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Ambrosius Aurelianus [called Emrys Wledig] (fl. 5th cent.), military leader  

David E. Thornton

Ambrosius Aurelianus [called Emrys Wledig] (fl. 5th cent.), military leader, successfully resisted the Anglo-Saxon advance across Britain. What little specific information can be established about him and his activities derives from chapter 25 of the De excidio Britanniae by Gildas, which was the source for ...

Article

Arthur (supp. fl. in or before 6th cent.), legendary warrior and supposed king of Britain  

O. J. Padel

Arthur (supp. fl. in or before 6th cent.), legendary warrior and supposed king of Britain, has an attested career that is entirely posthumous. From obscure beginnings in British legend, he became internationally known in the twelfth century, particularly through the success of Geoffrey of Monmouth's...

Article

Brennan, Michael [Mícheál] (1896–1986), Irish revolutionary and general  

David Fitzpatrick

Brennan, Michael [Mícheál] (1896–1986), Irish revolutionary and general, was born on 2 February 1896 at Gortgarraun, near Meelick, co. Clare, the youngest of three rebel sons of Patrick Brennan, a tenant farmer (1865–1901), and Mary (1862/3–1939), daughter of Michael Clancy from Rathurd, co. Limerick...

Article

Caesar [Gaius Julius Caesar] (100–44 bc), politician, author, and military commander  

T. P. Wiseman

Caesar [Gaius Julius Caesar] (100–44 bc), politician, author, and military commander, was born on 13 Quinctilis (July) 100 bc, probably at Rome, the son of Gaius Julius Caesar, a patrician of old but recently undistinguished family whose brother-in-law was Gaius Marius, and Aurelia...

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Cover Caesar (100–44bc)
Caesar (100– bc44) head © Copyright The British Museum

Article

Calgacus [Galgacus] (fl. c. ad 83/4), chieftain in Caledonia  

G. S. Maxwell

Calgacus [Galgacus] (fl. c. ad 83/4), chieftain in Caledonia, was the British war leader whom Tacitus represents as exhorting the confederate host which opposed a Roman army under Cn. Julius Agricola at the battle of 'Mons Graupius'. The site of this conflict, in which upwards of (reportedly) 30,000 native troops united to defend ...

Article

Calveley, Sir Hugh (d. 1394), military commander  

Kenneth Fowler

Calveley, Sir Hugh (d. 1394), military commander, was the son of David Calveley of Lea in Cheshire and his first wife, Joan.

Calveley served his military apprenticeship in the war of succession in Brittany (1341–64), in which the English supported the partisans of ...

Article

Clare, Richard fitz Gilbert de [called Strongbow], second earl of Pembroke [earl of Striguil] (c. 1130–1176), warrior  

M. T. Flanagan

Clare, Richard fitz Gilbert de [called Strongbow], second earl of Pembroke [earl of Striguil] (c. 1130–1176), warrior, was the son of Gilbert fitz Gilbert (d. 6 Jan? 1148), whom King Stephen created earl of Pembroke in 1138 and to whom the sobriquet ...

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Cover Clinton, Edward Fiennes de, first earl of Lincoln (1512–1585)

Clinton, Edward Fiennes de, first earl of Lincoln (1512–1585)  

Maker: unknown artist

In 

Edward Fiennes de Clinton, first earl of Lincoln (1512–1585) by unknown artist, 1584 © National Portrait Gallery, London

Article

Clinton, Edward Fiennes de, first earl of Lincoln (1512–1585), military commander  

Anne Duffin

Clinton, Edward Fiennes de, first earl of Lincoln (1512–1585), military commander, was the only son and heir of Thomas Fiennes de Clinton, eighth Baron Clinton and Saye (c.1490–1517), and his wife, Joan, illegitimate daughter of Sir Edward Poynings (1459–1521). Thomas, whose seat was at ...

Article

Courcy [Courci], John de (d. 1219?), conqueror of Ulster  

Seán Duffy

Courcy [Courci], John de (d. 1219?), conqueror of Ulster, styled by contemporaries prince of Ulster, is of uncertain parentage. He was without doubt a member of the well-known family who took their name from Courcy-sur-Dives in Calvados and who were lords of Stoke Courcy (Stogursey)...

Article

Dafydd [David] Gam (d. 1415), warrior  

T. F. Tout

revised by R. R. Davies

Dafydd [David] Gam (d. 1415), warrior, was descended lineally from the native Welsh rulers of Brycheiniog; his own pedigree, which can be documentarily established from the mid-thirteenth century, runs as follows: Dafydd Gam ap Llywelyn ap Hywel Fychan ap Hywel ab Einion Sais...

Article

Ealdred (d. 933?), leader of the Northumbrians  

Benjamin T. Hudson

Ealdred (d. 933?), leader of the Northumbrians, was the son of Eadulf and lord of Bamburgh. He was the most important Anglo-Saxon in Northumbria during the early tenth century, a time of renewed viking activity, and the last representative of an independent Anglo-Saxon royal family in the north. His father, ...

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Cover Edward, prince of Wales and of Aquitaine (1330–1376)
Edward, prince of Wales and of Aquitaine (1330–1376) tomb effigy by kind permission of the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury; photographer: Mrs Mary Tucker

Article

Edward [Edward of Woodstock; known as the Black Prince], prince of Wales and of Aquitaine (1330–1376), heir to the English throne and military commander  

Richard Barber

Edward [Edward of Woodstock; known as the Black Prince], prince of Wales and of Aquitaine (1330–1376), heir to the English throne and military commander, was the eldest son of Edward III (1312–1377) and Philippa of Hainault (1310x15?–1369).

Article

Gerontius (d. 411), Roman general  

R. S. O. Tomlin

Gerontius (d. 411), Roman general, was commander-in-chief (magister militum) successively of the usurpers Constantine III and Maximus. Gerontius was a native of Britain; his name is Greek, but since the third century it had been popular in Rome's western provinces, and has survived in Welsh as ...

Article

Haldane, Sir (James) Aylmer Lowthorpe (1862–1950), army officer and author  

Andy Simpson

Haldane, Sir (James) Aylmer Lowthorpe (1862–1950), army officer and author, was born on 17 November 1862 at 14 Stafford Street, Edinburgh, the only son and sixth of seven children of Daniel Rutherford Haldane (1824–1887), physician, and his wife, Charlotte Elizabeth Lowthorpe (d...

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Cover Haldane, Sir (James) Aylmer Lowthorpe (1862–1950)

Haldane, Sir (James) Aylmer Lowthorpe (1862–1950)  

Maker: Bassano

In 

Sir (James) Aylmer Lowthorpe Haldane (1862–1950) by Bassano, 1922 © National Portrait Gallery, London

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Cover Hawkwood, Sir John (d. 1394)

Hawkwood, Sir John (d. 1394)  

Maker: Paolo Uccello

In 

Sir John Hawkwood (d. 1394) by Paolo Uccello, 1436 photograph: AKG London

Article

Hawkwood, Sir John (d. 1394), military commander  

Kenneth Fowler

Hawkwood, Sir John (d. 1394), military commander, was the second son of Gilbert Hawkwood, a tanner and minor landowner at Sible Hedingham, Essex, where the family had held land since the beginning of the thirteenth century. The date of his birth is not recorded, but he was evidently in his early manhood by the time of his father's death in 1340, since, along with his elder brother, also called ...