William I the Overwinner

For the sundering, see Ƿilliam ðe Overwinner (William the Conquerer).

William I of Northmenland (Mean English: William the Conqueror, Engelnorthish (olden spelling): Willaume le Fiz le Conquerour or, French: Guillaume - le - Conquérant , Greater Anglish: Wilhelm of Northmenland), also known as William the or  William the Overwinner, was Northlandish Alderman and the first Northman king of England,  from 1066 to 1087.

As an of Gaange Rolf, an exiled Viking, William was the Alderman of Northmenland from 1035 onwards. Following a long struggle to settle his giftseat, William had no to his standing as Alderman by the year 1060 and took off the Normanish Ingang of England—sithence the Hild at Hastings—in 1066. The rest of his life was marked by struggles to fasten his hold over England and his mainland holdings, as well as tending to his upstandly son, Robert Curthose.

William was the son of the unwed Robert, Alderman of Northland and a tanner by the name of Herleva. His ill-gotten standing, as well as his youth, made toil after he aftercame his father, as did the lawlessness that broke out in the first year of his.