List of monarchs II

Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-)

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen


Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-)

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.


Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]


[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-)

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.


Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]


[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence[/QUOTE]
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-)

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]

(1507-1555) Colin IV (House of Campbell) [22]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Scotland and England were brought even closer together under Colin IV. Dissatisfaction with the Pope's power considering the relative isolation of the British Isles lead to the founding the Presbytery Movement in 1512. Colin was an early convert and Prebytery spread from Scotland to England, leaving the Highlands and Normandy as Catholic bastions. With religious and political upheaval and Colin's interest in culture taking the lead, there was little resistance to an increase in Irish raids on coastal hamlets, feeding into a growing slave trade with the Ottoman Empire in which Ireland was a key element.


Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1501) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence.
[10] The militaristic Charles II crushed the Dutch Revolt, but this caused resentment which to a certain extent continues to this day. Hungry for more conquests, Charles lead an army into Scotland hoping to add the northern kingdom to his, and bolstering the sprawling Hapsburg Dynastic Empire.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-)

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]

(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]

(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]

(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]

(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin
) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother ___________ to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother _________

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]


[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin
) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]


[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin
) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]

(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]

(1599-1627) War of English Succession

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikolai.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikolai.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)
[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikolai.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]
(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]
(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]
(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld
(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]
(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]
(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]
(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)
(1827-1888) Victor I (House of Warwick-Wettin) [31]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.
[31] Inherited Saxony, and changed the family name in order to stabilise both kingdoms.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)
(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)
(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]
(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)
(1744-1769) Maximillian I (House of Mecklenburg)
[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikolai.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]

(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)

(1827-1888) Victor I (House of Warwick-Wettin) [31]
(1888-1921) Henry III (House of Warwick-Wettin)[32]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.
[31] Inherited Saxony, and changed the family name in order to stabilise both kingdoms.
[32] Henry III had a long a troubled reign. The source of this trouble was German nationalism. The German nation of Swabia lead by Frederick VII Von Berlichingen began a campaign to unite German by annexing Bavaria, Austria, and the Rhineland. Frederick VII declared war on Britain to bring Saxony into the new German state dragging France, Russia, Poland, the Italian States, Castile, Aragon and Hungary into the war (Poland, Hungary, France, and Castile on British side, and Russia, Aragon, and The Italian states on the German side) thought Britain was ultimately victorious it was a long a bloody affair, and German nationalism would continue to be a problem for Britain for a long time to come. Henry III spent next several years of his reign trying to restore Britain economically but as he grew old he began to lose power to the Witan. By the end of his reign he held little to no power.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]

(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)

(1744-1769) Maximillian I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1769-1783) Nicholas I (House of Mecklenburg)


[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikola
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]

(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)

(1827-1888) Victor I (House of Warwick-Wettin) [31]
(1888-1921) Henry III (House of Warwick-Wettin)[32]


[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.
[31] Inherited Saxony, and changed the family name in order to stabilise both kingdoms.
[32] Henry III had a long a troubled reign. The source of this trouble was German nationalism. The German nation of Swabia lead by Frederick VII Von Berlichingen began a campaign to unite German by annexing Bavaria, Austria, and the Rhineland. Frederick VII declared war on Britain to bring Saxony into the new German state dragging France, Russia, Poland, the Italian States, Castile, Aragon and Hungary into the war (Poland, Hungary, France, and Castile on British side, and Russia, Aragon, and The Italian states on the German side) thought Britain was ultimately victorious it was a long a bloody affair, and German nationalism would continue to be a problem for Britain for a long time to come. Henry III spent next several years of his reign trying to restore Britain economically but as he grew old he began to lose power to the Witan. By the end of his reign he held little to no power.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]

(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)

(1744-1769) Maximillian I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1769-1783) Nicholas I (House of Mecklenburg)

(1783-1801) Alexandra III (House of Mecklenburg) [19]

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikola
[19] Partitioned the House of Lords into the House of Bishops and the House of Nobles. Also reintroduced serfdom in Scotland. Married Prince Charles-Frederick, Jarl of Scania, Elector of the Kalmar Union.
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]

(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)

(1827-1888) Victor I (House of Warwick-Wettin) [31]
(1888-1921) Henry III (House of Warwick-Wettin)[32]

(1921-1950) Victor II (House of Warwick-Wettin)[33]

