killed in Battle
Kind(eren):
Eardwulf, King of Northumbria
Gender:
Male
Birth:
808
Northumberland, England (United Kingdom)
Death:
844 (35-36) (killed in Battle)
Immediate Family:
Son of Eadwulf II, King of Northumbria
Father of Eadwulf of Bamburgh
Half brother of King Eanred of Northumbria
https://www.geni.com/people/Eardwulf-King-of-Northumbria/6000000022393037127
Eardwulf, King of Northumbria is your 32nd great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Welborn (Dykes)
his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes
her father ·Üí William George Dykes (2 Dykes-Revolutionary War Loyalist), Sr.
his father ·Üí George Edward Dykes, Sr.
his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
his father ·Üí Edward Deakes (Dyeck)
his father ·Üí Thomas Dyeck
his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
his father ·Üí Jane Dykes (Lancaster), of Sockbridge
his mother ·Üí Sir Lancelot Lancaster, MP
her father ·Üí Elizabeth Lancaster (Lowther)
his mother ·Üí Mabel Lowther (Lancaster)
her mother ·Üí Margaret Lancaster (Strickland)
her mother ·Üí Thomas de Strickland, MP
her father ·Üí Margaret Lathom
his mother ·Üí Sir Thomas de Lathom, I
her father ·Üí Sir Robert de Lathom, Knight
his father ·Üí Joan de Millom
his mother ·Üí Juliana de Boyville (de Ireby)
her mother ·Üí Adam de Ireby
her father ·Üí Orm de Ireby
his father ·Üí Gospatrick of High Ireby, Lord of Workington
his father ·Üí Gunhilda, of Northumbria
his mother ·Üí Gospatric, Earl of Dunbar
her father ·Üí Ealdgyth, of Northumbria
his mother ·Üí Uchtred "the Bold", Earl of Northumbria
her father ·Üí Waltheof I, Earl of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Oswulf I, Earl of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Ealdred I
his father ·Üí Eadwulf of Bamburgh
his father ·Üí Eardwulf, King of Northumbria
his father
Eadwulf II, king of Northumbria is your 31st great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Bombard
his mother ·Üí Emma Elizabeth Bombard
her mother ·Üí Isabelle Bynum
her mother ·Üí Robert W Bynum
her father ·Üí Elizabeth Bynum
his mother ·Üí Lydia Mitchell
her mother ·Üí Jonathan Wheeler, I
her father ·Üí Martha Wheeler (Salisbury)
his mother ·Üí William Salisbury
her father ·Üí William Salisbury, of Denbigh & Swansea
his father ·Üí John Salisbury, of Denbigh
his father ·Üí Lady Ursula Salusbury
his mother ·Üí Jane Halsall, of Knowsley
her mother ·Üí Jane Osbaldeston
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Beaumont
her mother ·Üí unknown Harington, heiress of Hornby
her mother ·Üí Robert de Neville, of Hornby
her father ·Üí Geoffrey de Neville, II
his father ·Üí Geoffrey FitzRobert de Neville, Baron of Raby
his father ·Üí Robert FitzMaldred, Lord of Raby
his father ·Üí Meldred fitz Dolfin, of Raby
his father ·Üí Dolfin fitz Uchtred, Lord of Raby
his father ·Üí Uchtred FitzGospatrick, Lord of Raby
his father ·Üí Gospatric, Earl of Dunbar
his father ·Üí Ealdgyth, of Northumbria
his mother ·Üí Uchtred "the Bold", Earl of Northumbria
her father ·Üí Waltheof I, Earl of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Oswulf I, Earl of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Ealdred I of Bamburgh
his father ·Üí Eadwulf IV, king of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Eadwulf III of Northumbria
his father ·Üí Eadwulf II, king of Northumbria
his father
Eadwulf II, king of Northumbria is your 34th great grandfather.
