Eardwulf
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From eard (“homeland, earth, land”) and wulf (“wolf”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈæ͜ɑrdˌwulf/, [ˈæ͜ɑrˠdˌwuɫf]
Proper noun
Eardwulf m
- a male given name
- Eardwulf of Northumbria; an Anglo-Saxon King of Northumbria.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- An. DCCXCV Hēr wæs sē mōna āþȳstrod betwux hancrēd ⁊ dagunge on V Kƚ Aprilis. ⁊ Eard[wulf] feng tō Norþanhymbra cynedōme on II Iđ Maĩ., and hē wæs syððan ġebletsod ⁊ his cynestōle āhafen on VII Kƚ Iunii on Eoforwīc frām Ēanbalde arċebisċop, ⁊ Æþelberhte ⁊ Hiġebalde ⁊ Badwulfe [bisċeopas].
- Year 795 In this year the moon was obscured between the cock's crow and dawn on the fifth of April. And Eardwulf became king of Northumbria on the second of May, and then on the seventh of June his throne was raised and he was blessed in York by Archbishop Eanbald and Bishops Aethelbright, Higebald, and Badwulf.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
References
- Electronic Sawyer S 333 (Æthelberht, king of Wessex, to the church of Sherborne; grant of privileges, with note that Æthelberht placed the charter on the high altar at Sherborne (A.D. 865, Good Friday)), Eardwulf is mentioned as "Eardulf" in the text and old text sections.