King of Wessex, Egbert

Birth Name King of Wessex, Egbert 1 2a 3 4a 5a 6a 7a
Also Known As King of England, Ecgbert
Gramps ID I28586
Gender male
Age at Death 64 years, 10 months, 18 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth [E36938] 775 Wessex, England  
2b 4b 5b 6b 7b
Death [E36939] 839-11-19 Wessex, England  
1a 2c 4c 5c 6c 7c
_FA1 [E36940]   Reigned 802-827 as King of Wessex. Interred: Winchester Cathedral, England.  
1 8 2d 4d 6d 7d
_FA2 [E36941]   At the death of KIng Brithric (800), called to throne of Wessex.  
8 4e 6e 7e
_FA3 [E36942]   Changed Wessex from lack of unity & vigor to a Wessex of greatness.  
3 4f 6f 7f
_FA5 [E36943]   Memorable for great victories achieved over the Danes.  
8 4g 6g 7g
_FA6 [E36944]   Reduced all the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy under his sway.  
8 4h 6h 7h
_FA7 [E36945] BET. 827 - 836 1st king of all of England (s. of the Thames & Cotswalds) of Anglo-Saxon line.  
8a 2e 4i 6i 7i
_FA8 [E36946]   Reign known as a long & glorious one.  
8 4j 6j 7j
_FA9 [E36947]   Defeated Mercia at Battle of Ellundun (823) & became overlord over them.  
8 4k 6k 7k
_FA10 [E36948]   Won the first English victory over the Vikings (838) at Hinxton Down.  
8 4l 6l 7l
_FA11 [E36949] BET. 798 - 802 Studied statesmanship in exile at the Court of Charlemagne.  
3 8b 4m 6m 7m
_FA12 [E36950]   Invaded Cornwall 815, seized it 825. Defeated Mercians at Ellandune.  
3 4n 6n 7n
_FA13 [E36951]   Result: restoration of Ine’s Wessex, held all land S of the Thames.  
3 4o 6o 7o

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father UnderKing of Kent, Ealhmund [I28588]758788
Mother of Kent, daughter [I28589]762
         King of Wessex, Egbert [I28586] 775 839-11-19

Families

    Family of King of Wessex, Egbert and of Wessex, Redburga [F7588]
Married Wife of Wessex, Redburga [I18518] ( * 788 + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage [E56818]   Wessex, England  
5d
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
King of Wessex, Aethelwulf [I18400]806857/8-01-13 (Julian)
Abbess of Polesworth, Editha [I26117]808
UnderKing of Kent, Athelstan [I26115]810
    Family of King of Wessex, Egbert and (of Wessex), Redburga [F11062]
Married Wife (of Wessex), Redburga [I28587] ( * 788 + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage [E58289]   Wessex  
1b 2f 4p

Narrative

[large-G675.FTW]

REF: Univ of Hull db: The first King of all of England of the Anglo-Saxon line. Reigned 802-839, began reign as Ecbert III King of Wessex. In 800 at the death of KIng Brithric, Egbert was called by the voice of his countrymen to assume the gov't. of Wessex, & he subsequently succeeded in reducing all the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy under his sway. His reign, a long & glorious one, is memorable for the great victories he achieved over the Danes. He is known both as Ecbert, KIng of England, and Ecbert III, King of Wessex.

REF: Fighting Kings of Wessex, Baker: When his maternal uncle Eadberht Praen of Kent revolted from Mercian control in 798, he was captured, blinded & mutilated by Ceonwulf of Mercia, leaving Ecgbert as sole heir of the Kentish throne (thus uniting the rival houses of Ceawlin of Wessex & Aethilbert of Kent). Upon Ceonwulf's invasion of Kent, Ecgbert took refuge in Gaul. When King Beorhtric of Wessex died (abt 802), Ecgbert had no serious competitors to the throne of Wessex either & promptly returned to England from the Continent. He waited on his claim to Kent, but on the very day he was elevated to King of Wessex, the Mercians crossed the Thames in force. They were met by Alderman of Wiltshire Weohstan & held. Thus, Ecgbert was poised & ready to assume sovereignity of England.

