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20 Minute Monarch

20 Minute Monarch

By: Audacious Audio
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A weekly, 20-minute romp through the lives and reigns of every English and British king and queen from Alfred the Great to Elizabeth II. Host Pete and historian Chris serve up chatty, accurate, and lightly humorous episodes that are perfect for commutes, tea breaks, or anyone who loves history without the heavy textbook tone.Audacious Audio World
Episodes
  • Edmund Ironside (1016)
    May 18 2026

    In Episode 12 of 20 Minute Monarch, Pete and Chris turn to one of the most energetic and tragic figures in English history: Edmund Ironside.

    The son of Æthelred II inherited a kingdom collapsing under Viking assault. Yet unlike many around him, Edmund refused to surrender. In a single astonishing year — 1016 — he raised armies, fought repeated campaigns against the forces of Cnut the Great, survived betrayals by powerful nobles, and briefly became king of a battered England.

    We follow Edmund’s rise from rebellious prince to desperate defender of the kingdom, including his dramatic campaigns across southern England, the brutal Battle of Assandun, and the eventual division of England between Edmund and Cnut. We also examine the mysterious circumstances of Edmund’s sudden death just weeks later — and how that death effectively ended the old Anglo-Saxon royal resistance to Danish conquest.

    Finally, Pete and Chris assess Edmund’s legacy. Was he England’s last great Anglo-Saxon warrior king? Could he realistically have defeated Cnut? And why has history remembered him so differently from kings like Alfred or Harold Godwinson?

    As always, the episode balances storytelling with source-based history, drawing on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and modern scholarship to separate fact from legend.

    England in crisis after the death of Æthelred.

    • Edmund’s rise from prince to military leader.
    • Repeated campaigns against Cnut the Great in 1016.
    • Betrayal, divided loyalties, and collapsing English unity.
    • The Battle of Assandun and its devastating consequences.
    • The division of England between Edmund and Cnut.
    • Edmund’s sudden death and the end of Anglo-Saxon resistance.
    • Reign: April–November 1016.
    • Father: Æthelred II.
    • Main rival: Cnut the Great.
    • Nickname: “Ironside” — probably reflecting toughness and battlefield resilience.
    • Key battle: Assandun (1016).
    • Historical significance: effectively the final major Anglo-Saxon military resistance before Danish rule.


    • Anglo-Saxon Chronicle — essential primary narrative for 1016.
    • Oxford DNB entry on Edmund Ironside.
    • Frank Stenton’s Anglo-Saxon England.
    • Modern works on Cnut and the Danish conquest of England.
    • British Library resources on late Anglo-Saxon kingship and warfare.
    • #EdmundIronside #AngloSaxon #VikingAge #HistoryPodcast #20MinuteMonarch

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    21 mins
  • Swein Forkbeard (1013-14)
    Apr 20 2026

    In Episode 11 of 20 Minute Monarch, Pete and Chris turn to one of the most formidable figures of the Viking Age: Swein Forkbeard.

    We trace Swein’s rise as King of Denmark, his long-running campaigns against England, and how years of raids and pressure finally culminated in full conquest in 1013. This is the moment when Æthelred II fled the country — one of the most dramatic breaks in English royal history.

    We explore the mechanics of conquest: shifting loyalties among English nobles, the collapse of resistance, and why Swein succeeded where others had failed. We also examine his extremely short reign as king of England (1013–1014), his sudden death, and the immediate scramble for power that followed.

    Finally, we look ahead: how Swein’s actions paved the way for his son, Cnut the Great, and a new North Sea empire.

    As always, Pete and Chris balance storytelling with source-based history, drawing on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and modern scholarship to separate fact from saga.

    • Intro & recap of where we are in the story.
    • Who was Swein Forkbeard? (background, Denmark, family).
    • Years of raids and pressure on England.
    • 1013: the conquest of England — how it happened.
    • The collapse of Æthelred’s rule and exile.
    • Swein’s short reign and sudden death in 1014.
    • Legacy: setting the stage for Cnut and a Viking England.
    • Ruled England: 1013–1014.
    • Primary title: King of Denmark before conquering England.
    • Key achievement: first Viking king to successfully conquer and rule England.
    • Opponent: Æthelred II.
    • Legacy: father of Cnut the Great — his conquest made Cnut’s rule possible.
    • Anglo-Saxon Chronicle — key narrative for 1013–1014.
    • Oxford DNB — Swein Forkbeard entry.
    • Scholarly works on Viking England and the Danish conquest.
    • British Library resources on late Anglo-Saxon manuscripts and Viking history.#SweynForkbeard #Vikings #VikingEngland #AngloSaxonEngland #Cnut #Aethelred #MedievalHistory #HistoryPodcast #LearnHistory #DidYouKnow #BritishHistory #HistoryBuff #PodcastRecommendations
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    20 mins
  • Aethelred the Unready P2 (978-1013 & 1014-16)
    Apr 5 2026

    Episode 10 completes our two-part deep dive into Æthelred II — and this is where the story turns sharply.

    We open with the St Brice’s Day massacre (1002): what the sources say, what they don’t, and why it proved a disastrous turning point. From there, Pete and Chris track the chain reaction — renewed and intensified Danish campaigns, the rise of leaders such as Sweyn Forkbeard, and a pattern of English defeats that put immense pressure on royal authority.

    We examine policy under strain: tribute (Danegeld), shifting military responses, and the role of advisers and regional elites. The narrative builds to one of the most extraordinary episodes in English royal history — Æthelred’s flight into exile in 1013 and his return to the throne in 1014, one of the rare cases of a king losing and regaining his crown.

    We close by weighing legacy. Is “the Unready” fair? What did unræd really mean? And if not that, what should we call him instead? Pete and Chris offer alternative epithets — and invite listeners to decide.

    As always, the tone is friendly and the approach source-led, drawing on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and modern scholarship to separate evidence from later storytelling.

    Picking up the story: the St Brice’s Day massacre (1002) — context and consequences.

    • Danish escalation: campaigns linked to Sweyn Forkbeard and sustained pressure on England.
    • A run of defeats: what went wrong militarily and politically.
    • Danegeld and decision-making under pressure.
    • 1013–1014: exile and the rare royal return.
    • Final years and death (1016): a kingdom in transition.
    • Legacy debate: was “Unready” deserved? Alternative epithets.
    • Anglo-Saxon Chronicle — essential contemporary narrative for 1002–1016.


    Suggested further reading:

    • Oxford DNB entry on Æthelred II — authoritative overview.
    • Works by Simon Keynes, Ann Williams, and other historians of late Anglo-Saxon England.
    • British Library resources on manuscripts, charters, and coinage of the period.Æthelred the Unready Part 2, Aethelred II 1002 St Brice’s Day massacre, Viking invasions England 11th century, Sweyn Forkbeard England, Danegeld, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle 1013 exile, king returns to throne England, early medieval England podcast, 20 Minute Monarch

    #Aethelred #AethelredTheUnready #AngloSaxonEngland #Vikings #SweynForkbeard #Danegeld #StBricesDay #MedievalHistory #HistoryPodcast #LearnHistory #DidYouKnow #BritishHistory #HistoryBuff #PodcastRecommendations

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    22 mins
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