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Jutish and king
The last pagan Jutish king, Arwald of the Isle of Wight was killed in 686.
Hengest has sometimes been identified with the Jutish king of Kent.
The last pagan Anglo-Saxon king, the Jutish king Arwald of the Isle of Wight, was killed in battle in 686 fighting against the imposition of Christianity in his kingdom.
Gorm succeeded his father as king and married Thyra, the daughter of the Jutish chieftain Harald Klak.
However, after the discovery of the Iron Age artifacts – and in apparent confusion over a reference to the area as Hedenesburia – it was renamed Hengistbury Head after the Jutish king Hengest.

Jutish and Kent
If, as seems likely from the name, these people were the continental remnants of the Jutish invaders of Kent, then it may be that the marriage was intended as a unifying political move, reconnecting different branches of the same people.
After it became the chief Jutish settlement, it gained its English name Canterbury, itself derived from the Old English Cantwareburh (" Kent people's stronghold ").
The Kingdom of Kent ( Cent in Old English, Cantia regnum in Latin ) was a Jutish colony and later independent kingdom in what is now south east England.
Vortimer died at the Battle of Aylesford alongside Horsa, the Jutish co-ruler of Kent.
Western Kent has fewer archaeological finds from the earliest periods than east Kent, and the eastern finds are somewhat distinct in character, showing Jutish and Frankish influence.
Alone among the kingdoms then existing Kent was Jutish, rather than Anglian or Saxon.
A lathe was an ancient administration division of Kent, and may well have originated during a Jutish colonisation of the county.
His books include " The Jutish Forest " and " The Kingdom of Kent ".

Jutish and married
They had the son Sigurd Hart, who married Ingeborg, the daughter of the Jutish chieftain Harald Klak.

Jutish and into
Although there were Jutish and later Saxon people in the Southampton area from the 5th century, the Britons seem to have successfully resisted their expansion into future Dorset for a long period.

Jutish and Britain
Hengist ( or Hengest ) and Horsa ( or Hors ) are figures of Anglo-Saxon, and subsequently British, legend, which records the two as the Germanic brothers who led the Angle, Saxon, and Jutish armies that conquered the first territories of Britain in the 5th century.
Jutish settlements in Britain c. 575
The 8th Century English historian Bede disagrees with Gildas, and states that the Saxon invasions continued after the battle of Mons Badonicus, including also Jutish and Anglic expeditions, resulting in a swift overrunning of the entirety of South-Eastern Britain, and the foundation of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
After the evacuation of the last Roman legions from Britain, the local tradition reported much later that a number of Jutish ships made landfall in Britain.
Following the Jutish example the Saxons began invading Britain in earnest.

Jutish and .
Wade-Evans, in fact, denies that there were any Anglo-Saxon invasions at all other than a minor Jutish foray in A.D. 514.
The majority of scholars believe that the Anglii lived on the coasts of the Baltic Sea, probably in the southern part of the Jutish peninsula.
The Royal Danish Army includes amongst its historic regiments the Jutish Dragoon Regiment, which was raised in 1670.
Another modern hypothesis ( the so-called " Jutish hypothesis "), accepted by the Oxford English Dictionary, states that the Jutes are identical with the Geats, a people who once lived in southern Sweden.
He was the only Jutish Bretwalda.
Over the next 100 years, an Anglo-Saxon community formed within the city walls, as Jutish refugees arrived, possibly intermarrying with the locals.
If such a dominant native family as that of Cerdic had already developed blood-relationships with existing Saxon and Jutish settlers at this end of the Saxon Shore, it could very well be tempted, once effective Roman authority had faded, to go further.
In Southern Jutish, mojn is used for hello and good bye, but mojn mojn is solely used for good bye.
A group of Jutish nobles had offered Frederick the throne as early as 1513, when his brother, King John, died, but he had declined, rightly believing that the majority of the Danish nobility would be loyal to prince Christian.
Later also the contacts increased between the Danes and the people on the northern half of the Jutish peninsula.
Tolkien read the word as Jutes, and theorized that the fight was a purely Jutish feud, and Finn and Hnæf were simply caught up by circumstance.
Hnæf, son of Hoc Half-Dane, is the lord of a Danish people who have conquered part of Jutland ( probably the northern part of the Cimbrian peninsula ) and exiled its former Jutish rulers.

king and Ethelbert
* Ethelbert, king of Kent and Bretwalda
* Ethelbert succeeds as king of Wessex.
* Eadbald succeeds Ethelbert as king of Kent.
* February 24 – Ethelbert, king of Kent and Bretwalda
* Ethelbert becomes king of Kent.
Ethelbert, king of the East Angles, having reigned single some time, thought fit to take a wife ; for this purpose he came to the court of Offa, king of Mercia, to desire his daughter in marriage.
The banner from in which the heinous crime was effected was as cowardly as it was fatal: under the chair of state in which Ethelbert sat, a deep pit was dug ; at the bottom of it was placed the murderer ; the unfortunate king was then let through a trap-door into the pit ; his fear overcame him so much, that he did not attempt resistance.
Ella, king of the South-Saxons, was the first who possessed so large a territory ; the second was Ceawlin, king of the West-Saxons: the third was Ethelbert, King of Kent ; the fourth was Redwald, king of the East-Angles ; the fifth was Edwin, king of the Northumbrians ; the sixth was Oswald, who succeeded him ; the seventh was Oswy, the brother of Oswald ; the eighth was Egbert, king of the West-Saxons.
Charibert was scarcely more than king at Paris when he married his daughter Bertha to Ethelbert, the pagan King of Kent.
In 2007, Murphy painted twelve " vibrant images " for a new shrine to St. Ethelbert, king and martyr, in Hereford Cathedral, where the saint is buried.
King Edwin was king of all England with the exception of Kent and wished to marry Ethelburgh, the daughter of Ethelbert king of Kent.

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