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Æthelstan

Æthelstan or Athelstan (/ˈæθəlstæn/; Old English: Æðelstān [ˈæðelstɑːn]; Old Norse: Aðalsteinn; lit.'noble stone';[4] c. 894 – 27 October 939) was King of the Anglo-Saxons from 924 to 927 and King of the English from 927 to his death in 939.[a] He was the son of King Edward the Elder and his first wife, Ecgwynn. Modern historians regard him as the first King of England and one of the "greatest Anglo-Saxon kings".[6] He never married and had no children; he was succeeded by his half-brother, Edmund I.

Æthelstan
Æthelstan presenting a book to St Cuthbert, an illustration in a manuscript of Bede's Life of Saint Cuthbert, probably presented to the saint's shrine in Chester-le-Street by Æthelstan when he visited the shrine on his journey to Scotland in 934.[1] He wore a crown of a similar design on his crowned bust coins.[2] It is the oldest surviving portrait of an English king and the manuscript is the oldest surviving made for an English king.[3]
King of the Anglo-Saxons
Reign924/5 – 927
Coronation4 September 925
Kingston upon Thames
PredecessorEdward the Elder
King of the English
Reign927 – 27 October 939
PredecessorTitle established
SuccessorEdmund I
Bornc. 894
Wessex
Died27 October 939 (aged about 45)
Gloucester, England
Burial
HouseWessex
FatherEdward the Elder
MotherEcgwynn

When Edward died in July 924, Æthelstan was accepted by the Mercians as king. His half-brother Ælfweard may have been recognised as king in Wessex, but died within three weeks of their father's death. Æthelstan encountered resistance in Wessex for several months, and was not crowned until September 925. In 927 he conquered the last remaining Viking kingdom, York, making him the first Anglo-Saxon ruler of the whole of England. In 934 he invaded Scotland and forced Constantine II to submit to him. Æthelstan's rule was resented by the Scots and Vikings, and in 937 they invaded England. Æthelstan defeated them at the Battle of Brunanburh, a victory that gave him great prestige both in the British Isles and on the Continent. After his death in 939, the Vikings seized back control of York, and it was not finally reconquered until 954.

Æthelstan centralised government; he increased control over the production of charters and summoned leading figures from distant areas to his councils. These meetings were also attended by rulers from outside his territory, especially Welsh kings, who thus acknowledged his overlordship. More legal texts survive from his reign than from any other 10th-century English king. They show his concern about widespread robberies, and the threat they posed to social order. His legal reforms built on those of his grandfather, Alfred the Great. Æthelstan was one of the most pious West Saxon kings, and was known for collecting relics and founding churches. His household was the centre of English learning during his reign, and it laid the foundation for the Benedictine monastic reform later in the century. No other West Saxon king played as important a role in European politics as Æthelstan, and he arranged the marriages of several of his sisters to continental rulers.

Background

By the ninth century the many kingdoms of the early Anglo-Saxon period had been consolidated into four: Wessex, Mercia, Northumbria and East Anglia.[7] In the eighth century, Mercia had been the most powerful kingdom in southern England, but in the early ninth, Wessex became dominant under Æthelstan's great-great-grandfather, Egbert. In the middle of the century, England came under increasing attack from Viking raids, culminating in invasion by the Great Heathen Army in 865. By 878, the Vikings had overrun East Anglia, Northumbria, and Mercia, and nearly conquered Wessex. The West Saxons fought back under Alfred the Great, and achieved a decisive victory at the Battle of Edington.[8] Alfred and the Viking leader Guthrum agreed on a division that gave the Anglo-Saxons western Mercia, and eastern Mercia to the Vikings. In the 890s, renewed Viking attacks were successfully fought off by Alfred, assisted by his son (and Æthelstan's father) Edward and Æthelred, Lord of the Mercians. Æthelred ruled English Mercia under Alfred and was married to his daughter Æthelflæd. Alfred died in 899 and was succeeded by Edward. Æthelwold, the son of Æthelred, King Alfred's older brother and predecessor as king, made a bid for power, but was killed at the Battle of the Holme in 902.[9]

Little is known of warfare between the English and the Danes over the next few years, but in 909, Edward sent a West Saxon and Mercian army to ravage Northumbria. The following year the Northumbrian Danes attacked Mercia, but suffered a decisive defeat at the Battle of Tettenhall.[10] Æthelred died in 911 and was succeeded as ruler of Mercia by his widow Æthelflæd. Over the next decade, Edward and Æthelflæd conquered Viking Mercia and East Anglia. Æthelflæd died in 918 and was briefly succeeded by her daughter Ælfwynn, but in the same year Edward deposed her and took direct control of Mercia.[11]

When Edward died in 924, he controlled all of England south of the Humber.[11] The Viking king Sihtric ruled the Kingdom of York in southern Northumbria, but Ealdred maintained Anglo-Saxon rule in at least part of the former kingdom of Bernicia from his base in Bamburgh in northern Northumbria. Constantine II ruled Scotland, apart from the southwest, which was the British Kingdom of Strathclyde. Wales was divided into a number of small kingdoms, including Deheubarth in the southwest, Gwent in the southeast, Brycheiniog immediately north of Gwent, and Gwynedd in the north.[12]

Early life

 
Statue in Tamworth of Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians, with her young nephew Æthelstan

According to the Anglo-Norman historian William of Malmesbury, Æthelstan was thirty years old when he came to the throne in 924, which would mean that he was born around 894. He was the oldest son of Edward the Elder. He was Edward's only son by his first consort, Ecgwynn. Very little is known about Ecgwynn, and she is not named in any contemporary source. Medieval chroniclers gave varying descriptions of her rank: one described her as an ignoble consort of inferior birth, while others described her birth as noble.[13] Modern historians also disagree about her status. Simon Keynes and Richard Abels believe that leading figures in Wessex were unwilling to accept Æthelstan as king in 924 partly because his mother had been Edward the Elder's concubine.[14] However, Barbara Yorke and Sarah Foot argue that allegations that Æthelstan was illegitimate were a product of the dispute over the succession, and that there is no reason to doubt that she was Edward's legitimate wife.[15] She may have been related to St Dunstan.[16]

William of Malmesbury wrote that Alfred the Great honoured his young grandson with a ceremony in which he gave him a scarlet cloak, a belt set with gems, and a sword with a gilded scabbard.[17] Medieval Latin scholar Michael Lapidge and historian Michael Wood see this as designating Æthelstan as a potential heir at a time when the claim of Alfred's nephew, Æthelwold, to the throne represented a threat to the succession of Alfred's direct line,[18] but historian Janet Nelson suggests that it should be seen in the context of conflict between Alfred and Edward in the 890s, and might reflect an intention to divide the realm between his son and his grandson after his death.[19] Historian Martin Ryan goes further, suggesting that at the end of his life Alfred may have favoured Æthelstan rather than Edward as his successor.[20] An acrostic poem praising prince "Adalstan", and prophesying a great future for him, has been interpreted by Lapidge as referring to the young Æthelstan, punning on the Old English meaning of his name, "noble stone".[21] Lapidge and Wood see the poem as a commemoration of Alfred's ceremony by one of his leading scholars, John the Old Saxon.[22] In Michael Wood's view, the poem confirms the truth of William of Malmesbury's account of the ceremony. Wood also suggests that Æthelstan may have been the first English king to be groomed from childhood as an intellectual, and that John was probably his tutor.[23] However, Sarah Foot argues that the acrostic poem makes better sense if it is dated to the beginning of Æthelstan's reign.[24]

Edward married his second wife, Ælfflæd, at about the time of his father's death, probably because Ecgwynn had died, although she may have been put aside. The new marriage weakened Æthelstan's position, as his step-mother naturally favoured the interests of her own sons, Ælfweard and Edwin.[17] By 920 Edward had taken a third wife, Eadgifu, probably after putting Ælfflæd aside.[25] Eadgifu also had two sons, the future kings Edmund and Eadred. Edward had several daughters, perhaps as many as nine.[26]

Æthelstan's later education was probably at the Mercian court of his aunt and uncle, Æthelflæd and Æthelred, and it is likely the young prince gained his military training in the Mercian campaigns to conquer the Danelaw. According to a transcript dating from 1304, in 925 Æthelstan gave a charter of privileges to St Oswald's Priory, Gloucester, where his aunt and uncle were buried, "according to a pact of paternal piety which he formerly pledged with Æthelred, ealdorman of the people of the Mercians".[27] When Edward took direct control of Mercia after Æthelflæd's death in 918, Æthelstan may have represented his father's interests there.[28]

Reign

The struggle for power

Edward died at Farndon in northern Mercia on 17 July 924, and the ensuing events are unclear.[29] Ælfweard, Edward's eldest son by Ælfflæd, had ranked above Æthelstan in attesting a charter in 901, and Edward may have intended Ælfweard to be his successor as king, either of Wessex only or of the whole kingdom. If Edward had intended his realms to be divided after his death, his deposition of Ælfwynn in Mercia in 918 may have been intended to prepare the way for Æthelstan's succession as king of Mercia.[30] When Edward died, Æthelstan was apparently with him in Mercia, while Ælfweard was in Wessex. Mercia acknowledged Æthelstan as king, and Wessex may have chosen Ælfweard. However, Ælfweard outlived his father by only sixteen days.[31]

