Born: 850-872 (circa), United Kingdom
Died: 12 June 918
Country most active: United Kingdom
Also known as: NA
Æthelflæd was an Anglo-Saxon warrior queen in 9th and 10th century England, who fought to protect her land from Viking invasion.
The princess of Wessex she was married to Æthelred circa 886 to create an alliance between Wessex and the kingdom of Mercia. On the way to the wedding, she personally fought off a Viking attack, which may have been an assassination attempt to prevent the marriage. She effectively ruled Mercia almost from the beginning of her marriage, particularly after Æthelred began to suffer a wasting illness in 902 and, with her brother Edward the Elder, played a key role in routing the Danes from eastern England. After her husband died in 911, she received the title “Lady of the Mercians.” A brilliant military strategist, she led her forces in repelling a Viking attack on the port of Chester in 905, and in 907 she took an army deep into Danish East Anglia to retrieve the bones of a Christian saint. In 917 she went to war against the Vikings at Derby and against Welsh kings who had been opening their borders to Viking forces. This tactical move led to alliances with some Welsh rulers. A cunning politician, she cultivated ties with the king of Alba (modern-day Scotland) and even with disaffected Viking lords. She also captured Derby and Leicester and remained in the thick of fight against the Danes until her death in 918, just days before the Vikings surrendered to her at York and accepted her as their overlord. Her decades of work resulted in a combined kingdom of Mercia and Wessex that lay the foundation for a united nation of England.