Jaspal Ubhi wrote:I am, however, not so sure that Alfred the Great would fit so comfortably amongst so illustrious a list. He certainly was no warrior, indeed he was almost constantly ill, as for as a strategos well...just think of what happened as Rochester, a victory yes but nowhere near what it should have been.
On the other hand he did alot to encourage learning and his system of setting up defensive, permanently garrisoned burhs around his country was an effective tactic.

Wrong, utterly wrong -- Alfred was indeed a warrior, not just a scholar. In his situation, he could not have afforded to be less than a warrior yet have fared so well as he did.
Alfred, along with brothers, fought in probably nine battles with the Danes before he even became king. After becoming king, he had to fight many more battles with the Danes. Indeed, he initially had to make a comback from near total defeat to eventual liberation of Wessex with consequent ousting of his invasive foe back into the Danelaw.
During that comeback time, Alfred existed off the land like some kind of wild beast for months, building up a new army as he roamed the land to gather men and resources. Alfred was willing to be savage, to do so personally in warfare : There was a battle where Alfred and his men fought the Danes, and sent them into retreat for their fort. Alfred and his men did not let up, pursuing the Danes so quickly that when he and his men caught some of the Danes who failed to make it to the gates, they slaughtered them ruthlessly right in front of that fort.
Alfred pushed back the Norse into the Danelaw to reconstitute a unified England. He built a new navy for England with ships of his own new innovative design, one that successfully engaged their enemies.
And yes, Alfred did indeed establish a unified and mutually supportive system of burghs (fort-towns) to bolster his country.
Alfred won some battles and he lost some battles -- yet he never stopped fighting, and he got back what others tried to take away from him, and consequently improved the lot of his folk.
Read
The Life of Alfred by his Welsh clegyman-biographer Asser; and a fine modern scholarly book
Alfred: Warrior King by John Peddie.