Dægberht
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Old English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From dæġ (“day”) and berht (“bright, clear”). Cognate with Frankish *Dagoberaht.
Pronunciation[edit]
Proper noun[edit]
Dæġberht m
- a male given name
References[edit]
- Electronic Sawyer S 1204 (Cialwulf to Eanmund; grant of land in Canterbury, in return for 120 silver pence; with added note of a purchase by Æthelhere in A.D. 888), Dægberht is mentioned as "Deibearht" in the text and old text sections.
- Electronic Sawyer S 296 (Æthelwulf, king of Wessex and Kent, to Badanoth, his apparitor; grant of land near Canterbury, in return for 15 mancuses of gold), Dægberht is mentioned as "Degberht" in the text and old text sections.