- Sæbbi (also
known as
Saint Sebbi or Sebba;
before 626 – 695) was son of ****red and was the
joint King of Es**** from 664 to
about 683
along with his cousin...
-
Germanic names in
Italy e.g. the
names of
kings Penda, Pybba, Offa, Wuffa, and
Sebbi, all Anglo-Saxons born in the 6th or 7th
centuries The
oldest attested Germanic...
- 660
Sigeberht the Good
Apparently son of Sæward.
Saint Sigeberht;
Saint Sebbi (Feast Day 29 August) 660 to 664 Swiþhelm 664 to 683
Sighere son of a Sigeberht...
- Anglia.
After his
death in 664, he was
succeeded by his
cousins Sighere and
Sebbi.
Swithhelm 1 at
Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon
England Warner,
Peter M. (1996)...
-
bispinosa APDB: 177075 APNI: 208420 CoL: 4WZ48 Ecocrop: 9712 EoL: 642633 EPPO:
SEBBI FloraBase: 4195 FNA: 242348734 FoC: 242348734 GBIF: 2970721 GRIN: 33761...
- said that his
selection as
Bishop of
London was at the
insistence of King
Sebbi. An
ancient epitaph says that
Earconwald served as
bishop of
London for...
-
addition to the
shrine of Erkenwald, two Anglo-Saxon
kings were
buried inside:
Sebbi, King of the East Saxons, and Æthelred the Unready. A
number of figures...
- the
throne for a time.
Oswine lost
power in 690, but Swæfheard (son of
Sebbi, the king of Es****), who had been a king in Kent for a year or two, remained...
-
early Bishop of Metz and
Confessor (5th century)
Saint Sæbbi of Es**** (
Sebbi, Sebba), King of Es**** and monk (c. 694)
Saint Medericus (Merry), a monk...
-
Uganda was
effectively over". On the day
following Jinja's capture,
Mohammed Sebbi, a
Uganda Army
commander who had
ordered the
execution of
numerous residents...