Ancient History

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Aug 29 2008

Canute The Great

Published by crsenter at 8:54 pm under Ancient Britian, Ancient Europeans Edit This

Canute was a Viking king who ruled the first truly unified England. He came to power in 1016 AD, defeating the Anglo-Saxon king Aethelred. A year later, Canute married Aethelred’s widow and fathered 2 children with her. Being a Viking ruler, Canute kept the vikings from invading England and brought about a time of peace and prosperity.

Canute was a devote Christian and allowed Christianity to flourish during his reign. He was attributed as having many new churches built as a way to atone for the evils done by his forefathers. He also brought beautiful artwork to the forefront of English society of the time, and kept the English justice system in place.

Canute died in 1035 at the age of 40, leaving his united kingdom in the hands of his sons. Harold, a son from an English mistress, became king for only five years before his death. That left his youngest son, Harthacnut, to rule as king. Harthacnut died after only two years of rule and was only known for the impossible taxes he had imposed on his people.

Because none of Canute’s heirs had children of their own, the country was passed on to the oldest child of Canute’s wife from her first husband, Aethelred. He would come to be known throughout history as Edward the Confessor.

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5 Responses to “Canute The Great”

  1. crsenteron 30 Aug 2008 at 12:05 am edit this

    Some of the ancient architecture is more amazing than that of today. I’ve always wanted to visit a medieval castle. I love this stuff. LOL

    There are a lot of interesting figures from history that hardly anyone has ever heard of. But, that’s why I created this site, so I could pass all my trivial knowledge on to the rest of the world.

    Great to have you here.

    Any requests???

  2. katieanneon 02 Sep 2008 at 5:18 am edit this

    Canute was one of the Danish vikings, upon the death of his brother he also became King of Denmark (although not before the Swedes and Norwegians had tried to keep him off it). Love viking history - it’s so mangled up and tightly woven together as the individual Scandinavian countries have tried to take control of the whole area. Lot of info, but much of it contradicted and open to interpretation, but that’s part of what makes ancient history so interesting isn’t it?

  3. crsenteron 02 Sep 2008 at 2:07 pm edit this

    It really is. I also love Scandinavian history and mythology. I’ve always believed that somewhere in those tales lie bits of truth.

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