Even after Ælfweard's death there seems to have been opposition to Æthelstan in Wessex, particularly in Winchester, where Ælfweard was buried. At first Æthelstan behaved as a Mercian king. A charter relating to land in Derbyshire, which appears to have been issued at a time in 925 when his authority had not yet been recognised outside Mercia, was witnessed only by Mercian bishops.[32] In the view of historians David Dumville and Janet Nelson he may have agreed not to marry or have heirs in order to gain acceptance.[33] However, Sarah Foot ascribes his decision to remain unmarried to "a religiously motivated determination on chastity as a way of life".[34][b]

The coronation of Æthelstan took place on 4 September 925 at Kingston upon Thames, perhaps due to its symbolic location on the border between Wessex and Mercia.[36] He was crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Athelm, who probably designed or organised a new ordo (religious order of service) in which the king wore a crown for the first time instead of a helmet. The new ordo was influenced by West Frankish liturgy and in turn became one of the sources of the medieval French ordo.[37]

Opposition seems to have continued even after the coronation. According to William of Malmesbury, an otherwise unknown nobleman called Alfred plotted to blind Æthelstan on account of his supposed illegitimacy, although it is unknown whether he aimed to make himself king or was acting on behalf of Edwin, Ælfweard's younger brother. Blinding would have been a sufficient disability to render Æthelstan ineligible for kingship without incurring the odium attached to murder.[38] Tensions between Æthelstan and Winchester seem to have continued for some years. The Bishop of Winchester, Frithestan, did not attend the coronation or witness any of Æthelstan's known charters until 928. After that he witnessed fairly regularly until his resignation in 931, but was listed in a lower position than he was entitled to by his seniority.[39]

In 933 Edwin was drowned in a shipwreck in the North Sea. His cousin, Adelolf, Count of Boulogne, took his body for burial at the Abbey of Saint Bertin in Saint-Omer. According to the abbey's annalist, Folcuin, who wrongly believed that Edwin had been king, he had fled England "driven by some disturbance in his kingdom". Folcuin stated that Æthelstan sent alms to the abbey for his dead brother and received monks from the abbey graciously when they came to England, although Folcuin did not realise that Æthelstan died before the monks made the journey in 944. The twelfth-century chronicler Symeon of Durham said that Æthelstan ordered Edwin to be drowned, but this is dismissed by most historians.[c] Edwin might have fled England after an unsuccessful rebellion against his brother's rule, and his death may have put an end to Winchester's opposition.[41]

King of the English

 
The British Isles in the early tenth century

Edward the Elder had conquered the Danish territories in east Mercia and East Anglia with the assistance of Æthelflæd and her husband Æthelred, but when Edward died the Danish king Sihtric still ruled the Viking Kingdom of York (formerly the southern Northumbrian kingdom of Deira). In January 926, Æthelstan arranged for his only full sister to marry Sihtric. The two kings agreed not to invade each other's territories or to support each other's enemies. The following year Sihtric died, and Æthelstan seized the chance to invade.[d] Guthfrith, a cousin of Sihtric, led a fleet from Dublin to try to take the throne, but Æthelstan easily prevailed. He captured York and received the submission of the Danish people. According to a southern chronicler, he "succeeded to the kingdom of the Northumbrians", and it is uncertain whether he had to fight Guthfrith.[45] Southern kings had never ruled the north, and his usurpation was met with outrage by the Northumbrians, who had always resisted southern control. However, at Eamont, near Penrith, on 12 July 927, King Constantine II of Alba, King Hywel Dda of Deheubarth, Ealdred of Bamburgh, and King Owain of Strathclyde (or Morgan ap Owain of Gwent)[e] accepted Æthelstan's overlordship. His triumph led to seven years of peace in the north.[47]

Whereas Æthelstan was the first English king to achieve lordship over northern Britain, he inherited his authority over the Welsh kings from his father and aunt. In the 910s Gwent acknowledged the lordship of Wessex, and Deheubarth and Gwynedd accepted that of Æthelflæd; following Edward's takeover of Mercia, they transferred their allegiance to him. According to William of Malmesbury, after the meeting at Eamont Æthelstan summoned the Welsh kings to Hereford, where he imposed a heavy annual tribute and fixed the border between England and Wales in the Hereford area at the River Wye.[48][f] The dominant figure in Wales was Hywel Dda of Deheubarth, described by the historian of early medieval Wales Thomas Charles-Edwards as "the firmest ally of the 'emperors of Britain' among all the kings of his day". Welsh kings attended Æthelstan's court between 928 and 935 and witnessed charters at the head of the list of laity (apart from the kings of Scotland and Strathclyde), showing that their position was regarded as superior to that of the other great men present. The alliance produced peace between Wales and England, and within Wales, lasting throughout Æthelstan's reign, though some Welsh resented the status of their rulers as under-kings, as well as the high level of tribute imposed upon them. In Armes Prydein Vawr (The Great Prophecy of Britain), a Welsh poet foresaw the day when the British would rise up against their Saxon oppressors and drive them into the sea.[50]

According to William of Malmesbury, after the Hereford meeting Æthelstan went on to expel the Cornish from Exeter, fortify its walls, and fix the Cornish boundary at the River Tamar. This account is regarded sceptically by historians, however, as Cornwall had been under English rule since the mid-ninth century. Thomas Charles-Edwards describes it as "an improbable story", while historian John Reuben Davies sees it as the suppression of a British revolt and the confinement of the Cornish beyond the Tamar. Æthelstan emphasised his control by establishing a new Cornish see and appointing its first bishop, but Cornwall kept its own culture and language.[51]

 
Silver penny of King Æthelstan

Æthelstan became the first king of all the Anglo-Saxon peoples, and in effect overlord of Britain.[52][g] His successes inaugurated what John Maddicott, in his history of the origins of the English Parliament, calls the imperial phase of English kingship between about 925 and 975, when rulers from Wales and Scotland attended the assemblies of English kings and witnessed their charters.[54] Æthelstan tried to reconcile the aristocracy in his new territory of Northumbria to his rule. He lavished gifts on the minsters of Beverley, Chester-le-Street, and York, emphasising his Christianity. He also purchased the vast territory of Amounderness in Lancashire, and gave it to the Archbishop of York, his most important lieutenant in the region.[h] But he remained a resented outsider, and the northern British kingdoms preferred to ally with the pagan Norse of Dublin. In contrast to his strong control over southern Britain, his position in the north was far more tenuous.[56]

Invasion of Scotland in 934

In 934 Æthelstan invaded Scotland. His reasons are unclear, and historians give alternative explanations. The death of his half-brother Edwin in 933 might have finally removed factions in Wessex opposed to his rule. Guthfrith, the Norse king of Dublin who had briefly ruled Northumbria, died in 934; any resulting insecurity among the Danes would have given Æthelstan an opportunity to stamp his authority on the north. An entry in the Annals of Clonmacnoise, recording the death in 934 of a ruler who was possibly Ealdred of Bamburgh, suggests another possible explanation. This points to a dispute between Æthelstan and Constantine over control of his territory. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle briefly recorded the expedition without explanation, but the twelfth-century chronicler John of Worcester stated that Constantine had broken his treaty with Æthelstan.[57]

Æthelstan set out on his campaign in May 934, accompanied by four Welsh kings: Hywel Dda of Deheubarth, Idwal Foel of Gwynedd, Morgan ap Owain of Gwent, and Tewdwr ap Griffri of Brycheiniog. His retinue also included eighteen bishops and thirteen earls, six of whom were Danes from eastern England. By late June or early July he had reached Chester-le-Street, where he made generous gifts to the tomb of St Cuthbert, including a stole and maniple (ecclesiastical garments) originally commissioned by his step-mother Ælfflæd as a gift to Bishop Frithestan of Winchester. The invasion was launched by land and sea. According to Symeon of Durham, his land forces ravaged as far as Dunnottar in north-east Scotland, the furthest north that any English army had reached since Ecgfrith's disastrous invasion in 685, while the fleet raided Caithness, then probably part of the Norse kingdom of Orkney.[58]

No battles are recorded during the campaign, and chronicles do not record its outcome. By September, however, he was back in the south of England at Buckingham, where Constantine witnessed a charter as subregulus, thus acknowledging Æthelstan's overlordship. In 935 a charter was attested by Constantine, Owain of Strathclyde, Hywel Dda, Idwal Foel, and Morgan ap Owain. At Christmas of the same year Owain of Strathclyde was once more at Æthelstan's court along with the Welsh kings, but Constantine was not. His return to England less than two years later would be in very different circumstances.[59]

Battle of Brunanburh

In 934 Olaf Guthfrithson succeeded his father Guthfrith as the Norse King of Dublin. The alliance between the Norse and the Scots was cemented by the marriage of Olaf to Constantine's daughter. By August 937 Olaf had defeated his rivals for control of the Viking part of Ireland, and he promptly launched a bid for the former Norse kingdom of York. Individually Olaf and Constantine were too weak to oppose Æthelstan, but together they could hope to challenge the dominance of Wessex. In the autumn they joined with the Strathclyde Britons under Owain to invade England. Medieval campaigning was normally conducted in the summer, and Æthelstan could hardly have expected an invasion on such a large scale so late in the year. He seems to have been slow to react, and an old Latin poem preserved by William of Malmesbury accused him of having "languished in sluggish leisure". The allies plundered English territory while Æthelstan took his time gathering a West Saxon and Mercian army. However, Michael Wood praises his caution, arguing that unlike Harold in 1066, he did not allow himself to be provoked into precipitate action. When he marched north, the Welsh did not join him, and they did not fight on either side.[60]

