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Ethelbald

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Ethelbald (died 860)

British king of Wessex. In 856 his father, Ethelwulf, agreed to a division of his kingdom, Ethelbald taking Wessex, while Ethelwulf retained Kent and the southeast. He married Judith, his father's widow, in 858.

Ethelbald (c. 716–757)

British king of Mercia. He succeeded to a weakened kingdom, but the death of Wihtred of Kent in 725 and the abdication of Ine of Sussex in 726 left him supreme in southern England. In 731 Bede states that all the English provinces south of the Humber were subject to him and one of Ethelbald's charters of 736 actually calls him rex Britanniae. Ethelbald appears to have ruled energetically, but his private life and treatment of the Church angered St Boniface, and he was murdered in circumstances which suggest that he was regarded as a tyrant. After his death Mercian power temporarily declined, to be later re-established by his son Offa.



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In Eighth Century England the King of Mercia, Ethelbald, cheekily annexed London from Essex and claimed to be King of Britain.
In the 11th century, Lench belonged to the Abbot of Evesham, who was granted it by Ethelbald, King of Mercia.
Flintshire council firstKING Ethelbald of Mercia (716-757) built Wat's Dyke from Basingwerk, near Holywell, to the River Severn, near Welshpool, to mark the frontier between his lands and the lands of the Welsh.
 
 
 
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