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See also: kingdom, is described as an ealdorman who in 495 landed with his son Cynric in Hampshire, where he was attacked at once by the Britons, Nothing more is heard of him until 508, when he defeated the Britons with See also: great slaughter
.
Strengthened by fresh arrivals of See also: Saxons, he gained another victory in 519 at Certicesford, a spot which has been identified with the See also: modern Charford, and in this See also: year took the title of See also: king
.
Turning westward,
See also: Cerdic appears to have been defeated by the Britons in 520 at Badbury or See also: Mount Badon, in Dorset, and in 527 yet another fight with the Britons is recorded
.
His last See also: work was the See also: conquest of the Isle of See also: Wight, probably in the See also: interest of some Jutish See also: allies
.
All the sovereigns of See also: England, except Canute, Hardicanute, the two Harolds and See also: William the Conqueror, are said to be descended from Cerdic
.
See Anglo-Saxon
See also: Chronicle, edited by C
.
Plummer (See also: Oxford, 1892-1899) ; See also: Gildas, De excidio Britanniae, edited by Th
.
See also: Mommsen (Berlin, 1898) ; See also: Nennius, Historia Brittonum, edited by Th
.
Mommsen (Berlin, 1898) See also: Bede, Historiae ecclesiasticae geniis Anglorum libri v., ed
.
C
.
Plummer (Oxford, 1896) ; E
.
See also: Guest, Origines Celticae (See also: London, 1883) ; J
.
R . See also: Green, The Making of England (London, 1897)
.
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