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==Trade and connections to the Franks== There is little documentary evidence about the nature of trade in Eadbald's reign. It is known that the kings of Kent had established royal control of trade in the late seventh century, but it is not known how early this control began. There is archaeological evidence that suggests that the royal influence predates any of the written sources, and it may have been Eadbald's father, Æthelberht, who took control of trade away from the aristocracy and made it a royal monopoly. The continental trade provided Kent access to luxury goods, which was an advantage in trading with the other Anglo-Saxon nations, and the revenue from trade was important in itself.<ref name=Yorke_40>Yorke, ''Kings and Kingdoms'', p. 40.</ref> Kent traded locally made glass and jewelry to the Franks; Kentish goods have been found as far south as the mouth of the [[Loire River|Loire]], south of Brittany. There was probably also a flourishing slave trade. The wealth this commerce brought to Kent may have been the basis of the continuing, though diminished, importance of Kent in Eadbald's reign.<ref name=Campbell_TAS_44>Campbell et al., ''The Anglo-Saxons'', p. 44.</ref> Coins were probably first minted in Kent in Æthelberht's reign, though none bear his name. These early golden coins were probably the shillings ({{langx|ang|scillingas}}) that are mentioned in Æthelberht's laws.<ref name=Yorke_40 /> The coins are also known to [[numismatics|numismatists]] as "[[thrymsa]]s".<ref name=Blackwell_113>[[M.A.S. Blackburn]], "Coinage", in Lapidge, ''Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England'', pp. 113–116.</ref> Thrymsas are known from Eadbald's reign, but few are known that carry his name: one such was minted at [[London]] and inscribed "AVDVARLD". It has been suggested that kings did not have a monopoly on the production of coinage at that time.<ref name="Yorke_40-41">Yorke, ''Kings and Kingdoms'', pp. 40–41.</ref> Connections with Francia went beyond trade and the royal marriages Æthelberht and Eadbald made with Frankish princesses. Eadbald's granddaughter, Eorcengota, became a nun at [[Faremoutiers Abbey|Faremoutiers]], and his great-granddaughter, [[Mildrith]], was a nun at [[Chelles Abbey|Chelles]]. When Edwin was killed in about 632, Æthelburg, escorted by Paulinus, fled by sea to Eadbald's court in Kent, but in a further sign of her family's ties across the channel she sent her children to the court of King [[Dagobert I]] of the Franks, to keep them safe from the intrigues of Eadbald and Oswald of Northumbria.<ref name=Yorke_39/><ref name=Bede_II_20/><ref name=Kirby_88/>
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