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.
[31] Inherited Saxony, and changed the family name in order to stabilise both kingdoms.
[32] Henry III had a long a troubled reign. The source of this trouble was German nationalism. The German nation of Swabia lead by Frederick VII Von Berlichingen began a campaign to unite German by annexing Bavaria, Austria, and the Rhineland. Frederick VII declared war on Britain to bring Saxony into the new German state dragging France, Russia, Poland, the Italian States, Castile, Aragon and Hungary into the war (Poland, Hungary, France, and Castile on British side, and Russia, Aragon, and The Italian states on the German side) thought Britain was ultimately victorious it was a long a bloody affair, and German nationalism would continue to be a problem for Britain for a long time to come. Henry III spent next several years of his reign trying to restore Britain economically but as he grew old he began to lose power to the Witan. By the end of his reign he held little to no power.
[33] Forced to work within the limits of his power, Victor II nevertheless accepted the strength of the Witan. His rule saw the codifying of the current British system of government, where the Executive in the person of the Monarch balances out the power of the Legislative as espoused by the Witan.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]

(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)

(1744-1769) Maximillian I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1769-1783) Nicholas I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1783-1810) Paul I (House of Mecklenburg)

[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikola
 
Kings of England (part of Normandy 1103- 1156) (In personal union with Scotland 1221-1260, 1314-1581)
Kings of Britain (1581- )

(1066-1082) Harold II (House of Godwin) [1]
(1082-1103) Edgar II 'The Ready' (House of Godwin) [2]
(1103) Lewis I (House of Godwin) [3]

(1103-1139) Richard I (House of Normandy) [4]
(1139-1156) Henry I (House of Normandy) [5]

(1156-1189) Colin I (House of Godwin) [6]
(1189-1192) Richard II (House of Normandy) [7]
(1192-1221) William I (House of Normandy) [8]

(1221-1230) Alexander I (House of Dunkeld) [9]
1230-1239 - War of Succession [10]
(1239-1260) Malcolm I (House of Dunkeld

(1255-1300) Geoffrey V 'The Handsome' (House of Anjou) [11]
(1300-1310) John I 'The Strange' (House of Anjou) [12]

(1310-1314) Philip I 'The Weak' (House of Capet) [13]
(1314-1325) Alexander II 'The Unlucky' (House of Dunkeld-Comyn) [14]
(1325-1370) Gordon I (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[15]
(1370-1409) Alexander III (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[16]
(1409-1456) Malcolm II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[17]
(1456-1460) Regency of Gordon II (House of Dunkeld-Comyn)[18]

(1460-1475) Colin II (House of Campbell) [19]
(1475-1484) Colin III (House of Campbell) [20]
(1484-1507) David I 'the Learned' (House of Campbell) [21]
(1507-1540) Alexander IV (House of Campbell) [22]
(1540-1578) James I (House of Campbell) [23]
(1578-1610) Gordon III (House of Campbell) [24]
(1610-1627) Duncan I (House of Campbell)[25]
(1627-1633) Malcolm III (House of Campbell)[26]
(1633-1640) Patrick I (House of Campbell) [27]

(1640-1651) Alexander V (House of Drake) [28]
(1651-1660) Henry II 'The Kingmaker' (House of Warwick) [29]
(1660-1719) Anne I (House of Warwick)
(1719-1799) Albert I " The Child" (House of Warwick) [30]
(1799-1827) Albert II (House of Warwick)

(1827-1888) Victor I (House of Warwick-Wettin) [31]
(1888-1921) Henry III (House of Warwick-Wettin)[32]

(1921-1950) Victor II (House of Warwick-Wettin)[33]
(1950-2009) George I (House of Warwick-Wettin)

