 ..en ag oedw'r cyfridog, wedi bod yn 50 yma, sydd y 870 a 920, y dyfodol geografiaeth yng nglŵs, Saxon, Ynglyn, yn cynhyrchu i'r ddweud i'r cymdeithas yng Nghyrch yn gyffredig. Mae'r catolistau i ddod yma er ein gwaith yn ymgyrcholi a'r gweithi'r cyfridog yn gwybod, yw'r Cyfridog yw yw'r cyfridog yw Lwyddo. Alfrid rhaen i'r gweithio ar gyfer 30 yma, ar 711 a'r 899, felly oedd yn dweud o'r credu sydd yn bwysig ar y 80s. Bydd yn rhan o'r ffordd, benodd, a'r dweud o'r rhan o'r cyfeirio, ac yn dweud o'r cyflig. Alfa'r llyfr yn ymddiadau, yn ddod i'r cerddolion. Rheidio'n gwirio gweithio gweithio, i'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio, i'r cyfligio'n cyfligio, i'r gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio. He's a great organiser of the Kingdom constructing fortresses and with a strategic eye to the future. But I think it's the cultural project that is the most wonderful to our eyes and the most extraordinary, especially given the fact that he was probably a literate point when he became king. Learning in England had collapsed under Viking invasions, literacy had collapsed, the ability to write even English, let alone Latin. We know about the programme mainly because we have the old English preface to the translation of Pope Gregory's pastoral care, in which he sets out his plan for the revival of the English language and the translation of books which are most necessary for all men to know from Latin into English. It's important to recognise that at the beginning of the 870s when he first became king, Alfred was just king of the west Saxons and of the men of Kent. It's then in the 880s that Alfred comes to be known by a different title, King of the Anglo-Saxons, and it was that position and title which he seems to have bequeathed to his son, Edward the Elder. It's important therefore that when Athelstan came to the throne in 924, and perhaps when he was crowned in 925, he seems to have been crowned king of the Anglo-Saxons. However, it was Athelstan's own achievement within a few years of his coronation that he then came to be known as King of the English. So many crucial things in the makeup of English and British culture, their roots lie back in the Anglo-Saxon period. So, I'd say it was a transformative and a crucially formative period in the history of the British Isles and especially in the history of the English state and the English people.