The two sides met at the Battle of Brunanburh, resulting in an overwhelming victory for Æthelstan, supported by his young half-brother, the future King Edmund. Olaf escaped back to Dublin with the remnant of his forces, while Constantine lost a son. The English also suffered heavy losses, including two of Æthelstan's cousins, sons of Edward the Elder's younger brother, Æthelweard.[61]

The battle was reported in the Annals of Ulster:

A great, lamentable and horrible battle was cruelly fought between the Saxons and the Northmen, in which several thousands of Northmen, who are uncounted, fell, but their king Amlaib [Olaf], escaped with a few followers. A large number of Saxons fell on the other side, but Æthelstan, king of the Saxons, enjoyed a great victory.[62]

A generation later, the chronicler Æthelweard reported that it was popularly remembered as "the great battle", and it sealed Æthelstan's posthumous reputation as "victorious because of God" (in the words of the homilist Ælfric of Eynsham).[63] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle abandoned its usual terse style in favour of a heroic poem vaunting the great victory, employing imperial language to present Æthelstan as ruler of an empire of Britain.[64] The site of the battle is uncertain, however, and over thirty sites have been suggested, with Bromborough on the Wirral the most favoured among historians.[65]

Historians disagree over the significance of the battle. Alex Woolf describes it as a "pyrrhic victory" for Æthelstan: the campaign seems to have ended in a stalemate, his power appears to have declined, and after he died Olaf acceded to the kingdom of Northumbria without resistance.[66] Alfred Smyth describes it as "the greatest battle in Anglo-Saxon history", but he also states that its consequences beyond Æthelstan's reign have been overstated.[67] In the view of Sarah Foot, on the other hand, it would be difficult to exaggerate the battle's importance: if the Anglo-Saxons had been defeated, their hegemony over the whole mainland of Britain would have disintegrated.[68]

Kingship

Administration

 
A sixteenth-century painting in Beverley Minster in the East Riding of Yorkshire of Æthelstan with Saint John of Beverley

Anglo-Saxon kings ruled through ealdormen, who had the highest lay status under the king. In ninth-century Wessex they each ruled a single shire, but by the middle of the tenth they had authority over a much wider area, a change probably introduced by Æthelstan to deal with the problems of governing his extended realm.[69] One of the ealdormen, who was also called Æthelstan, governed the eastern Danelaw territory of East Anglia, the largest and wealthiest province of England. He became so powerful that he was later known as Æthelstan Half King.[70] Several of the ealdormen who witnessed charters had Scandinavian names, and while the localities they came from cannot be identified, they were almost certainly the successors of the earls who led Danish armies in the time of Edward the Elder, and who were retained by Æthelstan as his representatives in local government.[71]

Beneath the ealdormen, reeves—royal officials who were noble local landowners—were in charge of a town or royal estate. The authority of church and state was not separated in early medieval societies, and the lay officials worked closely with their diocesan bishop and local abbots, who also attended the king's royal councils.[72]

As the first king of all the Anglo-Saxon peoples, Æthelstan needed effective means to govern his extended realm. Building on the foundations of his predecessors, he created the most centralised government that England had yet seen.[73] Previously, some charters had been produced by royal priests and others by members of religious houses, but between 928 and 935 they were produced exclusively by a scribe known to historians as "Æthelstan A", showing an unprecedented degree of royal control over an important activity. Unlike earlier and later charters, "Æthelstan A" provides full details of the date and place of adoption and an unusually long witness list, providing crucial information for historians. After "Æthelstan A" retired or died, charters reverted to a simpler form, suggesting that they had been the work of an individual, rather than the development of a formal writing office.[74]

A key mechanism of government was the king's council (witan in Old English).[75] Anglo-Saxon kings did not have a fixed capital city. Their courts were peripatetic, and their councils were held at varying locations around their realms. Æthelstan stayed mainly in Wessex, however, and controlled outlying areas by summoning leading figures to his councils. The small and intimate meetings that had been adequate until the enlargement of the kingdom under Edward the Elder gave way to large bodies attended by bishops, ealdormen, thegns, magnates from distant areas, and independent rulers who had submitted to his authority. Frank Stenton sees Æthelstan's councils as "national assemblies", which did much to break down the provincialism that was a barrier to the unification of England. John Maddicott goes further, seeing them as the start of centralised assemblies that had a defined role in English government, and Æthelstan as "the true if unwitting founder of the English parliament".[76]

Law

The Anglo-Saxons were the first people in northern Europe to write administrative documents in the vernacular, and law codes in Old English go back to Æthelberht of Kent at the beginning of the seventh century. The law code of Alfred the Great, from the end of the ninth century, was also written in the vernacular, and he expected his ealdormen to learn it.[77] His code was strongly influenced by Carolingian law going back to Charlemagne in such areas as treason, peace-keeping, organisation of the hundreds and judicial ordeal.[78] It remained in force throughout the tenth century, and Æthelstan's codes were built on this foundation.[79] Legal codes required the approval of the king, but they were treated as guidelines which could be adapted and added to at the local level, rather than a fixed canon of regulations, and customary oral law was also important in the Anglo-Saxon period.[80]

More legal texts survive from Æthelstan's reign than from any other tenth-century English king. The earliest appear to be his tithe edict and the "Ordinance on Charities". Four legal codes were adopted at Royal Councils in the early 930s at Grately in Hampshire, Exeter, Faversham in Kent, and Thunderfield in Surrey. Local legal texts survive from London and Kent, and one concerning the 'Dunsæte' on the Welsh border probably also dates to Æthelstan's reign.[81] In the view of the historian of English law Patrick Wormald, the laws must have been written by Wulfhelm, who succeeded Athelm as Archbishop of Canterbury in 926.[82] [i] Other historians see Wulfhelm's role as less important, giving the main credit to Æthelstan himself, although the significance placed on the ordeal as an ecclesiastical ritual shows the increased influence of the church. Nicholas Brooks sees the role of the bishops as marking an important stage in the increasing involvement of the church in the making and enforcement of law.[84]

The two earliest codes were concerned with clerical matters, and Æthelstan stated that he acted on the advice of Wulfhelm and his bishops. The first asserts the importance of paying tithes to the church. The second enforces the duty of charity on Æthelstan's reeves, specifying the amount to be given to the poor and requiring reeves to free one penal slave annually. His religious outlook is shown in a wider sacralization of the law in his reign.[85]

The later codes show his concern with threats to social order, especially robbery, which he regarded as the most important manifestation of social breakdown. The first of these later codes, issued at Grately, prescribed harsh penalties, including the death penalty for anyone over twelve years old caught in the act of stealing goods worth more than eight pence. This apparently had little effect, as Æthelstan admitted in the Exeter code: "I King Æthelstan, declare that I have learned that the public peace has not been kept to the extent, either of my wishes, or of the provisions laid down at Grately, and my councillors say that I have suffered this too long." In desperation the Council tried a different strategy, offering an amnesty to thieves if they paid compensation to their victims. The problem of powerful families protecting criminal relatives was to be solved by expelling them to other parts of the realm. This strategy did not last long, and at Thunderfield Æthelstan returned to the hard line, softened by raising the minimum age for the death penalty to fifteen "because he thought it too cruel to kill so many young people and for such small crimes as he understood to be the case everywhere".[86] His reign saw the first introduction of the system of tithing, sworn groups of ten or more men who were jointly responsible for peacekeeping (later known as frankpledge). Sarah Foot commented that tithing and oath-taking to deal with the problem of theft had its origin in Frankia: "But the equation of theft with disloyalty to Æthelstan's person appears peculiar to him. His preoccupation with theft—tough on theft, tough on the causes of theft—finds no direct parallel in other kings' codes."[87]

Historians differ widely regarding Æthelstan's legislation. Patrick Wormald's verdict was harsh: "The hallmark of Æthelstan's law-making is the gulf dividing its exalted aspirations from his spasmodic impact." In his view, "The legislative activity of Æthelstan's reign has rightly been dubbed 'feverish' ... But the extant results are, frankly, a mess.[88] In the view of Simon Keynes, however, "Without any doubt the most impressive aspect of King Æthelstan's government is the vitality of his law-making", which shows him driving his officials to do their duties and insisting on respect for the law, but also demonstrates the difficulty he had in controlling a troublesome people. Keynes sees the Grately code as "an impressive piece of legislation" showing the king's determination to maintain social order.[89]

Coinage

 
Coin of Æthelstan Rex, small cross pattée type, London mint, moneyer Biorneard

In the 970s, Æthelstan's nephew, King Edgar, reformed the monetary system to give Anglo-Saxon England the most advanced currency in Europe, with a good quality silver coinage, which was uniform and abundant.[90] In Æthelstan's time, however, it was far less developed, and minting was still organised regionally long after Æthelstan unified the country. The Grately code included a provision that there was to be only one coinage across the king's dominion. However, this is in a section that appears to be copied from a code of his father, and the list of towns with mints is confined to the south, including London and Kent, but not northern Wessex or other regions. Early in Æthelstan's reign, different styles of coin were issued in each region, but after he conquered York and received the submission of the other British kings, he issued a new coinage, known as the "circumscription cross" type. This advertised his newly exalted status with the inscription, "Rex Totius Britanniae". Examples were minted in Wessex, York, and English Mercia (in Mercia bearing the title "Rex Saxorum"), but not in East Anglia or the Danelaw.[91]