[1] Harold II fought off the Bastard and the Norwegian in the War of the English Succession.[
[2] Killed during his campaigns against the Normans, who attempted another invasion in 1091.
[3] Killed by the Norman commanders who managed to reach London. The Norman ruler Richard becomes King of England.
[4]United Normandy and England in personal union.
[5] Henry I preferred Normandy to these cold English domains, but he wished the two holdings be kept secure from any further threats, so he absorbed England into the Duchy of Normandy.
[6] Henry's constant wars with the Capets and his attempts to exert Norman influence over the British Isles mean that eventually a combined French-Scottish Coalition beat him in 1156. As a result, the currant Godwin claimant to the throne, Colin, who had been living in exile in Scotland all his life, is proclaimed King and once again and Englishman rules England. However, the Godwins long exile in Scotland has meant that they have intermarried much with Scottish culture as well as the Scottish Royal Family and some fear that Colin (who after all has a Gaelic name) might be just as foreign as the Normans.
[7] Unfortunately for them, the Normans mount another expedition to England, rousing support against the Scottish King. He only controls southern England, however, while the North is divided by a coalition of nobles.
[8] Sought to reunite England through diplomatic means, given that his brother Richard was only able to control the south. Largely successful, though northernmost England was still out of his grasp upon his deathbed.
[9] Williams infertility as well as the infighting between the northern nobles and an assault on Norman Lands in France by the Angevins means that Scots are once again able to take advantage of the Normans troubles and invade. Although the exiled Godwins died out, they had intermarried with the Scots royal family enough so that by 1221 the Kings of Scotland had a reasonable claim to the English Throne. With Williams cousin and heir, Stephen in France, Alexander is able to bribe the Northern Nobles into siding with him and by the end of the year he is crowned King of England and England and Scotland enter a personal union.
[10] Stephen returned to England and attempted to claim the throne but Alexander, son of Alexander I was declared King by the Nobles of England and Scotland. This led to a short War of Succession. Stephen was actually killed in 1237, but his allies fought on another two years before they were executed
[11] After marrying the older and recently divorced Constance the Fair, Duchess of Brittany, Count Geoffrey V of Anjou, a mere boy of 24, invades and quickly conquerors Normandy in 1256. A stalemate emerges with Geoffrey defeating every Scottish Army sent to Normandy but unable to cross the English channel. Geoffrey eventually crossed the channel amidst the chaos surrounding King Malcolm's 'unexpected' death in a hunting accident. King Geoffrey eventually reached a peace agreement with Scotland recognizing his rule south of the Castle of Nottingham.
[12] John was born in London, the son of Geoffrey, and was a popular king. However he never took a wife, and had a 'Lord of the Bedchamber' in Maurice of Wales.
[13] A cousin of John via Geoffrey's brother Philip III of France. Also King of France. The reign is short as both English and Scottish Nobles have no wish to be ruled by an absentee French King and so he is ousted in of favour of the great-nephew of Malcolm
[14] Unified England and Scotland under one throne again, however, his reign witness many costly wars with Frances that resulted in the loss of Anjou, Brittany and much of Normandy
[15] Alexanders son Gordon ends up having a much more successful reign than his father. Ascending the throne at 18, Gordon would eventually pursue a series of campaigns against France and by the time of his death, most of Gascony, Aquitaine and parts of Normandy are back in Anglo-Scottish hands. By the end of Gordon's reign, England and Scotland are more closely united than ever and with a Dynastic empire in France to add, with Gordon attempting to show the English side of his family roots in an attempt appear less foreign.
[16] Lost Gascony to the French in the early years of his reign but had regained it and had also occupied Paris and Orleans with English forces by the end of his reign.
[17] Unlike his father, Malcolm was a weak man. He thus lost most of the French territory save northern Normandy to the Angevin branch of the Capets, led by Charles VI. Ironically, this lack of continental cares would strengthen the Anglo-Scottish Union.
[18] Malcolm II's is succeed by his grandson Gordon II, a mere baby of 4. Gordon II represented the last male heir of of the Dunkeld-Comyn Dynasty. He died in 1460 at the age of 8 from the Sweating Disease.
[19] With Gordon being the last male heir, Colin Campbell, the powerful Lord of Argyll, head of Clan Campbell and former head of Gordon II's regency council, more or less usurps the throne. However, as the influential Campbell family had married much into the Dunkeld-Comyn's and the closest legitimate heir is the King of France through the line of Philip I, there is little opposition save from those Scottish clans who oppose the Campbell's sudden rise to power. Although he has a short reign, Colin was already able to begin counterattacking the Capets in France and by the time of his death, the new dynasty seemed secure.
