans left Britain. What the British did next. What happened when King Vortigern took over. The Sword in the Stone.
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: General Information
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/geninfo.html
Concerning the Early British Kingdoms Website. This brief introduction is to welcome all-comers to my website, originally set up in 1996. Here you will find the history of the Celtic nations which emerged in Britain after the withdrawal of the Roman Administration in the period generally known as the 'Dark Ages'. When referencing or quoting the site in essays, dissertations or theses, please use a form similar to the examples given below:. Ford, David Nash (2005) Early British Kingdoms. Wokingham: Nash F...
earlybritishkingdoms.com
EBK: King Arthur Index
http://earlybritishkingdoms.com/arthur/index.html
Arthur in Popular Literature. How did King Arthur become so well known? Arthur's famous sword and its magical origins. Biographies of Arthurian authors. Biographies of friends and foe. Early References to Arthur. Is there any documentary evidence that he existed at all? Knights of the Round Table. The Chivalric Order and its members. Arthur is usually called a king, but which one? The most famous piece of furniture in the World! Perhaps Arthur was a war leader rather than a monarch.
berkshirehistory.com
RBH: History of Wallingford, Berkshire (Oxfordshire)
http://www.berkshirehistory.com/villages/wallingford.html
Saxon Planning Lives On. This was one of the Burghs. In the ninth century. Some, like Wallingford, were 'new towns'; some were old Roman settlements; others were set up in Iron Age hillforts. All were carefully planned with precise street-grids and high fortifications. Wallingford had a stockaded bank, 3,300 yards long, that can still be clearly seen in places. Like other burghs, it appears to have had a church, St. Peter's. Or 'Wall(ed Town) by the Old Way' is still much less likely. The Duke of Normand...