From same: In 825 Ecgbert seized Cornwall, before he could get back to Wessex, King Beornwulf of Mercia invaded Wessex. Ecgbert defeated him at Ellandune, & thereby restored the ancient kingdom borders of Wessex of Ine, holding all of England S of the Thames. He then sent his son Aethilwulf into Kent to drive out Baldred, the Mercian regulus. Not only Kent, Sussex & Surrey, but Essex too gave their submission to Aethilwulf. Suddenly Wessex was N of the Thames. Then the King of the East Angles asked Ecgbert for protection vs. the Mercians; Beornwulf staked his chance on reducing East Anglia before Ecgbert could arrive; he failed. Ecgbert arrived & slew Beornwulf & was suddenly the master of 1/3 of England. Four years of peace followed, then in 829 Ecgbert invaded & subdued Mercia and thus held all England up to the Humber; later in the year he invaded Northumbria, who offered him acceptable terms. Thus in three rapid, vigorous & complete campaigns, Ecgbert was master of all of England. In 831, Ecgbert entered Wales & established some kind of supremacy or suzerainity. He allowed Wiglaf of Mercia to return & hold the throne of Mercia. Ecgbert's hedgemony resulted in the unification of England as a political unit. Although it would take a couple generations to build, never agin did the separate English kingdoms of the heptarchy regain full sovereignity & independence. From this time forward, England was one nation. His last campaign was to subdue Cornwall, which had revolted & joined the Danes in resistance to English rule. The A-S Chronicle says he won a great victory, & to be sure the Danes never reached Wessex nor any points of strategic import, but it is equally true that Ecgbert never saw the Cornish Sea again.

From same: We know nothing of Ecgbert's character other than his actions. He seems to have been a man who acted strictly on the basis of practicalities, rather than passion. He tended to the business at hand & got it done accordingly. As the Danes began their Viking raids, Ecgbert transformed England from weakened & disunited to a strong & united kingdom in sympathy with the Frankish empire of Charlemagne & his successors (& the last bastion of western Roman civilization) yet completely independent of it.
Acceded 802-839.[large-G675.FTW]

REF: Univ of Hull db: The first King of all of England of the Anglo-Saxon line. Reigned 802-839, began reign as Ecbert III King of Wessex. In 800 at the death of KIng Brithric, Egbert was called by the voice of his countrymen to assume the gov't. of Wessex, & he subsequently succeeded in reducing all the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy under his sway. His reign, a long & glorious one, is memorable for the great victories he achieved over the Danes. He is known both as Ecbert, KIng of England, and Ecbert III, King of Wessex.

REF: Fighting Kings of Wessex, Baker: When his maternal uncle Eadberht Praen of Kent revolted from Mercian control in 798, he was captured, blinded & mutilated by Ceonwulf of Mercia, leaving Ecgbert as sole heir of the Kentish throne (thus uniting the rival houses of Ceawlin of Wessex & Aethilbert of Kent). Upon Ceonwulf's invasion of Kent, Ecgbert took refuge in Gaul. When King Beorhtric of Wessex died (abt 802), Ecgbert had no serious competitors to the throne of Wessex either & promptly returned to England from the Continent. He waited on his claim to Kent, but on the very day he was elevated to King of Wessex, the Mercians crossed the Thames in force. They were met by Alderman of Wiltshire Weohstan & held. Thus, Ecgbert was poised & ready to assume sovereignity of England.

From same: In 825 Ecgbert seized Cornwall, before he could get back to Wessex, King Beornwulf of Mercia invaded Wessex. Ecgbert defeated him at Ellandune, & thereby restored the ancient kingdom borders of Wessex of Ine, holding all of England S of the Thames. He then sent his son Aethilwulf into Kent to drive out Baldred, the Mercian regulus. Not only Kent, Sussex & Surrey, but Essex too gave their submission to Aethilwulf. Suddenly Wessex was N of the Thames. Then the King of the East Angles asked Ecgbert for protection vs. the Mercians; Beornwulf staked his chance on reducing East Anglia before Ecgbert could arrive; he failed. Ecgbert arrived & slew Beornwulf & was suddenly the master of 1/3 of England. Four years of peace followed, then in 829 Ecgbert invaded & subdued Mercia and thus held all England up to the Humber; later in the year he invaded Northumbria, who offered him acceptable terms. Thus in three rapid, vigorous & complete campaigns, Ecgbert was master of all of England. In 831, Ecgbert entered Wales & established some kind of supremacy or suzerainity. He allowed Wiglaf of Mercia to return & hold the throne of Mercia. Ecgbert's hedgemony resulted in the unification of England as a political unit. Although it would take a couple generations to build, never agin did the separate English kingdoms of the heptarchy regain full sovereignity & independence. From this time forward, England was one nation. His last campaign was to subdue Cornwall, which had revolted & joined the Danes in resistance to English rule. The A-S Chronicle says he won a great victory, & to be sure the Danes never reached Wessex nor any points of strategic import, but it is equally true that Ecgbert never saw the Cornish Sea again.