In the early 930s a new coinage was issued, the "crowned bust" type, with the king shown for the first time wearing a crown with three stalks. This was eventually issued in all regions apart from Mercia, which issued coins without a ruler portrait, suggesting, in Sarah Foot's view, that any Mercian affection for a West Saxon king brought up among them quickly declined.[92]

Church

 
Miniature of St Matthew in the Carolingian gospels presented by Æthelstan to Christ Church Priory, Canterbury

Church and state maintained close relations in the Anglo-Saxon period, both socially and politically. Churchmen attended royal feasts as well as meetings of the Royal Council. During Æthelstan's reign these relations became even closer, especially as the archbishopric of Canterbury had come under West Saxon jurisdiction since Edward the Elder annexed Mercia, and Æthelstan's conquests brought the northern church under the control of a southern king for the first time.[93]

Æthelstan appointed members of his own circle to bishoprics in Wessex, possibly to counter the influence of the Bishop of Winchester, Frithestan. One of the king's mass-priests (priests employed to say Mass in his household), Ælfheah, became Bishop of Wells, while another, Beornstan, succeeded Frithestan as Bishop of Winchester. Beornstan was succeeded by another member of the royal household, also called Ælfheah.[94] Two of the leading figures in the later tenth-century Benedictine monastic reform in Edgar's reign, Dunstan and Æthelwold, served in early life at Æthelstan's court and were ordained as priests by Ælfheah of Winchester at the king's request.[95] According to Æthelwold's biographer, Wulfstan, "Æthelwold spent a long period in the royal palace in the king's inseparable companionship and learned much from the king's wise men that was useful and profitable to him".[96] Oda, a future Archbishop of Canterbury, was also close to Æthelstan, who appointed him Bishop of Ramsbury.[97] Oda may have been present at the battle of Brunanburh.[98]

Æthelstan was a noted collector of relics, and while this was a common practice at the time, he was marked out by the scale of his collection and the refinement of its contents.[99] The abbot of Saint Samson in Dol sent him some as a gift, and in his covering letter he wrote: "we know you value relics more than earthly treasure".[100] Æthelstan was also a generous donor of manuscripts and relics to churches and monasteries. His reputation was so great that some monastic scribes later falsely claimed that their institutions had been beneficiaries of his largesse. He was especially devoted to the cult of St. Cuthbert in Chester-le-Street, and his gifts to the community there included Bede's Lives of Cuthbert. He commissioned it especially to present to Chester-le Street, and out of all manuscripts he gave to a religious foundation which survive, it is the only one which was wholly written in England during his reign.[101] It has a portrait of Æthelstan presenting the book to Cuthbert, the earliest surviving manuscript portrait of an English king.[102] In the view of Janet Nelson, his "rituals of largesse and devotion at sites of supernatural power ... enhanced royal authority and underpinned a newly united imperial realm".[100]

Æthelstan had a reputation for founding churches, although it is unclear how justified this is. According to late and dubious sources, these churches included minsters at Milton Abbas in Dorset and Muchelney in Somerset. In the view of historian John Blair, the reputation is probably well-founded, but "these waters are muddied by Æthelstan's almost folkloric reputation as a founder, which made him a favourite hero of later origin-myths".[103] However, while he was a generous donor to monasteries, he did not give land for new ones or attempt to revive the ones in the north and east destroyed by Viking attacks.[104]

He also sought to build ties with continental churches. Cenwald was a royal priest before his appointment as Bishop of Worcester, and in 929 he accompanied two of Æthelstan's half-sisters to the Saxon court so that the future Holy Roman Emperor, Otto, could choose one of them as his wife. Cenwald went on to make a tour of German monasteries, giving lavish gifts on Æthelstan's behalf and receiving in return promises that the monks would pray for the king and others close to him in perpetuity. England and Saxony became closer after the marriage alliance, and German names start to appear in English documents, while Cenwald kept up the contacts he had made by subsequent correspondence, helping the transmission of continental ideas about reformed monasticism to England.[105]

Learning

 
Alea evangelii, a board game played at Æthelstan's court
 
Charter S416 of Æthelstan for Wulfgar in 931, written by "Æthelstan A"

Æthelstan built on his grandfather's efforts to revive ecclesiastical scholarship, which had fallen to a low state in the second half of the ninth century. John Blair described Æthelstan's achievement as "a determined reconstruction, visible to us especially through the circulation and production of books, of the shattered ecclesiastical culture".[106] He was renowned in his own day for his piety and promotion of sacred learning. His interest in education, and his reputation as a collector of books and relics, attracted a cosmopolitan group of ecclesiastical scholars to his court, particularly Bretons and Irish. Æthelstan gave extensive aid to Breton clergy who had fled Brittany following its conquest by the Vikings in 919. He made a confraternity agreement with the clergy of Dol Cathedral in Brittany, who were then in exile in central France, and they sent him the relics of Breton saints, apparently hoping for his patronage. The contacts resulted in a surge in interest in England for commemorating Breton saints. One of the most notable scholars at Æthelstan's court was Israel the Grammarian, who may have been a Breton. Israel and "a certain Frank" drew a board game called "Gospel Dice" for an Irish bishop, Dub Innse, who took it home to Bangor. Æthelstan's court played a crucial role in the origins of the English monastic reform movement.[107]

Few prose narrative sources survive from Æthelstan's reign, but it produced an abundance of poetry, much of it Norse-influenced praise of the King in grandiose terms, such as the Brunanburh poem. Sarah Foot even makes a case that Beowulf may have been composed in Æthelstan's circle.[108]

Æthelstan's court was the centre of a revival of the elaborate hermeneutic style of later Latin writers, influenced by the West Saxon scholar Aldhelm (c.639–709), and by early tenth-century French monasticism. Foreign scholars at Æthelstan's court such as Israel the Grammarian were practitioners. The style was characterised by long, convoluted sentences and a predilection for rare words and neologisms.[109] The "Æthelstan A" charters were written in hermeneutic Latin. In the view of Simon Keynes it is no coincidence that they first appear immediately after the king had for the first time united England under his rule, and they show a high level of intellectual attainment and a monarchy invigorated by success and adopting the trappings of a new political order.[110] The style influenced architects of the late tenth-century monastic reformers educated at Æthelstan's court such as Æthelwold and Dunstan, and became a hallmark of the movement.[111] After "Æthelstan A", charters became more simple, but the hermeneutic style returned in the charters of Eadwig and Edgar.[112]

The historian W. H. Stevenson commented in 1898:

The object of the compilers of these charters was to express their meaning by the use of the greatest possible number of words and by the choice of the most grandiloquent, bombastic words they could find. Every sentence is so overloaded by the heaping up of unnecessary words that the meaning is almost buried out of sight. The invocation with its appended clauses, opening with pompous and partly alliterative words, will proceed amongst a blaze of verbal fireworks throughout twenty lines of smallish type, and the pyrotechnic display will be maintained with equal magnificence throughout the whole charter, leaving the reader, dazzled by the glaze and blinded by the smoke, in a state of uncertainty as to the meaning of these frequently untranslatable and usually interminable sentences.[113]

However, Michael Lapidge argues that however unpalatable the hermeneutic style seems to modern taste, it was an important part of late Anglo-Saxon culture, and deserves more sympathetic attention than it has received from modern historians.[114] In the view of historian David Woodman, "Æthelstan A" should "be accorded recognition as an individual author of no little genius, a man who not only overhauled the legal form of the diploma but also had the ability to write Latin that is as enduringly fascinating as it is complex ... In many ways the diplomas of "Æthelstan A" represent the stylistic peak of the Anglo-Saxon diplomatic tradition, a fitting complement to Æthelstan's own momentous political feats and to the forging of what would become England."[115]

British monarch

 
Æthelstan in a fifteenth-century stained glass window in All Souls College Chapel, Oxford

Historians frequently comment on Æthelstan's grand and extravagant titles. On his coins and charters he is described as Rex totius Britanniae, or "King of the whole of Britain". A gospel book he donated to Christ Church, Canterbury is inscribed "Æthelstan, king of the English and ruler of the whole of Britain with a devout mind gave this book to the primatial see of Canterbury, to the church dedicated to Christ". In charters from 931 he is "king of the English, elevated by the right hand of the almighty to the throne of the whole kingdom of Britain", and in one manuscript dedication he is even styled "basileus et curagulus", the titles of Byzantine emperors.[116] Some historians are not impressed. "Clearly", comments Alex Woolf, "King Æthelstan was a man who had pretensions,"[117] while in the view of Simon Keynes, "Æthelstan A" proclaimed his master king of Britain "by wishful extension".[118] But according to George Molyneaux "this is to apply an anachronistic standard: tenth-century kings had a loose but real hegemony throughout the island, and their titles only appear inflated if one assumes that kingship ought to involve domination of an intensity like that seen within the English kingdom of the eleventh and later centuries."[119]

