- East
Saxons are
illuminated by a
letter written in 704 or 705 by
Bishop Wealdhere of
London to Brihtwold, the
Archbishop of Canterbury. The
letter refers...
- Walther, Walter, Waldher, and Valter. The Old
English equivalent is
Wealdhere, Old
Norse has Valðar and Valdarr. It was
later used in
modern English...
- Waldhere,
Wealdhere or
Waldere can
refer to: Waldere, Old
English epic poem
surviving only in
fragments Waldhere (Bishop of London),
early 8th-century...
- of Æthelred's,
dated between 693 and 704,
shows him
granting land to
Wealdhere, the
bishop of London, and in 704 Æthelred
consented to a
grant made by...
-
civil parish of Stoughton. The name
Walderton derives from the town of
Wealdhere's people. The
village lies just
below the
source of the
River Ems. It is...
- Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: OUP. ISBN 0192801392. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date
incompatibility (help)
Wealdhere 2 at
Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon
England v t e...