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Lincoln Eadberht of
Lindisfarne Eadberht of
Northumbria Eadberht of
Selsey Eadbert I of Kent
Eadberht II of Kent
Eadberht III Præn of Kent
Eadberht (Bishop...
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Eadberht I was king of Kent from 725 to 748.
After his
father Wihtred of Kent died, he
inherited the
kingdom of Kent
along with his two
brothers Æðelberht...
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Eadberht III Præn was the King of Kent from 796 to 798. His
brief reign was the
result of a
rebellion against the
hegemony of Mercia, and it
marked the...
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Eadberht II was king of Kent,
jointly with Sigered. He was
apparently the son of Æðelberht II.
Eadberht II is
known from
three charters. As a
result of...
-
built of
stone but only of hewn oak
thatched with reeds. A
later bishop,
Eadbert,
removed the
thatch and
covered both
walls and roof in lead. An abbot,...
- Nasr ibn Sayyar, Arab
general (b. 663)
Cellan of Clonfert,
Irish abbot Eadbert I, king of Kent (approximate date)
Indrechtach mac Dungalaig, king of Brega...
- The
kingdom is
divided between his
three sons: Æthelbert II as overking,
Eadbert I in West Kent and Alric. Yi Xing,
Chinese Buddhist monk and astronomer...
- unclear,
although there is
evidence of both an Æthelbert and at
least one
Eadbert in the
following years.
After Wihtred's death, and the
departure of Ine...
- died, and in this
moment of
Mercian weakness a
Kentish rebellion under Eadbert Praen temporarily succeeded. Offa's
eventual successor, Coenwulf, reconquered...
- of Kent (complete list) – Wihtred, King (c.693–725) Alric, King (725–?)
Eadbert I, King (725–748) Æthelbert II, King (725–762) Eardwulf, King (unknown)...