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・ Çakırkoç, Posof
・ Æthelhun
・ Ætheling
・ Æthelmod
・ Æthelmod (bishop)
・ Æthelmund
・ Æthelmær
・ Æthelmær of Elmham
・ Æthelmær the Stout
・ Æthelnoth
・ Æthelnoth (archbishop of Canterbury)
・ Æthelnoth (bishop of London)
・ Æthelred
・ Æthelred "Mucel", Ealdorman of the Gaini
・ Æthelred (bishop)
Æthelred and Æthelberht
・ Æthelred I
・ Æthelred I of East Anglia
・ Æthelred I of Northumbria
・ Æthelred II of East Anglia
・ Æthelred II of Northumbria
・ Æthelred of Cornwall
・ Æthelred of East Anglia
・ Æthelred of Mercia
・ Æthelred of Wessex
・ Æthelred the Unready
・ Æthelred, Lord of the Mercians
・ Æthelric
・ Æthelric (bishop of Dorchester)
・ Æthelric (bishop of Durham)


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Æthelred and Æthelberht : ウィキペディア英語版
Æthelred and Æthelberht

:''For the king of Kent, see Æthelberht of Kent.''
Saints Æthelred and Æthelberht (also ''Ethelred'', ''Ethelbert'') according to the Kentish royal legend (attested in the 11th century) were princes of the Kingdom of Kent who were murdered in around AD 669, and later commemorated as saints and martyrs. Their story forms an important element in the legend of Saint Mildrith, because the monastery of Minster in Thanet is said to have been founded in atonement for the crime.
==Historical context==
King Eorcenberht of Kent seized the rule of Kent in 640 in precedence to his elder brother Eormenred. Both were sons of Eadbald of Kent (r. c. 616–640). The legend, contained in a Latin ''Passio'', tells that Eormenred and his wife Oslafa had several children including the two sons Aethelred and Aethelberht, and a daughter Eormenbeorg, also known as Domne Eafe. Eafe married Merewalh, ruler of the Maegonsaetan, a people situated in the west Midlands in the Shropshire area. King Eorcenberht married Seaxburh, daughter of King Anna of East Anglia, and ruled as a Christian king: he was the first ruler to order the abandonment and destruction of idols throughout his kingdom, and to establish the forty days' fast of Lent to be observed by royal authority (Bede, Ecclesiastical History iii,8). He had two sons, Ecgberht and Hlothhere, and two daughters, Eormenhild and Eorcongota. On Eorconberht's death of the plague in 664, Ecgberht succeeded him as King of Kent.

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