198:" sent his son to acquire Scotland. And when they reported to his father that he had been slain in battle, said, 'Did he receive the mortal wound in front of his body, or behind?' The messengers said. 'In front'. And he replied: 'I rejoice wholly, for I would deem myself or my son worthy of no meaner death'. Siward therefore marched into Scotland and conquered the king battle ... "
148:"At this time earl Siward went with a great army into Scotland, with both fleet and a land-force; and fought against the Scots, and put to flight the king Mac Bethad, and slew all that were best in the land, and brought thence much war-spoil, such as no man obtained before; And there were slain his son Osbeorn, and his sister's son Siward, and some of his
231:
Osbeorn's death left Siward's legacy in danger. When he died the following year, his only surviving son
Waltheof (Osbeorn's brother) was underage and thus did not succeed immediately to the whole territory ruled by Siward, Northumbria going instead to
168:
is not accepted as historical by modern historians, resting as it does on later medieval accounts. The earliest mention of
Dunsinane as the location of the battle being the early 15th-century account by
115:(died 1055). He is one of two known sons of Siward, believed to be the elder. While it is normally assumed he was the son of Siward's Bamburgh wife Ælfflæd, it has been suggested by
214:, claimed that Osbeorn, called "Osbert Bulax", was killed by Northumbrians while his father was absent in Scotland. The accounts in Henry of Huntingdon and the
695:
619:
Chroniques Anglo-Normandes: recueil d'extraits et d'écrits relatifs à l'histoire de
Normandie et d'Angleterre pendant les XIe et XIIe siècles
665:
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228:'s account related activity in 1053, an agreement made between Siward and Mac Bethad, but a death of Osbeorn is not mentioned.
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211:
131:
685:
112:
67:
135:
690:
476:
The Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle: An edition with TEI P4 markup, expressed in XML and translated to XHTML1.1 using XSL
164:, and is known variously as the "Battle of the Seven Sleepers" or the "Battle of Dunsinane". The location
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that
Osbeorn's mother was not Ælfflæd. The nickname "Bulax" probably represents the
240:
617:
377:, pp. 172–3, for a discussion of the possibility that Dunsinane was the location
207:
84:
600:
The Norman
Conquest of the North: The Region and Its Transformation, 1000–1135
522:
124:
149:
120:
521:
Aird, William M. (2004), "Siward, earl of
Northumbria (d. 1055), magnate",
558:
The
Chronicle of John of Worcester. Volume II, The Annals from 450 To 1066
49:
245:
17:
107:, also spelled Osbjorn and Osbert (died c. 1054), given the nickname
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269:
180:, the names of the slain are omitted, an omission repeated by the
542:(1991 revised & corrected ed.), Stamford: Paul Watkins,
219:
579:
The
Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and Independence
194:
related that
Osbeorn had been sent to Scotland ahead of Siward:
556:
Darlington, R. R.; McGurk, P.; Bray, Jennifer, eds. (1995),
514:
Early Sources of Scottish History A.D. 500 to 1286 (2 vols)
474:
160:
This battle was fought somewhere in Scotland north of the
540:
Scottish Annals from English Chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286
627:
Reaney, Percy Hide; Wilson, Richard Middlewood (1991),
130:
According to the most reliable sources, he died at the
138:, King of the Scots, in 1054. Under this year, the
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560:, Oxford Medieval Texts, Oxford: Clarendon Press,
134:, fought somewhere in Scotland between Siward and
647:The Cultivation of Saga in Anglo-Saxon England
416:, vol. i, p. 594, n. 3 (from p. 593); Michel,
8:
339:, s.a. 1054; translation based on Anderson,
272:, s.a. 1054; translation based on Anderson,
152:, and also of the king's, on the day of the
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581:, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,
524:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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666:Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
399:Translation and notes in, Anderson,
386:Darlington, McGurk and Bray (eds.),
222:devoted to the life of Earl Siward.
239:Osbeorn Bulax was fictionalised as
202:Another legendary account, in the
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218:are thought to be derived from a
629:A Dictionary of English Surnames
616:Michel, Francisque, ed. (1836),
538:Anderson, Alan Orr, ed. (1908),
325:A Dictionary of English Surnames
390:, vol. ii, pp. 574, 575, n. 15
388:Chronicle of John of Worcester
1:
696:11th-century English nobility
495:, Stroud: Sutton Publishing,
144:, recension D, related that:
649:, Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd
516:, Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd
132:Battle of the Seven Sleepers
373:, pp. 35–6; see Aitchison,
113:Siward, Earl of Northumbria
73:Ælfflæd or Godgifu (mother)
68:Siward, Earl of Northumbria
717:
602:, London: Croom Helm Ltd,
418:Chroniques Anglo-Normandes
433:, pp. 75, 76, 127–33, 136
98:
33:Osbeorn (Osbjorn, Osbert)
491:Aitchison, Nick (1999),
136:Mac Bethad mac Findlaích
156:(July 27)."
645:Wright, C. E. (1939),
216:Vita et Passio Waldevi
204:Vita et Passio Waldevi
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176:In recension C of the
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631:, London: Routledge,
622:, vol. II, Rouen
493:Macbeth: Man and Myth
210:of Osbeorn's brother
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178:Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
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141:Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
701:11th-century Vikings
596:Kapelle, William E.
479:, Tony Jebson, 2007
431:Cultivation of Saga
251:William Shakespeare
192:Henry of Huntingdon
686:Anglo-Norse people
510:Anderson, Alan Orr
420:, vol. iii, p. 110
323:Reany and Wilson,
369:, p. 90; Duncan,
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276:, pp. 86–87
208:hagiography
85:Northumbria
675:Categories
467:References
412:Anderson,
343:, pp. 85–6
150:housecarls
123:term for "
662:Osbeorn 2
455:Kapelle,
442:Kapelle,
310:Kapelle,
285:Kapelle,
182:Chronicle
166:Dunsinane
121:Old Norse
81:Residence
598:(1979),
577:(2002),
530:18 March
483:18 March
429:Wright,
371:Kingship
337:ASC MS D
327:, p. 351
270:ASC MS D
212:Waltheof
91:Nickname
70:(father)
50:Scotland
403:, p. 85
375:Macbeth
367:Macbeth
356:, p. 90
354:Macbeth
289:, p. 30
246:Macbeth
125:Poleaxe
105:Osbeorn
61:Parents
18:Osbeorn
635:
606:
585:
564:
546:
499:
257:Notes
109:Bulax
94:Bulax
633:ISBN
604:ISBN
583:ISBN
562:ISBN
544:ISBN
532:2008
497:ISBN
485:2009
220:saga
206:, a
44:Died
664:at
249:by
184:of
127:".
677::
294:^
253:.
236:.
188:.
173:.
56:)
20:)
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