-
profession of
obedience to Æthelhard, the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
Sometimes Wulfhard or
Wulfehard Fryde, et al.
Handbook of
British Chronology p. 217 Brooks...
- was the
eighth Count of
Paris and a
Count palatine. He was the son of
Wulfhard of
Flavigny and
Suzanne of Paris, a
daughter of Beggo,
Count of Toulouse...
-
often wrote under the
pseudonyms Wanda von
Dunajew and D. Dolorès. Stahl,
Wulfhard (2016). "Sacher-Masoch,
Wanda von". In Korotin, Ilse (ed.). BiografiA :...
- monastery,
which can be
identified with Exeter, Devon, has a
Germanic name (
Wulfhard)
during the time
Boniface studied there.
Boniface self-identifies as Anglo-Saxon...
-
birth but says that at an
early age he
attended a
monastery ruled by
Abbot Wulfhard in escancastre, or Examchester,
which seems to
denote Exeter, and may have...
- Also
recorded as Utellus. 799 x 801 822 x 824
Wulfheard Also
recorded as
Wulfhard; Wulfehard. 824 825 x 832
Beonna Also
recorded as Benna. 825 x 832 836...
- the
monastery of Escancastre, or
Examchester was
under the rule of
Abbot Wulfhard. It was
refounded circa 930 by the Anglo-Saxon King Æthelstan but was burnt...
- Coenwulf, King of Mercia, and Cuthred, King of Kent, to a
priest called Wulfhard. He also
witnessed a
grant from
between 805 and 807 by Cuthred, King of...
- of
Constantine II. In the
spring of 773,
Charlemagne sent George,
Abbot Wulfhard of Tours [fr] and a
certain Alboin to Pope
Hadrian I in Rome to ascertain...
- to
Hoddom is in a copy of an eighth-century
letter sent from
Alcuin to
Wulfhard, 'abbot of
Hodda Helm' (abbatem
Hodda Helmi). The twelfth-century 'Life...