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Harold Godwinson
(redirected from Harold II of England)

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Harold (II) Godwinson (c. 1020–1066)

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An illustration from a 13th-century manuscript shows King Harold of England wounded in the eye at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Forced or tricked after a shipwreck to agree to William of Normandy's claim to the throne of England, and betrayed to the King of Norway by his own brother, Harold II remained king of England for only eight months.
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A replica of the Bayeux Tapestry, one of the earliest examples of European embroidery. The original was made in the 11th century, on a strip of linen about 50 cm wide. There are 72 scenes relating to the Norman conquest of England in 1066, embroidered in eight colours.

Last Anglo-Saxon king of England, January to October 1066. He was defeated and killed by William of Normandy (William (I) the Conqueror) at the Battle of Hastings.

He succeeded his father Earl Godwin in 1053 as Earl of Wessex. Harold was Edward the Confessor's military commander, and became so powerful that one chronicler described him as the ‘sub-king’. In about 1063 William of Normandy tricked or forced him into swearing to support his claim to the English throne, and when the Witan (the Anglo-Saxon council including government officials, landowners, and high-ranking churchmen) elected Harold to succeed Edward the Confessor, William prepared to invade. Meanwhile, Harold's treacherous brother Tostig (died 1066) joined the King of Norway Harald (III) Hardrada in invading Northumbria. Harold defeated and killed them at Stamford Bridge on 25 September. Three days later William landed at Pevensey, Sussex, and Harold was killed at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October.



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While we may think tattoos have been made popular today by a celebrity and in the past only worn by sailors or bikers, you would be amazed to find out that tattoos have been a part of life for centuries and centuries and was performed world-wide by the time of Christ The first known celebrity, if you will, would have been King Harold II of England who is the first known royalty to bear a tattoo
14, 1066) Battle that ended in the defeat of Harold II of England by William, duke of Normandy, and established the Normans as rulers of England.
14, 1066) Battle that ended in the defeat of Harold II of England by William, duke of Normandy, and established the Normans as rulers of England.
 
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