Död omkring 785.
Ealhmund (d. 785?), also known as Alckmund of Wessex, was a King of Kent (c. 784 - c.
785). The 784 entry of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions Ealhmund as the father of Egbert,
but this is uncertain.
Ealhmund probably became king following the death of Egbert II around the year 784. There is
little historical evidence for his reign. A charter of 784 survives, in which Ealhmund granted
land to the Abbot of Reculver. Significantly, this charter makes no mention of Offa of Mercia,
who had ruled Kent directly or indirectly for most of the 760s and 770s; we may consider this
as evidence that Ealhmund was acting independent of Offa's authority, perhaps as a
consequence of a possible Kentish victory at the Battle of Otford in 776.
If this was the case, however, it did not last: Offa invaded Kent again around the year 785 and
Ealhmund was probably killed in battle. After this, Offa ruled Kent directly.
Preceded by:
Egbert II King of Kent Succeeded by:
Eadbert II
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ealhmund_of_Kent"
Levnadsbeskrivning
Död omkring 785.
Ealhmund (d. 785?), also known as Alckmund of Wessex, was a King of Kent (c. 784 - c.
785). The 784 entry of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle mentions Ealhmund as the father of Egbert,
but this is uncertain.
Ealhmund probably became king following the death of Egbert II around the year 784. There is
little historical evidence for his reign. A charter of 784 survives, in which Ealhmund granted
land to the Abbot of Reculver. Significantly, this charter makes no mention of Offa of Mercia,
who had ruled Kent directly or indirectly for most of the 760s and 770s; we may consider this
as evidence that Ealhmund was acting independent of Offa's authority, perhaps as a
consequence of a possible Kentish victory at the Battle of Otford in 776.
If this was the case, however, it did not last: Offa invaded Kent again around the year 785 and
Ealhmund was probably killed in battle. After this, Offa ruled Kent directly.
Preceded by:
Egbert II King of Kent Succeeded by:
Eadbert II
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ealhmund_of_Kent"
Gifte och barn
Gift
.
Egbert av Wessex.
Kung.
Född omkring 770. [1]
Död 839. [1]
Begravd i Winchester, Hampshire. [1]
Egbert (also Ecgbehrt or Ecgbert) (c. 770 - July 839) was King of Wessex from 802 until his
death. Under Egbert, Wessex rose to become the most powerful of the Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms, overthrowing the supremacy of Mercia.
A somewhat difficult question has arisen as to the parentage of Egbert. Under the year 825,
the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that in his eastern conquests Egbert recovered what had
been the rightful property of his kin. The father of Egbert was called Ealhmund, and we find an
Ealhmund, king in Kent, mentioned in a charter dated 784, who is identified with Egbert's
father in a late addition to the Chronicle under the date 784. It is possible, however, that the
Chronicle in 825 refers to some claim through Ine of Wessex from whose brother Ingeld Egbert
was descended.
After the murder of King Cynewulf in 786, Egbert may have contested the succession, but the
throne went to Beorhtric, an ally of Offa of Mercia. Starting probably in 789, Egbert went into
exile after being expelled by Offa and Beorhtric. He spent this exile with the Franks on the
continent, and although it is said to have lasted three years, some historians have suggested
that this period may have actually lasted thirteen years (789-802), as this would account for
Egbert's whereabouts during the whole period preceding Beorhtric's death.
Beorhtric ruled subject to the Mercian kings (Offa and, from 796, Coenwulf), and Egbert
probably sought greater independence for Wessex. He was acknowledged as king by the
West Saxons following Beorhtric's death in 802, but on the same day as his accession to the
throne, Æthelmund, earl of the Hwicce, led a raid into Wessex. Æthelmund was defeated and
killed by Weoxtan, earl of Wiltshire, who also lost his life in the battle.
In 815 Egbert ravaged the whole of the territories of the West Welsh, which probably at this
time did not include much more than Cornwall; it is probably from his reign that Cornwall can be
considered subject to Wessex. The next important occurrence in the reign was the defeat of
Beornwulf of Mercia at a place called Ellandun in 825. After this victory, Kent, Surrey, Sussex
and Essex submitted to Wessex; while the East Anglians, who rose against Mercian rule and
slew Beornwulf shortly afterwards, acknowledged Egbert as overlord. In 829 the king
conquered Mercia, and Northumbria accepted him as overlord after refusing to fight his forces
at Dore (now a suburb of Sheffield). In 830 he led a successful expedition against the Welsh,
and it was in the same year that Mercia regained its independence under Wiglaf, although it is
uncertain whether this was achieved through a rebellion or was the result of a grant by Egbert
to Wiglaf. In 836 Egbert was defeated by the Danes, but in 838 he won a battle against them
and their allies the West Welsh at Hingston Down in Cornwall.
Egbert married Redburga, a Frankish princess (possibly a sister-in-law of the emperor
Charlemagne), and had two sons and a daughter. Egbert died in about 839, and was buried at
Winchester. He was succeeded by his son, King Ethelwulf of Wessex.
The image of Egbert is an imaginary portrait drawn by an unknown artist.
[edit]
References
This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, a publication in the
public domain.
Preceded by:
Wiglaf King of Mercia Succeeded by:
Wiglaf
Preceded by:
Beorhtric King of Wessex Succeeded by:
Ethelwulf of Wessex
Preceded by:
Offa of Mercia Bretwalda
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egbert_of_Wessex"