Earl of York explained

In Anglo-Saxon England, the Earl of York or Ealdorman of York was the ruler of the southern half of Northumbria. The titles ealdorman and earl both come from Old English. The ealdormanry (earldom) seems to have been created in 966 following a period when the region was under the control of Oswulf, already high-reeve of Bamburgh in northern Northumbria, from about 954, when Norse rule at York came to an end.[1]

After the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, the Earldom of York was re-created on two occasions. In 1385, the title Duke of York was granted to Edmund of Langley and it continues in use as a royal dukedom, often given to the monarch's second son: for example Prince Andrew, Duke of York, born in 1960.

Ealdormen

Later earls

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: George Molyneaux . 2017 . The Formation of the English Kingdom in the Tenth Century . Oxford University Press . 177–179. In footnote 289, he provides the following list with dates based on charter witnesses: "Thored (witnesses 979–c.989), Ælfhelm (993–1005), Uhtred (1009–1015), Erik (1018–1023), Siward (1033–1053×1055), Tostig (1059–1065), and Morcar (1065)."
  2. Paul Dalton (2004), "William le Gros, count of Aumale and earl of York (c. 1110–1179), magnate". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  3. Book: England Under the Angevin Kings . Kate Norgate . Kate Norgate . 1887 . Macmillan . 373 n. 1.
  4. Book: Richard the Lionheart and Otto IV: Itinerant Kingship and the City of Cologne . The Social Politics of Medieval Diplomacy: Anglo-German Relations (1066–1307). University of Michigan Press . Joseph Patrick Huffman . 2000. 157–58.
  5. Book: Lionheart and Lackland: King Richard, King John and the Wars of Conquest . Frank McLynn . Vintage . 2007. 390.