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770s births

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Ecgberht
King of Wessex
Einhard
thumb|Einhard as scribe. Manuscript depiction from 1050
Charles the Younger
second son of Charlemagne
Tahir ibn Husayn
Abbasid caliphate general and the founder of Taheri Emirate (821–822)
Ermengarde of Hesbaye
Holy Roman empress
Xue Tao
Tang Dynasty poet Chinese woman poet in Qing Dynasty. CBDB ID = 0095068
Theodosia
Byzantine empress, wife of Leo V
Yahya ibn Ma'in
Iraqi Muslim scholar (774–847)
Welf I, Count of Altdorf
father of Judith of Bavaria
Prokopia
Prokopia (; c. 770 – after 813) was the empress consort of Michael I Rhangabe of the Eastern Roman Empire. She was a daughter of Nikephoros I. The name of her mother is not known. Her only known sibling is Staurakios.
Alchmund of Derby
saint
Maria of Amnia
Byzantine empress
Ibn Masawayh
thumb|De consolatione medicinarum, 1475
Agobard
Agobard of Lyon (840) was a Spanish-born priest and archbishop of Lyon, during the Carolingian Renaissance. The author of multiple treatises, ranging in subject matter from the iconoclast controversy to Spanish Adoptionism to critiques of the Carolingian royal family, Agobard is best known for his critiques of Jewish religious practices and political power in the Frankish-Carolingian realm. He was succeeded by Amulo of Lyons.
Ibn Abī Shaiba
Islamic scholar
Rotrude
second daughter of Charlemagne from his marriage to Hildegard
Khalifa ibn Khayyat
Arab historian of Abbasid era (777-854)
Ebbo
Ebbo, Ebo or Epo ( – 20 March 851) was the Archbishop of Rheims from 816 until 835 and again from 840 to 841. He was born a German serf on the royal demesne of Charlemagne. He was educated at his court and became the librarian and councillor of Louis the Pious, king of Aquitaine, son of Charlemagne. When Louis became emperor, he appointed Ebbo to the see of Rheims, then vacant after the death of Wulfaire.
Bugha al-Kabir
Abbasid general of Turkic origin
Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam
Arab philologist
Amalarius of Metz
Amalarius (c. 775–c. 850) was a Frankish prelate and courtier, temporary bishop of Trier (812–13) and Lyon (835–38), and an accomplished liturgist. He was close to Charlemagne and a partisan of his successor, Louis the Pious, throughout the latter's tumultuous reign.
Sahnun
Sahnun ibn Said ibn Habib al-Tanukhi () (c. 776/77 – 854/55) (160 AH – 240 AH ) was a jurist in the Maliki school from Qayrawan in modern-day Tunisia.
Li Gongzuo
writer
Külüg Bilge khagan
khagan of Uyghurs
Qutluq Bilge Qaghan
sixth khagan of the Uyghur Khaganate
Ahmad ibn Abi Du'ad
Chief judge of Abbasid Caliphate
Ansegisus
Saint Ansegisus (c. 770 – 20 July 833 or 834) was a monastic reformer of the Franks.
Al-Fadl ibn Marwan
Abbasid vizier
George the Standard-Bearer
Archbishop of Mytilene from 804-815
Hedwig
Saxon noble woman