You‰
‰ ‰ ᆒ‰ Henry "Toad" Welborn‰
your father‰ ᆒ‰ Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Calhoun H. Welborn‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Sarah Elizabeth Welborn‰
his mother‰ ᆒBenjamin Franklin Dykes‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ William Dykes, Sr.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ George Dykes, Sr.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Edward George Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Edward Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒThomas Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Edward Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Thomas Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Leonard Dykes‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Isabelle Dykes‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Mary Pennington‰
her mother‰ ᆒJohn Hudleston, 7th Lord of Millom‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Richard Huddleston‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Sir Richard Of Millom Castle, Cumberland Huddleston, of Millum‰
his father‰ ᆒSir John Hodelston, Esq.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Sir John Huddleston, Knt.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Sir Richard Huddleston, Knt.‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Lady Joan Huddleston (de Boyville)‰
his mother‰ ᆒJuliana de Boyville‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Adam de Ireby‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Orm de Ireby‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Gospatrick of High Ireby, Lord of Workington‰
his father‰ ᆒGunhilda, of Northumbria‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Gospatric, Earl of Dunbar‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Ealdgyth, of Northumbria‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Uchtred "the Bold", Earl of Northumbria‰
her father‰ ᆒWaltheof I, Earl of Northumbria‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Oswulf I, Earl of Northumbria‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Ealdred I of Bamburgh‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Eadwulf Iv, king of Northumbria‰
his father‰ ᆒEadwulf III of Northumbria‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Eadwulf II, king of Northumbria‰
his father
Eadwulf III was the son of Eardwulf II (fl. 790 ·Äì c. 808) who was king of Northumbria from 796 to 808, when he was deposed and went into exile. He may have had a second reign from 809 until perhaps 810. Northumbria in the last years of the eighth century was the scene of dynastic strife between several noble families: In 790, the then-king âÜthelred I attempted to have Eardwulf assassinated. Eardwulf's survival may have been viewed as a sign of divine favour. A group of nobles conspired to assassinate âÜthelred in April 796 and he was succeeded by Osbald: Osbald's reign lasted only twenty-seven days before he was deposed and Eardwulf II became king on 14 May 796.
Quote from Wikipedia article, from URL below: "Eardwulf was not, so far as is known, connected to any of the factions that had been warring for the throne up to the mid-790s. Nothing is definitely known of his background, though Symeon of Durham's History of the Kings, an early twelfth-century work based on the lost late tenth-century chronicle of Byrhtferth, records that his father's name was also Eardwulf,[23] and both father and son are given the title dux.[24] Historian Barbara Yorke has proposed that he was a descendant of one Earnwine who (according to Symeon of Durham) was killed in 740 on the orders of King Eadberht.[1] This Earnwine may be identified with King Eadwulf's son of the same name.[25] Eardwulf's father may have been one of the two Eardwulfs whose deaths are recorded by Symeon of Durham in 774 and 775.[26]
Eardwulf appears to have been an enemy of âÜthelred I. He first appears in the historical record circa 790, when Symeon of Durham reports that:[27] Eardulf was taken prisoner, and conveyed to Ripon, and there ordered by the aforesaid king [Aethelred] to be put to death without the gate of the monastery. The brethren carried his body into the church with Gregorian chanting, and placed it out of doors in a tent; after midnight he was found alive in the church.
A letter from Alcuin to Eardwulf suggests that this fortunate recovery was seen as being miraculous."
Little is recorded of Eardwulf's family, though his father, also named Eardwulf, is known to have been a nobleman. Eardwulf II was married by the time he became king, though his wife's name is not recorded. It is possible he later wed an illegitimate daughter of Charlemagne (Source-Annales Lindisfarnenses 797MGH 58 XIX p 506). Early in his reign, in 798,,Eardwulf II fought a battle at Billington Moor against a nobleman named Wada, who had been one of those who killed King âÜthelred. Wada was defeated and driven into exile. In 801, Eardwulf II led an army against Coenwulf of Mercia, perhaps because of Coenwulf's support for other claimants to the Northumbrian throne.
Eardwulf II was deposed in 808 and according to a Frankish record, returned to his kingdom in 809. No record has survived (?) of his death or the end of his reign in 810 He was possibly buried at the Mercian royal monastery of Breedon on the Hill which carries a dedication to Saint Mary and Saint Hardulph, with whom Eardwulf II is identified by several historians (i.e. Saint Hardulph was Eardwulf II).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eardwulf_of_Northumbria
According to the source in Medlands "ANNALES LINDISFARNENSES 797, MGH 58 XIX p. 506" the second wife of Eadwulf II was supposed to be a daughter of Emperor Charlemagne (filiam regis Karoli) because Eadwulf II fled for protection in 807-08 to the court of Charlemagne and was granted a papal delegation to return with Eadwulf and his new wife to Northumbria. With that being done, Eadwulf II was restored to his position as king and he had a son by his new wife named Eadwulf III born 808. However, Eadwulf's eldest son Eanred succeeded to the throne after 810 and ruled until his death in 840. Then Eanred's son Aethelred ruled until 844 when he was deposed by the thanes and Eadwulf III. By the end of 844 Eadwulf III was killed in battle by Aethelred who then ruled again until his death in 848.
From 848 another family ruled Northumberland with Osberht and then brother Aella being kings from 848-67. They were both killed in the Battle of York defeated by Ragnarsson, the Viking leader. See the overview for his father Eadwulf II for a broader history of the Eadwulf rulers of Northumberland through Earl Siward and his son Waltheof whose daughter became Queen of the Scots. Through Waltheof's daughter arose the House of Huntingdon which led to the powerful House of Bruce of Scotland and the Royal House of Stewart.
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