From same: We know nothing of Ecgbert's character other than his actions. He seems to have been a man who acted strictly on the basis of practicalities, rather than passion. He tended to the business at hand & got it done accordingly. As the Danes began their Viking raids, Ecgbert transformed England from weakened & disunited to a strong & united kingdom in sympathy with the Frankish empire of Charlemagne & his successors (& the last bastion of western Roman civilization) yet completely independent of it.
[large-G675.FTW]

REF: Univ of Hull db: The first King of all of England of the Anglo-Saxon line. Reigned 802-839, began reign as Ecbert III King of Wessex. In 800 at the death of KIng Brithric, Egbert was called by the voice of his countrymen to assume the gov't. of Wessex, & he subsequently succeeded in reducing all the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy under his sway. His reign, a long & glorious one, is memorable for the great victories he achieved over the Danes. He is known both as Ecbert, KIng of England, and Ecbert III, King of Wessex.

REF: Fighting Kings of Wessex, Baker: When his maternal uncle Eadberht Praen of Kent revolted from Mercian control in 798, he was captured, blinded & mutilated by Ceonwulf of Mercia, leaving Ecgbert as sole heir of the Kentish throne (thus uniting the rival houses of Ceawlin of Wessex & Aethilbert of Kent). Upon Ceonwulf's invasion of Kent, Ecgbert took refuge in Gaul. When King Beorhtric of Wessex died (abt 802), Ecgbert had no serious competitors to the throne of Wessex either & promptly returned to England from the Continent. He waited on his claim to Kent, but on the very day he was elevated to King of Wessex, the Mercians crossed the Thames in force. They were met by Alderman of Wiltshire Weohstan & held. Thus, Ecgbert was poised & ready to assume sovereignity of England.

From same: In 825 Ecgbert seized Cornwall, before he could get back to Wessex, King Beornwulf of Mercia invaded Wessex. Ecgbert defeated him at Ellandune, & thereby restored the ancient kingdom borders of Wessex of Ine, holding all of England S of the Thames. He then sent his son Aethilwulf into Kent to drive out Baldred, the Mercian regulus. Not only Kent, Sussex & Surrey, but Essex too gave their submission to Aethilwulf. Suddenly Wessex was N of the Thames. Then the King of the East Angles asked Ecgbert for protection vs. the Mercians; Beornwulf staked his chance on reducing East Anglia before Ecgbert could arrive; he failed. Ecgbert arrived & slew Beornwulf & was suddenly the master of 1/3 of England. Four years of peace followed, then in 829 Ecgbert invaded & subdued Mercia and thus held all England up to the Humber; later in the year he invaded Northumbria, who offered him acceptable terms. Thus in three rapid, vigorous & complete campaigns, Ecgbert was master of all of England. In 831, Ecgbert entered Wales & established some kind of supremacy or suzerainity. He allowed Wiglaf of Mercia to return & hold the throne of Mercia. Ecgbert's hedgemony resulted in the unification of England as a political unit. Although it would take a couple generations to build, never agin did the separate English kingdoms of the heptarchy regain full sovereignity & independence. From this time forward, England was one nation. His last campaign was to subdue Cornwall, which had revolted & joined the Danes in resistance to English rule. The A-S Chronicle says he won a great victory, & to be sure the Danes never reached Wessex nor any points of strategic import, but it is equally true that Ecgbert never saw the Cornish Sea again.

