I think you mean "who reigned in 1066". Next we need to know who reigned where? to answer your question. I'm assuming we are talking about The Battle of Hastings for control of England.
A homophone for "rained" is "reigned".
The past tense of "rain" would be "rained".It rained is the past tense
Rained is the past tense verb in "It rained last night."
it always rained
October 14th 1066
'It was a dreadful winter that year. It rained and rained and rained for two long months.'
A homophone for "reigned" is "rained".
'It rained like cats and dogs.'
The Day It Rained Forever was created in 2000.
1066 A.D. For those who are not religious it would be 1066 C.E. (common era).
The homophone for "rained" is "reigned." "Rained" refers to precipitation falling from the sky, while "reigned" refers to ruling or being in power.
And then it rained for seven days was created in 2009-04.