Wuffa of East Anglia
| Wuffa | |
|---|---|
An imaginary depiction of Wuffa, from John Speed's Saxon Heptarchy (1611) | |
| King of the East Angles | |
| Reign | 6th century |
| Predecessor | Wehha |
| Successor | Tytila |
| House | Wuffingas |
| Father | Wehha |
| Religion | Anglo-Saxon Paganism |
Wuffa (or Uffa, Old English: Ƿuffa) is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon genealogies as an early king of East Anglia. If historical, he would have lived in the 6th century.
By tradition Wuffa was named as the son of Wehha and the father of Tytila, but it is not known with any certainty that Wuffa was an actual historical figure. The name Wuffa was the eponym for the Wuffingas dynasty, the ruling royal family of the East Angles until 749.
Bede regarded Wuffa as the first king of the East Angles, but the author of the Historia Brittonum, writing a century later, named Wehha as the first ruler. Although clearly, "Wuffa" and "Wehha" are the same thing, with a small difference in pronunciation which is common in these times before standardised spelling, so to draw a distinction is farcical.