- Forente de 7 kongeriker:
Kent, Essex, Sussex, Wessex, Mercia, Øst-Anglia og Northumberland til ett; kongeriket Anglia.
Egbert var etterkommer til vestsaksernes høvding Cerdic.
Han ble som ung jaget av kong Offa av Mercia og oppholdt seg i flere år hos Karl den store. Egbert kom ca.802 tilbake til England og ble konge.
Kongen av Mercia gjorde et innfall i 825, men led nederlag. Deretter undertvang Egbert seg Kent, Sussex og Essex, mye med hjelp av sin sønn Ethelwulf. Østanglerne underkastet seg også, og Mercia og Northumberland måtte i 829 anerkjenne ham som overherre. Dette år betegnes som de 7 rikers forening.
Egbert var gift med Redburh (Redburgia).
De saksiske germanerne kom fra Sachsen i Tyskland ved slutten av 400-tallet og fordrev de keltiske brittene. Slekten skal visstnok kunne føre sine aner tilbake til Odin (Woden)!
England ble oppdelt i kongerikene Northumbria, East Anglia, Mercia, Essex, Sussex, Wessex og Kent.
På 600-tallet hadde Northumbria den ledende stillingen i England, mens Mercia dominerte på 700-tallet.
Wessex-slekten var konger av Wessex og Kent fra 519 til 927 og konger av England fra 927 til 1013 og fra 1042 til 1066.
Etter et kort mellomspill med kong Harald Godwinson ble England erobret av Vilhelm Erobreren.
Kilder:
Wikipedia.
Dictionary of National Biography.
Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 219.
Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 8-9, 103.
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ECGBERHT, son of EALHMUND Under-King of Kent. (769/780-4 Feb or (Jun) 839, bur Winchester Cathedral).
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Egbert succeeded to the kingdom of Wessex after the death of Beorhtric in 802, in a later passage describing him as Ecgberht as son of Ealhmund, and in another passage which setting out his complete ancestry from his son Æthelwulf King of Wessex. According to the Chronicle, Ecgberht was expelled from England in 789 by King Beorhtric after he unsuccessfully challenged Beorhtric's succession. It may be significant that England rather than Wessex is specified in this passage of the Chronicle.
Ecgberht's father was king of Kent around this time, and it is possible that the expulsion was from Kent, maybe a consequence of his father being deposed as Kentish king. According to William of Malmesbury, Beorhtric was allied with Offa King of Mercia at this time. He explains that Ecgberht had sought refuge with King Offa after his expulsion by King Beorhtric, but that the latter bribed Offa for Ecgberht's surrender and was offered Offa's daughter in marriage in return.
Ecgberht sought refuge at the Frankish court until (792).
Under-King in Kent in (796). On Beorhtric's death, he established himself in 802 as ECGBERHT King of Wessex, rebelling against Mercian overlordship. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that he ravaged the Britons of Dumnonia (Cornwall) 815. He defeated Beornwulf King of Mercia in 825 at Ellendun (=Wroughton, Wiltshire), which marked the end of Mercian ascendancy. King Ecgberht immediately sent his son Æthelwulf with a large army into Kent, which submitted to him along with Surrey, Sussex and Essex. East Anglia, in revolt against Mercia, turned to Ecgberht for protection. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Ecgberht conquered Mercia in 829, taking the title rex Merciorum, from evidence provided by a limited number of coins, but lost control of Mercia again in 830.
He exacted tribute from Eanred King of Northumbria in 829. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the first Danish raiders landed at Sheppey in 835 and King Ecgberht was defeated by Viking invaders at Carhampton in 836, but defeated the Vikings at Hingston Down, Cornwall in 838, which is probably when Cornwall was integrated into Wessex. Ægberhtus rex occidentalium Saxonum granted land at Canterbury to Ciaba clericus, jointly with Æthelwulfi regis filii mei, by charter dated 836. Æthelwulf rex Cancie was co-grantor of land in Kent with Egberthus rex occident Saxonum pater meus by charters dated (833/839) and 838 respectively. Despite his successes, he does not seem to have claimed overlordship over all the southern English or referred to himself as king of England. He is listed as eighth bretwalda in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, supplementing the original list given by Bede.
William of Malmesbury records that King Ecgberht died after a reign of 37 years and was buried at Winchester. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Ecgberht died in 839.
Married (789/792) REDBURGA. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. According to Weir, she is said to have been sister of the king of the Franks, who at the time was Charles 1., later Emperor Charlemagne, but her identity is uncertain. The primary source on which this is based has not been identified. If her origin was Frankish, King Ecgberht presumably married her during his exile at the Frankish court between 789-792.
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