European relations

The West Saxon court had connections with the Carolingians going back to the marriage between Æthelstan's great-grandfather Æthelwulf and Judith, daughter of the king of West Francia (and future Holy Roman Emperor) Charles the Bald, as well as the marriage of Alfred the Great's daughter Ælfthryth to Judith's son by a later marriage, Baldwin II, Count of Flanders. One of Æthelstan's half-sisters, Eadgifu, married Charles the Simple, king of the West Franks, in the late 910s. He was deposed in 922, and Eadgifu sent their son Louis to safety in England. By Æthelstan's time the connection was well established, and his coronation was performed with the Carolingian ceremony of anointment, probably to draw a deliberate parallel between his rule and Carolingian tradition.[120] His "crowned bust" coinage of 933–938 was the first Anglo-Saxon coinage to show the king crowned, following Carolingian iconography.[121]

Like his father, Æthelstan was unwilling to marry his female relatives to his own subjects, so his sisters either entered nunneries or married foreign husbands. This was one reason for his close relations with European courts, and he married several of his half-sisters to European nobles[122] in what historian Sheila Sharp called "a flurry of dynastic bridal activity unequalled again until Queen Victoria's time".[123] Another reason lay in the common interest on both sides of the Channel in resisting the threat from the Vikings, while the rise in the power and reputation of the royal house of Wessex made marriage with an English princess more prestigious to European rulers.[124] In 926 Hugh, Duke of the Franks, sent Æthelstan's cousin, Adelolf, Count of Boulogne, on an embassy to ask for the hand of one of Æthelstan's sisters. According to William of Malmesbury, the gifts Adelolf brought included spices, jewels, many swift horses, a crown of solid gold, the sword of Constantine the Great, Charlemagne's lance, and a piece of the Crown of Thorns. Æthelstan sent his half-sister Eadhild to be Hugh's wife.[125]

Æthelstan's most important European alliance was with the new Liudolfing dynasty in East Francia. The Carolingian dynasty of East Francia had died out in the early tenth century, and its new Liudolfing king, Henry the Fowler, was seen by many as an arriviste. He needed a royal marriage for his son to establish his legitimacy, but no suitable Carolingian princesses were available. The ancient royal line of the West Saxons provided an acceptable alternative, especially as they (wrongly) claimed descent from the seventh-century king and saint, Oswald, who was venerated in Germany. In 929 or 930 Henry sent ambassadors to Æthelstan's court seeking a wife for his son, Otto, who later became Holy Roman Emperor. Æthelstan sent two of his half-sisters, and Otto chose Eadgyth. Fifty years later, Æthelweard, a descendant of Alfred the Great's older brother, addressed his Latin version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle to Mathilde, Abbess of Essen, who was Eadgyth's granddaughter, and had apparently requested it. The other sister, whose name is uncertain, was married to a prince from near the Alps who has not definitely been identified.[126]

In early medieval Europe, it was common for kings to act as foster-fathers for the sons of other kings. Æthelstan was known for the support he gave to dispossessed young royalty. In 936 he sent an English fleet to help his foster-son, Alan II, Duke of Brittany, to regain his ancestral lands, which had been conquered by the Vikings. In the same year he assisted the son of his half-sister Eadgifu, Louis, to take the throne of West Francia, and in 939 he sent another fleet that unsuccessfully attempted to help Louis in a struggle with rebellious magnates. According to later Scandinavian sources, he helped another possible foster-son, Hakon, son of Harald Fairhair, king of Norway, to reclaim his throne,[127] and he was known among Norwegians as "Æthelstan the Good".[128]

Æthelstan's court was perhaps the most cosmopolitan of the Anglo-Saxon period.[129] The close contacts between the English and European courts ended soon after his death, but descent from the English royal house long remained a source of prestige for continental ruling families.[130] According to Frank Stenton in his history of the period, Anglo-Saxon England, "Between Offa and Cnut there is no English king who played so prominent or so sustained a part in the general affairs of Europe."[131]

Foreign contemporaries described him in panegyrical terms. The French chronicler Flodoard described him as "the king from overseas", and the Annals of Ulster as the "pillar of the dignity of the western world".[132] Some historians take a similar view. Michael Wood titled an essay, "The Making of King Aethelstan's Empire: an English Charlemagne?", and described him as "the most powerful ruler that Britain had seen since the Romans".[133] In the view of Veronica Ortenberg, he was "the most powerful ruler in Europe" with an army that had repeatedly defeated the Vikings; continental rulers saw him as a Carolingian emperor, who "was clearly treated as the new Charlemagne". She wrote:

Wessex kings carried an aura of power and success, which made them increasingly powerful in the 920s, while most Continental houses were in military trouble and engaged in internecine warfare. While the civil wars and the Viking attacks on the Continent had spelled the end of unity of the Carolingian empire, which had already disintegrated into separate kingdoms, military success had enabled Æthelstan to triumph at home and to attempt to go beyond the reputation of a great heroic dynasty of warrior kings, in order to develop a Carolingian ideology of kingship.[134]

Death

 
Empty fifteenth-century tomb of King Æthelstan at Malmesbury Abbey

Æthelstan died at Gloucester on 27 October 939.[j] His grandfather Alfred, his father Edward, and his half-brother Ælfweard had been buried at Winchester, but Æthelstan chose not to honour the city associated with opposition to his rule. By his own wish, he was buried at Malmesbury Abbey, where he had buried his cousins who died at Brunanburh. No other member of the West Saxon royal family was buried there, and, according to William of Malmesbury, Æthelstan's choice reflected his devotion to the abbey and to the memory of its seventh-century abbot Saint Aldhelm. William described Æthelstan as fair-haired "as I have seen for myself in his remains, beautifully intertwined with gold threads". His bones were lost during the Reformation, but he is commemorated by an empty fifteenth-century tomb.[136]

Aftermath

After Æthelstan's death, the men of York immediately chose the Viking king of Dublin, Olaf Guthfrithson as their king, and Anglo-Saxon control of the north, seemingly made safe by the victory of Brunanburh, collapsed. The reigns of Æthelstan's half-brothers Edmund (939–946) and Eadred (946–955) were largely devoted to regaining control. Olaf seized the east midlands, leading to the establishment of a frontier at Watling Street. In 941 Olaf died, and Edmund took back control of the east midlands in 942, and then York in 944. Following Edmund's death York again switched back to Viking control, and it was only when the Northumbrians finally drove out their Norwegian Viking king Eric Bloodaxe in 954 and submitted to Eadred that Anglo-Saxon control of the whole of England was finally restored.[137]

Primary sources

Chronicle sources for the life of Æthelstan are limited, and the first biography, by Sarah Foot, was only published in 2011.[138] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle in Æthelstan's reign is principally devoted to military events, and it is largely silent apart from recording his most important victories. An important source is the twelfth-century chronicle of William of Malmesbury, but historians are cautious about accepting his testimony, much of which cannot be verified from other sources. David Dumville goes so far as to dismiss William's account entirely, regarding him as a "treacherous witness" whose account is unfortunately influential.[139] However, Sarah Foot is inclined to accept Michael Wood's argument that William's chronicle draws on a lost life of Æthelstan. She cautions, however, that we have no means of discovering how far William "improved" on the original.[140]

In Dumville's view, Æthelstan has been regarded by historians as a shadowy figure because of an ostensible lack of source material, but he argues that the lack is more apparent than real.[141] Charters, law codes, and coins throw considerable light on Æthelstan's government.[142] The scribe known to historians as "Æthelstan A", who was responsible for drafting all charters between 928 and 935, provides very detailed information, including signatories, dates, and locations, illuminating Æthelstan's progress around his realm. "Æthelstan A" may have been Bishop Ælfwine of Lichfield, who was close to the king.[143] By contrast with this extensive source of information, no charters survive from 910 to 924, a gap which historians struggle to explain, and which makes it difficult to assess the degree of continuity in personnel and the operation of government between the reigns of Edward and Æthelstan.[144] Historians are also paying increasing attention to less conventional sources, such as contemporary poetry in his praise and manuscripts associated with his name.[145]

Legacy

The reign of Æthelstan has been overshadowed by the achievements of his grandfather, Alfred the Great, but he is now considered one of the greatest kings of the West Saxon dynasty.[146] Modern historians endorse the view of twelfth-century chronicler William of Malmesbury that "no one more just or more learned ever governed the kingdom".[147] Frank Stenton and Simon Keynes both describe him as the one Anglo-Saxon king who will bear comparison with Alfred. In Keynes's view he "has long been regarded, with good reason, as a towering figure in the landscape of the tenth century ... he has also been hailed as the first king of England, as a statesman of international standing".[148] David Dumville describes Æthelstan as "the father of mediaeval and modern England",[149] while Michael Wood regards Offa, Alfred, and Æthelstan as the three greatest Anglo-Saxon kings, and Æthelstan as "one of the more important lay intellectuals in Anglo-Saxon history".[150]

Æthelstan is regarded as the first King of England by modern historians.[k] Although it was his successors who would achieve the permanent conquest of Viking York, Æthelstan's campaigns made this success possible.[146] His nephew Edgar called himself King of the English and revived the claim to rule over all the peoples of Britain. Simon Keynes argued that "the consistent usages of Edgar's reign represent nothing less than a determined reaffirmation of the polity created by Æthelstan in the 930s".[152] Historian Charles Insley, however, sees Æthelstan's hegemony as fragile: "The level of overlordship wielded by Æthelstan during the 930s over the rest of Britain was perhaps not attained again by an English king until Edward I."[153] George Molyneaux argues that:

The tendency of some modern historians to celebrate Æthelstan as "the first king of England" is, however, problematic, since there is little sign that in his day the title rex Anglorum was closely or consistently tied to an area similar to that which we consider England. When Æthelstan's rule was associated with any definite geographical expanse, the territory in question was usually the whole island of Britain.[154]

Simon Keynes saw Æthelstan's law-making as his greatest achievement.[79] His reign predates the sophisticated state of the later Anglo-Saxon period, but his creation of the most centralised government England had yet seen, with the king and his council working strategically to ensure acceptance of his authority and laws, laid the foundations on which his brothers and nephews would create one of the wealthiest and most advanced systems of government in Europe.[155] Æthelstan's reign built upon his grandfather's ecclesiastical programme, consolidating the ecclesiastical revival and laying the foundation for the monastic reform movement later in the century.[156]

Æthelstan's reputation was at its height when he died. According to Sarah Foot, "He found acclaim in his own day not only as a successful military leader and effective monarch but also as a man of devotion, committed to the promotion of religion and the patronage of learning." Later in the century, Æthelweard praised him as a very mighty king worthy of honour, and Æthelred the Unready, who named his eight sons after his predecessors, put Æthelstan first as the name of his eldest son.[157] In his biography of Æthelred, Levi Roach commented, "The king was clearly proud of his family and the fact that Æthelstan stands atop this list speaks volumes: though later overtaken by Alfred the Great in fame, in the 980s it must have seemed as if everything had begun with the king's great-uncle (a view with which many modern historians would be inclined to concur)."[158]

Memory of Æthelstan then declined until it was revived by William of Malmesbury, who took a special interest in him as the one king who had chosen to be buried in his own house. William's account kept his memory alive, and he was praised by other medieval chroniclers. In the early sixteenth century William Tyndale justified his English translation of the Bible by stating that he had read that King Æthelstan had caused the Holy Scriptures to be translated into Anglo-Saxon.[159] From the sixteenth century onwards, Alfred's reputation became dominant, and Æthelstan largely disappeared from popular consciousness. Sharon Turner's History of the Anglo-Saxons, first published between 1799 and 1805, played a crucial role in promoting Anglo-Saxon studies, and he helped to establish Brunanburh as a key battle in English history, but his treatment of Æthelstan was slight in comparison with Alfred. Charles Dickens had only one paragraph on Æthelstan in his Child's History of England, and although Anglo-Saxon history was a popular subject for nineteenth-century artists, and Alfred was frequently depicted in paintings at the Royal Academy between 1769 and 1904, there was not one picture of Æthelstan.[160]

Williams comments: "If Æthelstan has not had the reputation which accrued to his grandfather, the fault lies in the surviving sources; Æthelstan had no biographer, and the Chronicle for his reign is scanty. In his own day he was 'the roof-tree of the honour of the western world'."[161]

Notes

  1. ^ Ninth-century kings of Wessex up to the reign of Alfred the Great used the title king of the West Saxons. In the 880s Æthelred, Lord of the Mercians, accepted West Saxon lordship, and Alfred then adopted a new title, king of the Anglo-Saxons, representing his conception of a new polity of all the English people who were not under Viking rule. This endured until 927, when Æthelstan conquered the last Viking stronghold, York, and adopted the title king of the English.[5]
  2. ^ An allusion in the twelfth-century Liber Eliensis to "Eadgyth, daughter of king Æthelstan" is probably a mistaken reference to his sister.[35]
  3. ^ An exception is George Molyneaux, who states that "There are, however, grounds to suspect that Æthelstan may have had a hand in the death of Ælfweard's full brother Edwin in 933".[40]
  4. ^ Some historians believe that Sihtric renounced his wife soon after the marriage and reverted to paganism,[42] while others merely state that Æthelstan took advantage of Sihtric's death to invade.[43] In the view of Alex Woolf, it is unlikely that Sihtric repudiated her because Æthelstan would almost certainly have declared war on him.[44]
  5. ^ According to William of Malmesbury it was Owain of Strathclyde who was present at Eamont, but the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle says Owain of Gwent. It could have been both.[46]
  6. ^ William of Malmesbury's report of the Hereford meeting is not mentioned in the first volume of the Oxford History of Wales, Wales and the Britons 350–1064 by Thomas Charles-Edwards.[49]
  7. ^ The situation in northern Northumbria, however, is unclear. In the view of Ann Williams, the submission of Ealdred of Bamburgh was probably nominal, and it is likely that he acknowledged Constantine as his lord, but Alex Woolf sees Ealdred as a semi-independent ruler acknowledging West Saxon authority, like Æthelred of Mercia a generation earlier.[53]
  8. ^ In the view of Janet Nelson, Æthelstan had limited control over the north-west, and the donation of Amounderness in an area which had recently attracted many Scandinavian immigrants to "a powerful, but far from reliable, local potentate" was "a political gesture rather than a sign of prior control."[55]
  9. ^ Wormald discusses the codes in detail in The Making of English Law.[83]
  10. ^ Murray Beaven commented in 1918 that as the Anglo-Saxon day started at 4 p.m. the previous evening it is more likely that he died on 26 October, but as the exact date is not known Beaven preferred to keep the accepted date.[135]
  11. ^ David Dumville's chapter on Æthelstan in Wessex and England is headed 'Between Alfred the Great and Edgar the Peacemaker: Æthelstan, The First King of England', and the title of Sarah Foot's biography is Æthelstan: The First King of England.[151]