[20] Colin III cares little for ruling and as such the Government is run by various Royal Favorites the most famous being the Dutch Willem Janssen
[21] David I was a much more proactive ruler than his father ever was. David I assumed the throne at the height of Janssen power and much of his early reign was defined by a power struggle between the two which David I won. David I ended the long conflict with the Capets which had been going on since 1460 after winning a stunning victory over the french king Henri III at Evreux, capturing Henri III. David forced Henri III to drop his claims to England, and Normandy. To seal the treaty David married Henri III first daughter Marie. With the war over a era of peace settled over the British isles as England and Scotland boomed economically, and culturally leading to a golden age. It was with David reign that the idea of a British national identity began to form.
[22] Supported the reforming Pope Paul IV, along with Castile, Portugal, the Bohemia-led Holy Roman Empire, against the French-led Avignon Papacy, in the First Western Schism. Also laid down the groundwork for the formal union of the British crowns.
[23] James quickly signs a peace treaty with France recognizing British control over the Ports of Dunkirk and Calais.
[24] With the de facto cession of much of Normandy under his predecessor, and a peace with France (for now), Gordon was able to concentrate on intra-British relations and the colonies overseas. In 1581, Britain was formally united as a single realm to much jubilation in the cities of the new kingdom. Now he wished to secure control over the at best loosely controlled colonies in America. Basque, Breton and Norman sailors had settled the colonies along with a strong bedrock of West Country fishermen and Lowland Scots farmers. Together they had turned the wild coasts of New Britain (New York, Connecticut and New Jersey) into a thriving cluster of de facto independent city-states and relations with the natives were good. But Gordon wished to see New Britain united from its erratic form into a single unit of governance. A policy he would not live to see completed.
[25] Much of Duncan reign was focused to towards the expansion and consolidation of New Britain. During his reign the first British-Aragonese war began, which was the first major conflict between two colonial power for control of the Americas. Settlers from the city Irvine (OTL Philadelphia) got into border conflicts with Aragonese settlers coming from Neuva Barcelona (OTL Baltimore). Though these conflicts would not normally turn into war, tensions erupted when British settlers with the native allies burnt down several Aragonese settlements. The Aragonese King Marti III demanded that Duncan compensate him and punish those responsible for the act. Duncan being a young arrogant man refused and declared war. Duncan sent his brother Malcolm to seize the Aragonese colonies which he did successfully. Meanwhile Duncan himself invaded Aragon proper only to be killed and defeated at the Battle of Logrono by Marti III more disciplined army. Duncan never had any kids so the throne, and management of the war was left to his younger brother Malcolm.
[26] Malcolm's reign saw further expansion of the British colonial Empire. During this time a formal alliance with Portugal, aimed at Aragon, was formed.
[27] Malcolm's impotent, blind brother.
[28] Alexander Drake was elected by the Witan (Parliament) after Patrick died bringing an end to the viable royal line of Campbells. Drake was the grandson of the famous privateer Bernard Drake, and his prescence on the throne merely worsend Britano-Aragonese relations, though the relationship with the colonies did improve.
[29] Alexander Drake is overthrown by his close friend and the man responsible for his election the thrown, Duke Henry of Warwick also known as the Kingmaker. Many believe that Henry overthrew King Alexander V because he was unwilling to marry the Duke's daughter and that a large section of the English nobility was uncomfortable with a descendent of a pirate upon the Throne.
[30] Albert became king at teh age of one, and also lived a vary long life, his wife was a German Princess so that greatened Relations with Saxony. He is also known to increaes colonization in america.
[31] Inherited Saxony, and changed the family name in order to stabilise both kingdoms.
[32] Henry III had a long a troubled reign. The source of this trouble was German nationalism. The German nation of Swabia lead by Frederick VII Von Berlichingen began a campaign to unite German by annexing Bavaria, Austria, and the Rhineland. Frederick VII declared war on Britain to bring Saxony into the new German state dragging France, Russia, Poland, the Italian States, Castile, Aragon and Hungary into the war (Poland, Hungary, France, and Castile on British side, and Russia, Aragon, and The Italian states on the German side) thought Britain was ultimately victorious it was a long a bloody affair, and German nationalism would continue to be a problem for Britain for a long time to come. Henry III spent next several years of his reign trying to restore Britain economically but as he grew old he began to lose power to the Witan. By the end of his reign he held little to no power.
[33] Forced to work within the limits of his power, Victor II nevertheless accepted the strength of the Witan. His rule saw the codifying of the current British system of government, where the Executive in the person of the Monarch balances out the power of the Legislative as espoused by the Witan.