From same: We know nothing of Ecgbert's character other than his actions. He seems to have been a man who acted strictly on the basis of practicalities, rather than passion. He tended to the business at hand & got it done accordingly. As the Danes began their Viking raids, Ecgbert transformed England from weakened & disunited to a strong & united kingdom in sympathy with the Frankish empire of Charlemagne & his successors (& the last bastion of western Roman civilization) yet completely independent of it.
[large-G675.FTW]

REF: Univ of Hull db: The first King of all of England of the Anglo-Saxon line. Reigned 802-839, began reign as Ecbert III King of Wessex. In 800 at the death of KIng Brithric, Egbert was called by the voice of his countrymen to assume the gov't. of Wessex, & he subsequently succeeded in reducing all the Kingdoms of the Heptarchy under his sway. His reign, a long & glorious one, is memorable for the great victories he achieved over the Danes. He is known both as Ecbert, KIng of England, and Ecbert III, King of Wessex.

REF: Fighting Kings of Wessex, Baker: When his maternal uncle Eadberht Praen of Kent revolted from Mercian control in 798, he was captured, blinded & mutilated by Ceonwulf of Mercia, leaving Ecgbert as sole heir of the Kentish throne (thus uniting the rival houses of Ceawlin of Wessex & Aethilbert of Kent). Upon Ceonwulf's invasion of Kent, Ecgbert took refuge in Gaul. When King Beorhtric of Wessex died (abt 802), Ecgbert had no serious competitors to the throne of Wessex either & promptly returned to England from the Continent. He waited on his claim to Kent, but on the very day he was elevated to King of Wessex, the Mercians crossed the Thames in force. They were met by Alderman of Wiltshire Weohstan & held. Thus, Ecgbert was poised & ready to assume sovereignity of England.

From same: In 825 Ecgbert seized Cornwall, before he could get back to Wessex, King Beornwulf of Mercia invaded Wessex. Ecgbert defeated him at Ellandune, & thereby restored the ancient kingdom borders of Wessex of Ine, holding all of England S of the Thames. He then sent his son Aethilwulf into Kent to drive out Baldred, the Mercian regulus. Not only Kent, Sussex & Surrey, but Essex too gave their submission to Aethilwulf. Suddenly Wessex was N of the Thames. Then the King of the East Angles asked Ecgbert for protection vs. the Mercians; Beornwulf staked his chance on reducing East Anglia before Ecgbert could arrive; he failed. Ecgbert arrived & slew Beornwulf & was suddenly the master of 1/3 of England. Four years of peace followed, then in 829 Ecgbert invaded & subdued Mercia and thus held all England up to the Humber; later in the year he invaded Northumbria, who offered him acceptable terms. Thus in three rapid, vigorous & complete campaigns, Ecgbert was master of all of England. In 831, Ecgbert entered Wales & established some kind of supremacy or suzerainity. He allowed Wiglaf of Mercia to return & hold the throne of Mercia. Ecgbert's hedgemony resulted in the unification of England as a political unit. Although it would take a couple generations to build, never agin did the separate English kingdoms of the heptarchy regain full sovereignity & independence. From this time forward, England was one nation. His last campaign was to subdue Cornwall, which had revolted & joined the Danes in resistance to English rule. The A-S Chronicle says he won a great victory, & to be sure the Danes never reached Wessex nor any points of strategic import, but it is equally true that Ecgbert never saw the Cornish Sea again.

From same: We know nothing of Ecgbert's character other than his actions. He seems to have been a man who acted strictly on the basis of practicalities, rather than passion. He tended to the business at hand & got it done accordingly. As the Danes began their Viking raids, Ecgbert transformed England from weakened & disunited to a strong & united kingdom in sympathy with the Frankish empire of Charlemagne & his successors (& the last bastion of western Roman civilization) yet completely independent of it.

Pedigree

  1. UnderKing of Kent, Ealhmund [I28588]
    1. of Kent, daughter [I28589]
      1. King of Wessex, Egbert
        1. of Wessex, Redburga [I18518]
          1. King of Wessex, Aethelwulf [I18400]
          2. Abbess of Polesworth, Editha [I26117]
          3. UnderKing of Kent, Athelstan [I26115]
        2. (of Wessex), Redburga [I28587]

Ancestors

Source References

  1. Denis R. Reid: Royal Genealogies DB [S284656]
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  2. Frederick Lewis Weis: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America bef 1760 [S286879]
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        s of Ealhmund UnderKing of Kent, no mother

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        b 775, no place

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        d aft 19 Nov 838, no place

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        no burial info

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  3. G.P. Baker: Fighting Kings of Wessex [S287682]
  4. large-G675.FTW [S286834]
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  5. 11615-2.ftw [S7587]
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  8. Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science: University of Hull Royal Database (England) [S283806]
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