Citations

  1. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 120–21.
  2. ^ Blunt 1974, pp. 47–48.
  3. ^ Parker Library 2015.
  4. ^ Foot 2011, p. 110.
  5. ^ Keynes 2014, pp. 534–36.
  6. ^ Wood 2005, p. 7.
  7. ^ Stenton 1971, pp. 95, 236.
  8. ^ Keynes & Lapidge 1983, pp. 11–13, 16–23.
  9. ^ Stenton 1971, pp. 259–69, 321–22.
  10. ^ Miller 2004.
  11. ^ a b Costambeys 2004.
  12. ^ Charles-Edwards 2013, pp. 510–12, 548.
  13. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 29–30.
  14. ^ Keynes 1999, p. 467; Abels 1998, p. 307.
  15. ^ Yorke 2001, pp. 26, 33; Foot 2011, pp. 29–31.
  16. ^ Yorke 2004.
  17. ^ a b Foot 2011, pp. 31–33.
  18. ^ Lapidge 1993, p. 68 n. 96; Wood 1999, pp. 157–58.
  19. ^ Nelson 1999a, pp. 63–64.
  20. ^ Ryan 2013, p. 296.
  21. ^ Lapidge 1993, pp. 60–68.
  22. ^ Lapidge 1993, p. 69; Wood 1999, p. 158.
  23. ^ Wood 1999, p. 157; Wood 2007, p. 199; Wood 2010, p. 137.
  24. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 32, 110–12.
  25. ^ Williams 1991a, p. 6; Miller 2004.
  26. ^ Foot 2011, pp. xv, 44–52.
  27. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 17, 34–36, 206.
  28. ^ Foot 2011a.
  29. ^ Foot 2011, p. 17.
  30. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 51; Charles-Edwards 2013, p. 510.
  31. ^ Foot 2011, p. 17; Keynes 2014, pp. 535–36; Keynes 1985, p. 187 n. 206.
  32. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 73–74; Keynes 1999, pp. 467–68.
  33. ^ Dumville 1992, p. 151; Nelson 1999b, p. 104.
  34. ^ Foot 2011, p. 249.
  35. ^ Foot 2011, p. 59.
  36. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 73–74.
  37. ^ Nelson 2008, pp. 125–26.
  38. ^ Foot 2011, p. 40.
  39. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 75, 83 n. 98; Thacker 2001, pp. 254–55.
  40. ^ Molyneaux 2015, p. 29.
  41. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 39–43, 86–87; Stenton 1971, pp. 355–56.
  42. ^ Hart 2004; Thacker 2001, p. 257.
  43. ^ Foot 2011, p. 18; Stenton 1971, p. 340; Miller 2014, p. 18.
  44. ^ Woolf 2007, pp. 150–51.
  45. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 12–19, 48.
  46. ^ Foot 2011, p. 162 n. 15; Woolf 2007, p. 151; Charles-Edwards 2013, pp. 511–12.
  47. ^ Higham 1993, p. 190; Foot 2011, p. 20.
  48. ^ Stenton 1971, pp. 340–41; Foot 2011, p. 163.
  49. ^ Charles-Edwards 2013, pp. 510–19.
  50. ^ Charles-Edwards 2013, pp. 497–523.
  51. ^ Charles-Edwards 2013, p. 432; Davies 2013, pp. 342–43; Foot 2011, p. 164; Stenton 1971, pp. 341–42.
  52. ^ Foot 2011, p. 20.
  53. ^ Williams 1991c, pp. 116–17; Woolf 2007, p. 158.
  54. ^ Maddicott 2010, pp. 7–8, 13.
  55. ^ Nelson 1999b, pp. 116–17.
  56. ^ Higham 1993, p. 192; Keynes 1999, p. 469.
  57. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 164–65; Woolf 2007, pp. 158–65.
  58. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 87–88, 122–23, 165–67; Woolf 2007, pp. 158–66; Hunter Blair 2003, p. 46.
  59. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 88–89; Woolf 2007, pp. 166–68.
  60. ^ Higham 1993, p. 193; Livingston 2011, pp. 13–18, 23; Wood 1999, p. 166; Wood 2005, p. 158.
  61. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 169–71; Stenton 1971, pp. 342–43; Woolf 2007, pp. 168–69; Smyth 1979, pp. 202–04.
  62. ^ Woolf 2007, p. 169.
  63. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 3, 210–211.
  64. ^ Foot 2008, p. 144.
  65. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 172–79; Scragg 2014, p. 58; Higham 1993, p. 193; Hill 2004, pp. 139–53; Livingston 2011, pp. 18–20.
  66. ^ Woolf 2013, p. 256.
  67. ^ Smyth 1984, p. 204; Smyth 1979, p. 63.
  68. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 172–72.
  69. ^ John 1982, p. 172; Stafford 2014, pp. 156–57.
  70. ^ Hart 1992, p. 575.
  71. ^ Foot 2011, p. 129.
  72. ^ Foot 2011, p. 130.
  73. ^ Foot 2011, p. 10.
  74. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 71–72.
  75. ^ Yorke 2014, pp. 126–27.
  76. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 63, 77–79; Stenton 1971, p. 352; Maddicott 2010, p. 4.
  77. ^ Foot 2011, p. 136.
  78. ^ Pratt 2010, p. 332.
  79. ^ a b Keynes 1999, p. 471.
  80. ^ Roach 2013, pp. 477–79; Foot 2011, pp. 136–37.
  81. ^ Pratt 2010, pp. 335–36, 345–46; Foot 2011, pp. 299–300.
  82. ^ Wormald 1999, pp. 299–300.
  83. ^ Wormald 1999, pp. 290–308, 430–40.
  84. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 138, 146–48; Pratt 2010, pp. 336, 350; Keynes 1999, p. 471; Brooks 1984, p. 218.
  85. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 136–40, 146–47.
  86. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 140–42.
  87. ^ Pratt 2010, pp. 339–47; Foot 2011, pp. 143–45.
  88. ^ Wormald 1999, pp. 300, 308.
  89. ^ Pratt 2010, p. 349.
  90. ^ Campbell 2000, pp. 32–33, 181; Foot 2011, p. 152.
  91. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 151–55.
  92. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 155–56.
  93. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 95–96.
  94. ^ Foot 2011, p. 97.
  95. ^ Lapidge 2004; Yorke 2004.
  96. ^ Wood 2010, pp. 148–49.
  97. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 97–98, 215.
  98. ^ Cubitt & Costambeys 2004.
  99. ^ Brooke 2001, p. 115.
  100. ^ a b Nelson 1999b, p. 112.
  101. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 117–24; Keynes 1985, p. 180.
  102. ^ Karkov 2004, p. 55.
  103. ^ Blair 2005, p. 348.
  104. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 135–36.
  105. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 101–02.
  106. ^ Blair 2005, p. 348; Dumville 1992, p. 156.
  107. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 94, 99–107, 190–91; Keynes 1985, pp. 197–98; Brett 1991, pp. 44–45.
  108. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 109–17.
  109. ^ Lapidge 1993, p. 107; Gretsch 1999, pp. 332–34, 336.
  110. ^ Keynes 1999, p. 470.
  111. ^ Gretsch 1999, pp. 348–49.
  112. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 72, 214–15.
  113. ^ Foot 2011, p. 214, quoting an unpublished lecture by Stevenson.
  114. ^ Lapidge 1993, p. 140.
  115. ^ Woodman 2013, p. 247.
  116. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 212–13; Ortenberg 2010, p. 215.
  117. ^ Woolf 2007, p. 158.
  118. ^ Keynes 2001, p. 61.
  119. ^ Molyneaux 2015, p. 211.
  120. ^ Ortenberg 2010, pp. 211–15; Foot 2011, p. 46.
  121. ^ Karkov 2004, pp. 66–67.
  122. ^ Foot 2011, pp. xv, 44–45.
  123. ^ Sharp 1997, p. 198.
  124. ^ Ortenberg 2010, pp. 217–18; Sharp 2001, p. 82.
  125. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 46–49, 192–93; Ortenberg 2010, pp. 218–19.
  126. ^ Foot 2011, pp. xvi, 48–52; Ortenberg 2010, pp. 231–32; Nelson 1999b, p. 112; Wormald 2004.
  127. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 22–23, 52–53, 167–68, 167–69, 183–84.
  128. ^ Zacher 2011, p. 84.
  129. ^ Zacher 2011, p. 82.
  130. ^ MacLean 2013, pp. 359–61.
  131. ^ Stenton 1971, p. 344.
  132. ^ Ortenberg 2010, p. 211; Foot 2011, p. 210.
  133. ^ Wood 1983, p. 250.
  134. ^ Ortenberg 2010, pp. 211–22.
  135. ^ Beaven 1918, p. 1, n. 2.
  136. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 25, 186–87; Thacker 2001, pp. 254–55.
  137. ^ Keynes 1999, pp. 472–73.
  138. ^ Cooper 2013, p. 189.
  139. ^ Dumville 1992, pp. 146, 167–68.
  140. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 251–58, discussing an unpublished essay by Michael Wood.
  141. ^ Dumville 1992, pp. 142–43.
  142. ^ Miller 2014, p. 18.
  143. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 71–73, 82–89, 98.
  144. ^ Keynes 1999, pp. 465–67.
  145. ^ Foot 2011, p. 247.
  146. ^ a b Williams 1991b, p. 50.
  147. ^ Lapidge 1993, p. 49.
  148. ^ Stenton 1971, p. 356; Keynes 1999, p. 466.
  149. ^ Dumville 1992, p. 171.
  150. ^ Wood 2005, p. 7; Wood 2007, p. 192.
  151. ^ Dumville 1992, chapter IV; Foot 2011.
  152. ^ Keynes 2008, p. 25.
  153. ^ Insley 2013, p. 323.
  154. ^ Molyneaux 2015, p. 200.
  155. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 10, 70.
  156. ^ Dumville 1992, p. 167.
  157. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 94, 211, 228.
  158. ^ Roach 2016, pp. 95–96.
  159. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 227–33.
  160. ^ Foot 2011, pp. 233–42.
  161. ^ Williams 1991b, p. 51.

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External links

Æthelstan
Born: c. 893/895 Died: 27 October 939
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the Anglo-Saxons
924–927
Conquest of York
New title King of the English
927 – 27 October 939
Succeeded by