Edmund Ironside Lives

(1016-1037) Edmund II "Ironside" (House of Wessex) [1]
(1037-1046) Harold I (House of Wessex)
(1046-1062) Edmund III (House of Wessex)

(1062-1080) Eadwulf I (House of Northumbria) [2]
(1080-1142) Edgar (House of Northumbria) [3]
(1142-1145) Harold II (House of Northumbria)

(1145-1167) The Peasants' Revolution [4]
(1167-1345) First Repbulic of England [5]
(1345-1366) Louis I (House of Orleans)
(1366-1377) Maurice I (House of Wittlesbach) [6]
(1377-1401) Philip I (House of Northumbria-Habsburg) [7]
(1401-1425) Philip II 'The Conqueror' (House of Northumbria-Habsburg)[8]
(1425-1440) Philip III (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1440-1462) Philip IV (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)
(1462-1471) Charles I (House of Nothumbria-Hapsburg) [9]
(1471-1499) Philip V (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [10]
(1499-1530) Philip VI (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg [11]
(1530-1562) Charles II (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [12]
(1562-1565) Albert I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg) [13]
(1565-1599) Frederick I (House of Northumbria-Hapsburg)[14]

(1599-1627) War of English Succession
High Doge of England
(1627-1633) Thomas Wentworth (Thorough) [15]
(1633-1655) Erik I (House of Kalmar) [16]
(1655-1687) Margaret I (House of Kalmar) [17]
(1687-1726) Alexandra I (House of Kalmar) [18]
(1726-1744) Alexandra II (House of Kalmar)

(1744-1769) Maximillian I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1769-1783) Nicholas I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1783-1810) Paul I (House of Mecklenburg)
(1810-1828) Catherine I (House of Mecklenburg)
[1] Edmund Ironside wins the Battle of Assandun against Canute and over the coming decade or so, the Danes are effectively expelled from England, with Edmund becoming seen as a second Alfred the Great.
[2] Eadwulf, the immensely powerful Earl of Northumbria, who had effectively become Edmund III's right hand man at the expense of his son, Edgar Atheling, was able to claim that Edmund had passed the succession on to him upon his death and was crowned king. However, a bitter struggle ensues between Eadwulf's supporters and the supporters of Edgar.
[3] The longest reigning King, Edgar invaded Denmark but lost his war with the Danes and became much more introverted and left most decisions to his advisors
[4] The Peasants Revolution was a revolt started in London, and which spread throughout the Kingdom advocating the first known form of 'modern' democracy, with Peter Lougheed leading the charge.
[5] The five sons of Harold II go into exile in Europe
[6] The unruly English overthrow the French and invite the Count of Holland, Maurice, to become the "Standholder" of England in a new elected monarchy, in an effort to return to stability.
[7] The attempt at stability failed as Philip von Habsburg, Count of Tyrol claimed descent from Harold II and marched his army into London where he was named and crowned King, taking the Northumbria name to his own. For most of his reign he was involved in Wars with Maurice II, Count of Holland who tried to invade a number of times but was pushed back
[8] Philip II repulsed the last invasion of Count Maurice in 1402. Philip II secured an Alliance with the House of Orleans by marrying King Louis IVth daughter. This Alliance was instrumental in Philip II's successful conquest of Holland in 1414.
[9] Charles I reign was a disaster as english control over the Holland began to slip when a rebellion broke out against English rule. Charles I attempted to bring the the region under control but his attempts failed sparking the 20 year war, or the 1st war of Dutch independence
[10] Though forced to recognize the newly independent Grand Duchy of Holland, Philip V's reign was a general success, as England prospered under his reign.
[11] Philip VI's reign witnesses the creation of the First English colony in the Philippines (Newfoundland)
[12] The founding of the city of New Bristol on the Hudson River was the high point of Charles' reign. Other than that, his rule degenerated into squabbles with National Estate (Parliament) and he died an angry and dissolute man.
[13] Albert inherited a shaky throne from his father. Raise to be a absolutist king Albert struck back against the National Estate eliminating many of the privileges. This only served to make the him more unpopular and turn the people against him. Finally National Estate had enough and remembering the First English revolution against Harold II, revolted and took much of southern england. Albert was forced to flee London and began to gather his forces but was assassinated by Republican radical James McGibbons. Albert's brother __________ was quickly crowned in Oxford and Second English Revolution began.
[14] Frederick was a more politically adept man, and knew he had to work with the National Estate. This made him a more popular king than his brother, yet the line of the Northumbria Hapsburgs died with him, as all of his children predeceased him.
[15] The war came to an end, with the monarchy expelled and a Second Republic established and Thomas Wentworth became the first High Doge of All England. His Thorough Party sought to centralise power and create an efficient state to prevent a Hapsburg reconquista. However, the fall of the English Hapsburgs soon lead to a general lapse in the breadth of the Greater Hapsburg Empire.
[16] The Danish King and High King of the Union of Kalmar Christian III invades England to remove the Republic from power. After successfully conquering England he names his youngest son Erik as King.
[17] Erik and his queen Catherine Vasa are incapable of producing a son, but no less than 6 princesses are born to the royal couple. Erik's death brings his oldest daughter Margaret to the throne. Margaret marries a Scottish nobleman and becomes a great patron of the arts, and commissions Sir Christopher Wren to construct great architectural masterpieces for her. Unfortunately, her patronage for science becomes somewhat misguided, as she spends massive royal funds on projects to produce a Philosopher's Stone, project that receives more and more attention as the queen visibly starts to age. She dies out of mercury poisoning after having consumed an elixir her court alchemist had prepared for her, who is readily tried and executed for treason, regicide and devil-worship. To this day, the name of the alchemist, Isaac Newton, is synonymous with traitor in the English language.
[18] Because Margaret was unable to produce a child, her sister, Alexandra, ascends to the throne, marrying Russian Prince Nikola
 
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