The
kingdom of East Anglia () was a small independent
Anglo-Saxon kingdom that comprised what are now the English counties of
Norfolk and
Suffolk. It perhaps also included the eastern part of the
Fens in
Cambridgeshire, a region that was disputed between the East Angles and their neighbours, the
Mercians. Created in the wake of the
Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, the kingdom was ruled from the 6th century by the
Wuffingas, the most powerful member of the dynasty being
Rædwald, the first definitely known to have been king. The Wuffingas retained their dynastic power until the end of the reign of the poorly recorded
Ælfwald in 749. After Ælfwald, the East Angles were ruled independently by kings of unknown lineage, until in 794
Æthelberht was killed on the order of
Offa of Mercia, who then consolidated his control over the kingdom. East Anglia briefly strove for independence after 796, the year that Offa was succeeded by his son
Ecgfrith. Ecgfrith died after a rule of only five months and was succeeded by a distant kinsman, Coenwulf. The East Angles were conquered by the
Danes in 869, to form part of the
Danelaw. In 918, the region was conquered by
Edward the Elder and was incorporated into the
Kingdom of England. == Coinage ==