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  1. Baldred of Kent. Coin of Baldred, minted at Canterbury. Baldred was king of Kent, from 823 until 826 or 827. Ceolwulf I, king of Mercia, had ruled Kent directly, and was deposed by Beornwulf in 823, and at about the same time moneyers at Canterbury started issuing coins in the name of Baldred, king of Kent.

    • I. Hengist. Anno 455.
    • II. Escus.—Anno 488.
    • III. Octa. Anno 512.
    • IV. Hermenric. Anno 534.
    • V. Ethelbert. Anno 564.
    • VI. Eadbald. Anno 616.
    • VII. Ercombert.
    • VIII. Egbert.
    • IX. Lothair.
    • X. Edric.

    ALTHOUGH Hengist had thus establishedhimself in the kingdom of Kent, yet the Britons stillkept possession of a considerable part of the threeprovinces he had so unjustly extorted from Vortigern.The natives every where shewed the greatest detestation of the Saxons, and a resolution not to submitto their government till the last extremity. Thisexceed...

    WHEN his father died, Escus was in the northern parts of Britain, where he had been sent theyear before to assist against the Britons; but as soonas he had notice of it, he hastened into Kent, totake possession of the kingdom. As he had not thevalour or abilities of his father, he seems rather tohave defended than enlarged his kingdom, preferringhi...

    TWO years after king Octa's accession to thethrone of Kent, Ella, king of Sussex, died, and themonarchy of the Saxons was conferred on Cerdicabove-mentioned, who, after many bloody battles,gaining a signal victory over the Britons in the year519, took possession of the present counties of Hampshire and Somersetshire, where he founded the kingdom of...

    DURING whose reign, that is, in 547, Ida, a famous chief, an Angle by nation, and a descendant ofWoden, arrived in Britain with a number of hiscountrymen. They landed at Flamborough, in Yorkshire, then in the possession of the NorthumbrianSaxons, who received them as friends. The Northumbrians, so called from their inhabiting north ofthe Humber, ha...

    THOUGH Ethelbert, when he ascended thethrone, was but young, yet he had a great and aspi-ring genius, and beheld, with regret, the loss of thatsuperiority which Hengist, as monarch, had over allthe Saxons settled in Britain. To regain this, he resolved to revive his pretensions to this dignity byforce of arms, and for that purpose declared waragain...

    HE was succeeded by his son Eadbald, who became the sixth king of Kent. A man very unlikehis father; for as soon as he became his own master,he forsook the Christian religion, and became again aheathen, and is even said to have married the queen,his mother-in-law. (fn. 10) His vices rendering him slothful and inactive, allthe English kings cast off...

    ERCOMBERT, though the younger of kingEadbald's sons, found means to ascend the throne inprejudice of his elder brother, as some say, by theappointment of his father. This prince was a zealous Christian, and ordered the heathen temples tobe razed to the ground, and the idols to be brokenin pieces, left they should hereafter prove a snare tothe peopl...

    EGBERT succeeded his father in the kingdomof Kent, and became a great encourager of learningand the liberal arts; which then, under the endeavours of archbishop Theodore, began to make theirappearance in England. He was a kind patron ofthe ministers of the gospel, receiving and entertainingthem with much generosity. But these actions weremuch sulli...

    LOTHAIR did not reign long unmolested; (fn. 15)hisfirst thoughts were employed in securing the succession of the crown to his posterity; for which purposehe made his son Richard, by his wife, daughter ofSigerus, king of the East Saxons, and sister to king Offa, partner with him in the government. This obligedhis nephew, Edric, to withdraw from cour...

    AFTER this victory, Edric was crowned without opposition, about the year 68ç. His short reignwas a continued scene of warfare with his subjects, bywhom he was slain, within the space of two years,leaving the kingdom of Kent so weakened and embroiled, that it became a prey to the several usurperswho attempted the conquest of it.

  2. Baldred. Baldred fue rey de Kent, desde 823 hasta 826 u 827. Ceolwulf I, rey de Mercia, había gobernado Kent directamente, pero en 823 fue depuesto por Beornwulf, y, más o menos en la misma época, los acuñadores de Canterbury comenzaron a emitir monedas en nombre de Baldred, rey de Kent.

  3. History Wiki. in: Kent, Peoples of Anglo-Saxon England. Baldred of Kent. Baldred was known to be the king of Kent (Cent in Old English) from 823 until 826-827. Ceolwulf I, the once-current king of Mercia ruled Cent directly until 823 where he was deposed by Beornwulf.

  4. 27 de nov. de 2016 · View Complete Profile. About Baldred, King of Kent. He succeeded to the title of King Baldred of Kent in 823.1 He was deposed as King of Kent, expelled by Ecgberht, King of the West Saxons in 825. Ref: John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989), page 64.

    • estimated between 695 and 825
    • November 27, 2016
    • after 825
    • Jason Scott Wills
  5. www.wikiwand.com › es › BaldredBaldred - Wikiwand

    De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. Baldred fue rey de Kent, desde 823 hasta 826 u 827. Ceolwulf I, rey de Mercia, había gobernado Kent directamente, pero en 823 fue depuesto por Beornwulf, y, más o menos en la misma época, los acuñadores de Canterbury comenzaron a emitir monedas en nombre de Baldred, rey de Kent.

  6. Baldred: no charters; coins: BALDRED REX CANT expelled by Æðelwulf in 825 825 to 839 Ecgberht III: Ecgberht rex occidentalium Saxonum necnon et Cantuariorum: son of Ealhmund; reigned in Kent jointly with his son Æðelwulf; also King of Wessex (802-839) 825 to 858 Æðelwulf: Aetheluulf rex. Æðeluulf rex Cantrariorum. Æthelwolf ...