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9th-century archbishops

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Leo III
Pope of the Catholic Church from 795 to 816 (born 750–816)
Gregory IV
Pope and bishop of Rome from 827 to 844
John VIII
Head of the Catholic Church from 872 to 882
Adrian II
pope
Adrian III
pope
Leo IV
pope of the Catholic Church
Sergius III
pope (860-911)
Paschal I
pope
Eugene II
pope
Stephen VI
pope
Marinus I
pope
Boniface VI
pope
Stephen V
pope
Nicholas I
pope
John IX
pope
Stephen IV
pope
Sergius II
pope
Romanus
pope
Theodore II
pope (840-897)
Rabanus Maurus
archbishop of Mainz and writer (d. 856)
John VIII
antipope in 844
Ado of Vienne
Archbishop of Vienne
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.
Arno of Salzburg
Roman Catholic archbishop
Hatto I
Roman Catholic archbishop
Æthelhard
Æthelhard (died 12 May 805) was a Bishop of Winchester then an Archbishop of Canterbury in medieval England. Appointed by King Offa of Mercia, Æthelhard had difficulties with both the Kentish monarchs and with a rival archiepiscopate in southern England, and was deposed around 796 by King Eadberht III Præn of Kent. By 803, Æthelhard, along with the Mercian King Coenwulf, had secured the demotion of the rival archbishopric, once more making Canterbury the only archbishopric south of the Humber in Britain. Æthelhard died in 805, and was considered a saint until his cult was suppressed after the
Elipando
thumb|A letter dated to 792 from Charlemagne to Elipandus concerning Adoptionism, from a manuscript of 821 commissioned by Bishop [[Baturich.]] Elipandus (717–805) was a Spanish theologian and the archbishop of Toledo from 782. He was condemned by the Catholic Church as an Adoptionist.
Charles, Archbishop of Mainz
Roman Catholic archbishop
Liutbert, Archbishop of Mainz
Roman Catholic archbishop
Adalram
thumb|Adalram's dedication in the "Muspilli manuscript" Adalram (died 836) was an early 9th-century prelate active in Bavaria. He is known to have been archdeacon of the Salzburg diocese , and in 821 succeeded Arno as Archbishop of Salzburg. In 824, following the request of the emperor Louis the Pious, he received the pallium from Pope Eugenius II.
Bernard of Vienne
Bishop of Vienne
Gunther
Archbishop of Cologne in Germany
Hildebold
Roman Catholic archbishop
Odgar
Roman Catholic archbishop
Herman I
Archbishop of Cologne
Wilbert
Archbishop of Cologne
Wigmund
Archbishop of York
Eanbald II
Archbishop of York
Richbod
Richbod was a Frankish monk and prelate who was the Abbot of Lorsch from 784 and and Archbishop of Trier from around 792, holding all three of these positions concurrently. He is first documented as a monk in the Lorsch monastery, where he worked as a document clerk. After, he would be noticed and picked up as a student of Alcuin at the court of Charlemagne. Whilst under king he would rise to role of advisor and be awarded the titles of:
Angilbert II
Roman Catholic archbishop
Gregorios Asbestas
Æthelred
Archbishop of Canterbury
Amulo
Amulo (also known as: Amalo, Amulon, Amolo, Amularius) served as Archbishop of Lyon from 841 to 852 AD. As a Gallic prelate, Amulo is best known for his letters concerning two major themes: Christian–Jewish relations in the Frankish kingdom and the Carolingian controversy over predestination. He was ordained as archbishop in January 841.
Walter of Sens
Frankish arshibishop of Sens (-923)
Wulfsige
archbishop of York
Ansegisus
Benedictine monk, Frankish Archbishop of Sens
Wulfhere of York
archbishop of York