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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BOS-BRI |
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BRETWALDA , a word used in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle under the date 827, and also in a charter of sEthelstan, king of the English. It appears in several variant forms (brytenwalda, bretenanwealda, &c.), and means most probably " lord of the Britons " or " lord of Britain "; for although the derivation of the word is uncertain, its earlier syllable seems to be cognate with the words Briton and Britannia. In the Chronicle the title is given to Ecgbert, king of the English, " the eighth king that was Bretwalda," and retrospectively to seven kings who ruled over one or other of the English kingdoms. The seven names are copied from Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica, and it is interesting to note that the last king named, Oswiu of Northumbria, lived 150 years before Ecgbert. It has been assumed that these seven kings exercised a certain superiority over a large part
south
south
Palgrave that the Bretwaldas were the successors of the pseudo-emperors, Maximus and Carausius
See E. A. Freeman, History of the Norman Conquest, vol. i. ( Oxford
Stubbs
Oxford
Palgrave , The Rise and Progress of the English Commonwealth
Saxons
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