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  2. Ecgberht, King of Wessex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecgberht,_King_of_Wessex

    Historians do not agree on Ecgberht's ancestry. The earliest version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Parker Chronicle, begins with a genealogical preface tracing the ancestry of Ecgberht's son Æthelwulf back through Ecgberht, Ealhmund (thought to be king Ealhmund of Kent), and the otherwise unknown Eafa and Eoppa to Ingild, brother of King Ine of Wessex, who abdicated the throne in 726.

  3. Ecgberht I of Northumbria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecgberht_I_of_Northumbria

    Ecgberht (died 873) was king of Northumbria in the middle of the 9th century. This period of Northumbrian history is poorly recorded, and very little is known of Ecgberht. He first appears following the death of kings Ælla and Osberht in battle against the Vikings of the Great Heathen Army at York on 21 March 867. Symeon of Durham records:

  4. Æthelberht, King of Wessex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Æthelberht,_King_of_Wessex

    Ecgberht's nearest connection to a previous king of Wessex was as a great-great-grandson of Ingild, brother of King Ine (688–726), but he was believed to be a paternal descendant of Cerdic, the founder of the West Saxon dynasty. This made Ecgberht an ætheling – a prince who had a legitimate claim to the throne. But in the ninth and tenth ...

  5. Æthelwulf, King of Wessex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Æthelwulf,_King_of_Wessex

    Æthelwulf's father Ecgberht was king of Wessex from 802 to 839. His mother's name is unknown, and he had no recorded siblings. He is known to have had two wives in succession, and so far as is known, Osburh , the senior of the two, was the mother of all his children.

  6. Ecgberht II of Northumbria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecgberht_II_of_Northumbria

    Ecgberht was a king in Northumbria in the late Ninth Century.Very little is known of his reign. Unlike his predecessor King Ricsige, who may have ruled most of the kingdom of Northumbria following the expulsion of the first King Ecgberht in 872, this Ecgberht ruled only the northern part of Northumbria, the lands beyond the Tyne in northern England and southern Scotland.

  7. Battle of Hingston Down - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Hingston_Down

    The Battle of Hingston Down took place in 838, probably at Hingston Down in Cornwall between a combined force of Cornish and Vikings on the one side, and West Saxons led by Ecgberht, King of Wessex on the other. The result was a West Saxon victory. [1] According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which called the Cornish the West Welsh:

  8. Battle of Reading (871) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Reading_(871)

    A depiction of Alfred the Great. The Battle of Reading was a victory for a Danish Viking army over a West Saxon force on about 4 January 871 at Reading in Berkshire.The Vikings were led by Bagsecg and Halfdan Ragnarsson and the West Saxons by King Æthelred and his brother, the future King Alfred the Great.

  9. List of monarchs of Wessex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Wessex

    The manuscript is thought to have been made at Glastonbury in the 930s during the reign of King Æthelstan [3] (whose family traced their own royal descent back to Cerdic via a brother of King Ine), but the material may well date back to the earliest reconstructable version of the collection, c. 796; and possibly still further back, to 725 ...