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  1. Hace 2 días · El problema para el partido de Beorhtric fue, muy probablemente, un hecho que conocemos por las crónicas, y es que el mismo año que murió el rey (las crónicas dicen que el mismo día, pero eso puede ser licencia poética), también lo hizo su principal consejero y gobernador de Wessex in pectore, el ealdorman Worr.

  2. 13 de may. de 2024 · In 802, Beorhtric died (later accounts accuse his wife of poisoning him) and the throne passed to his old rival, Ecgberht; with hindsight, Ecgberht’s reign marks the beginning of two separate but interrelated shifts that affected both the royal household and the macrocosm of the kingdom. 1 The first of these concerned the royal ...

  3. 19 de may. de 2024 · King Egbert was born around 770 the son of Ealmund of Kent; his mother’s identity is not known. When he was sixteen, in 786, King Cynewulf of Wessex was murdered. Beothric was elected to be King but Egbert believed he had a legitimate claim and contested the election.

  4. 13 de may. de 2024 · Answer: Beorhtric Beorhtric, with a name meaning "Magnificent Power", ruled Wessex from 786 to 802. During his reign, the Synod of Chelsea was held in 787, approving Lichfield becoming the center of an archdiocese. In 789, the first Viking raids on England, took place on the Dorset shore.

  5. 19 de may. de 2024 · Beorhtric was tenant in both 1066 and 1086. In 1256 it was held by Thomas Trivet and descended with Durborough. After the death of Thomas Trivet (fl. c. 1330) it seems to have been totally absorbed into that manor and the name was no longer used for the estate.

  6. 13 de may. de 2024 · Eadburh married Beorhtric, king of the West Saxons. Asser describes her as behaving “like a tyrant” and ultimately accidentally poisoning Beorhtric in an attempt to murder someone else; he finishes by describing her death as a beggar in Pavia.[11][12] Note that this Eadburh is not the same as Alfred’s mother-in-law, also named ...

  7. Hace 2 días · Beorhtric, a thegn, in 1086 held land at OAKSEY which his father had held in 1066. The estate was apparently bought after 1086 by Edward of Salisbury.