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Aelle is said to have been the first king of the South Saxons, reigning from 477 AD.
Richard I
no he wasnt Henry vii was the first Tudor king not Henry viii
King John (1166 AD - 1216 AD), England's only king named John to date.
William the conquerer invaded England and became King in 1066 AD.
The king of what country was forced to sign the Magna Carta in 1215 AD? england
England
Sorry, old bean, but there was never was a King Ortha of England. Could you mean King Offa of Mercia (774-796) whom later (forged) documents described as King of England.
Ethelred II, King of England from AD 978 to 1017, was known as "Ethelred the Unready."
St. Edward the Martyr,King of the English (AD 962-978)Edward was the eldest son of King Edgar the Peacemaker by his first wife, the beautiful Ethelflaeda Eneda (White-Duck).
Some people have considered that the first king was Offa, in about 774 AD The consensus is that Egbert is the traditional first, so perhaps you could call him the Father of the Country
No. Depending on whether you count Egbert of Wessex (who was overlord of all the English kingdoms about AD 830) as a king of England, and on whether you consider England to have been united when Edward the Elder inherited the kingdom of Mercia (about 920) or not until Athelstan conquered Nothumbria (927), the first king of England was either Egbert or his great-grandson Edward the Elder, or Edward's son Athelstan. They were all Saxons, not Romans. If you are being very picky, then the Edward the Elder's title was not "King of England" but "King of the Angles and Saxons", and Athelstan's was "King of the English". The title "King of England" as opposed to "King of the English" was first used by Henry II, in 1154. Henry was a Frenchman (from Angers), not a Roman either.