Æthelstan, this, article, about, 10th, century, king, other, uses, disambiguation, athelstan, english, Æðelstān, ˈæðelstɑːn, norse, aðalsteinn, noble, stone, october, king, anglo, saxons, from, king, english, from, death, king, edward, elder, first, wife, ecgw. This article is about the 10th century king For other uses see AEthelstan disambiguation AEthelstan or Athelstan ˈ ae 8 el s t ae n Old English AEdelstan ˈaedelstɑːn Old Norse Adalsteinn lit noble stone 4 c 894 27 October 939 was King of the Anglo Saxons from 924 to 927 and King of the English from 927 to his death in 939 a He was the son of King Edward the Elder and his first wife Ecgwynn Modern historians regard him as the first King of England and one of the greatest Anglo Saxon kings 6 He never married and had no children he was succeeded by his half brother Edmund I AEthelstanAEthelstan presenting a book to St Cuthbert an illustration in a manuscript of Bede s Life of Saint Cuthbert probably presented to the saint s shrine in Chester le Street by AEthelstan when he visited the shrine on his journey to Scotland in 934 1 He wore a crown of a similar design on his crowned bust coins 2 It is the oldest surviving portrait of an English king and the manuscript is the oldest surviving made for an English king 3 King of the Anglo SaxonsReign924 5 927Coronation4 September 925Kingston upon ThamesPredecessorEdward the ElderKing of the EnglishReign927 27 October 939PredecessorTitle establishedSuccessorEdmund IBornc 894 WessexDied27 October 939 aged about 45 Gloucester EnglandBurialMalmesbury AbbeyHouseWessexFatherEdward the ElderMotherEcgwynnWhen Edward died in July 924 AEthelstan was accepted by the Mercians as king His half brother AElfweard may have been recognised as king in Wessex but died within three weeks of their father s death AEthelstan encountered resistance in Wessex for several months and was not crowned until September 925 In 927 he conquered the last remaining Viking kingdom York making him the first Anglo Saxon ruler of the whole of England In 934 he invaded Scotland and forced Constantine II to submit to him AEthelstan s rule was resented by the Scots and Vikings and in 937 they invaded England AEthelstan defeated them at the Battle of Brunanburh a victory that gave him great prestige both in the British Isles and on the Continent After his death in 939 the Vikings seized back control of York and it was not finally reconquered until 954 AEthelstan centralised government he increased control over the production of charters and summoned leading figures from distant areas to his councils These meetings were also attended by rulers from outside his territory especially Welsh kings who thus acknowledged his overlordship More legal texts survive from his reign than from any other 10th century English king They show his concern about widespread robberies and the threat they posed to social order His legal reforms built on those of his grandfather Alfred the Great AEthelstan was one of the most pious West Saxon kings and was known for collecting relics and founding churches His household was the centre of English learning during his reign and it laid the foundation for the Benedictine monastic reform later in the century No other West Saxon king played as important a role in European politics as AEthelstan and he arranged the marriages of several of his sisters to continental rulers Contents 1 Background 2 Early life 3 Reign 3 1 The struggle for power 3 2 King of the English 3 3 Invasion of Scotland in 934 3 4 Battle of Brunanburh 4 Kingship 4 1 Administration 4 2 Law 4 3 Coinage 4 4 Church 4 5 Learning 4 6 British monarch 4 7 European relations 5 Death 6 Aftermath 7 Primary sources 8 Legacy 9 Notes 10 Citations 11 Sources 12 External linksBackground EditBy the ninth century the many kingdoms of the early Anglo Saxon period had been consolidated into four Wessex Mercia Northumbria and East Anglia 7 In the eighth century Mercia had been the most powerful kingdom in southern England but in the early ninth Wessex became dominant under AEthelstan s great great grandfather Egbert In the middle of the century England came under increasing attack from Viking raids culminating in invasion by the Great Heathen Army in 865 By 878 the Vikings had overrun East Anglia Northumbria and Mercia and nearly conquered Wessex The West Saxons fought back under Alfred the Great and achieved a decisive victory at the Battle of Edington 8 Alfred and the Viking leader Guthrum agreed on a division that gave the Anglo Saxons western Mercia and eastern Mercia to the Vikings In the 890s renewed Viking attacks were successfully fought off by Alfred assisted by his son and AEthelstan s father Edward and AEthelred Lord of the Mercians AEthelred ruled English Mercia under Alfred and was married to his daughter AEthelflaed Alfred died in 899 and was succeeded by Edward AEthelwold the son of AEthelred King Alfred s older brother and predecessor as king made a bid for power but was killed at the Battle of the Holme in 902 9 Little is known of warfare between the English and the Danes over the next few years but in 909 Edward sent a West Saxon and Mercian army to ravage Northumbria The following year the Northumbrian Danes attacked Mercia but suffered a decisive defeat at the Battle of Tettenhall 10 AEthelred died in 911 and was succeeded as ruler of Mercia by his widow AEthelflaed Over the next decade Edward and AEthelflaed conquered Viking Mercia and East Anglia AEthelflaed died in 918 and was briefly succeeded by her daughter AElfwynn but in the same year Edward deposed her and took direct control of Mercia 11 When Edward died in 924 he controlled all of England south of the Humber 11 The Viking king Sihtric ruled the Kingdom of York in southern Northumbria but Ealdred maintained Anglo Saxon rule in at least part of the former kingdom of Bernicia from his base in Bamburgh in northern Northumbria Constantine II ruled Scotland apart from the southwest which was the British Kingdom of Strathclyde Wales was divided into a number of small kingdoms including Deheubarth in the southwest Gwent in the southeast Brycheiniog immediately north of Gwent and Gwynedd in the north 12 Early life Edit Statue in Tamworth of AEthelflaed Lady of the Mercians with her young nephew AEthelstan According to the Anglo Norman historian William of Malmesbury AEthelstan was thirty years old when he came to the throne in 924 which would mean that he was born around 894 He was the oldest son of Edward the Elder He was Edward s only son by his first consort Ecgwynn Very little is known about Ecgwynn and she is not named in any contemporary source Medieval chroniclers gave varying descriptions of her rank one described her as an ignoble consort of inferior birth while others described her birth as noble 13 Modern historians also disagree about her status Simon Keynes and Richard Abels believe that leading figures in Wessex were unwilling to accept AEthelstan as king in 924 partly because his mother had been Edward the Elder s concubine 14 However Barbara Yorke and Sarah Foot argue that allegations that AEthelstan was illegitimate were a product of the dispute over the succession and that there is no reason to doubt that she was Edward s legitimate wife 15 She may have been related to St Dunstan 16 William of Malmesbury wrote that Alfred the Great honoured his young grandson with a ceremony in which he gave him a scarlet cloak a belt set with gems and a sword with a gilded scabbard 17 Medieval Latin scholar Michael Lapidge and historian Michael Wood see this as designating AEthelstan as a potential heir at a time when the claim of Alfred s nephew AEthelwold to the throne represented a threat to the succession of Alfred s direct line 18 but historian Janet Nelson suggests that it should be seen in the context of conflict between Alfred and Edward in the 890s and might reflect an intention to divide the realm between his son and his grandson after his death 19 Historian Martin Ryan goes further suggesting that at the end of his life Alfred may have favoured AEthelstan rather than Edward as his successor 20 An acrostic poem praising prince Adalstan and prophesying a great future for him has been interpreted by Lapidge as referring to the young AEthelstan punning on the Old English meaning of his name noble stone 21 Lapidge and Wood see the poem as a commemoration of Alfred s ceremony by one of his leading scholars John the Old Saxon 22 In Michael Wood s view the poem confirms the truth of William of Malmesbury s account of the ceremony Wood also suggests that AEthelstan may have been the first English king to be groomed from childhood as an intellectual and that John was probably his tutor 23 However Sarah Foot argues that the acrostic poem makes better sense if it is dated to the beginning of AEthelstan s reign 24 Edward married his second wife AElfflaed at about the time of his father s death probably because Ecgwynn had died although she may have been put aside The new marriage weakened AEthelstan s position as his step mother naturally favoured the interests of her own sons AElfweard and Edwin 17 By 920 Edward had taken a third wife Eadgifu probably after putting AElfflaed aside 25 Eadgifu also had two sons the future kings Edmund and Eadred Edward had several daughters perhaps as many as nine 26 AEthelstan s later education was probably at the Mercian court of his aunt and uncle AEthelflaed and AEthelred and it is likely the young prince gained his military training in the Mercian campaigns to conquer the Danelaw According to a transcript dating from 1304 in 925 AEthelstan gave a charter of privileges to St Oswald s Priory Gloucester where his aunt and uncle were buried according to a pact of paternal piety which he formerly pledged with AEthelred ealdorman of the people of the Mercians 27 When Edward took direct control of Mercia after AEthelflaed s death in 918 AEthelstan may have represented his father s interests there 28 Reign EditThe struggle for power Edit Edward died at Farndon in northern Mercia on 17 July 924 and the ensuing events are unclear 29 AElfweard Edward s eldest son by AElfflaed had ranked above AEthelstan in attesting a charter in 901 and Edward may have intended AElfweard to be his successor as king either of Wessex only or of the whole kingdom If Edward had intended his realms to be divided after his death his deposition of AElfwynn in Mercia in 918 may have been intended to prepare the way for AEthelstan s succession as king of Mercia 30 When Edward died AEthelstan was apparently with him in Mercia while AElfweard was in Wessex Mercia acknowledged AEthelstan as king and Wessex may have chosen AElfweard However AElfweard outlived his father by only sixteen days 31 Even after AElfweard s death there seems to have been opposition to AEthelstan in Wessex particularly in Winchester where AElfweard was buried At first AEthelstan behaved as a Mercian king A charter relating to land in Derbyshire which appears to have been issued at a time in 925 when his authority had not yet been recognised outside Mercia was witnessed only by Mercian bishops 32 In the view of historians David Dumville and Janet Nelson he may have agreed not to marry or have heirs in order to gain acceptance 33 However Sarah Foot ascribes his decision to remain unmarried to a religiously motivated determination on chastity as a way of life 34 b The coronation of AEthelstan took place on 4 September 925 at Kingston upon Thames perhaps due to its symbolic location on the border between Wessex and Mercia 36 He was crowned by the Archbishop of Canterbury Athelm who probably designed or organised a new ordo religious order of service in which the king wore a crown for the first time instead of a helmet The new ordo was influenced by West Frankish liturgy and in turn became one of the sources of the medieval French ordo 37 Opposition seems to have continued even after the coronation According to William of Malmesbury an otherwise unknown nobleman called Alfred plotted to blind AEthelstan on account of his supposed illegitimacy although it is unknown whether he aimed to make himself king or was acting on behalf of Edwin AElfweard s younger brother Blinding would have been a sufficient disability to render AEthelstan ineligible for kingship without incurring the odium attached to murder 38 Tensions between AEthelstan and Winchester seem to have continued for some years The Bishop of Winchester Frithestan did not attend the coronation or witness any of AEthelstan s known charters until 928 After that he witnessed fairly regularly until his resignation in 931 but was listed in a lower position than he was entitled to by his seniority 39 In 933 Edwin was drowned in a shipwreck in the North Sea His cousin Adelolf Count of Boulogne took his body for burial at the Abbey of Saint Bertin in Saint Omer According to the abbey s annalist Folcuin who wrongly believed that Edwin had been king he had fled England driven by some disturbance in his kingdom Folcuin stated that AEthelstan sent alms to the abbey for his dead brother and received monks from the abbey graciously when they came to England although Folcuin did not realise that AEthelstan died before the monks made the journey in 944 The twelfth century chronicler Symeon of Durham said that AEthelstan ordered Edwin to be drowned but this is dismissed by most historians c Edwin might have fled England after an unsuccessful rebellion against his brother s rule and his death may have put an end to Winchester s opposition 41 King of the English Edit The British Isles in the early tenth century Edward the Elder had conquered the Danish territories in east Mercia and East Anglia with the assistance of AEthelflaed and her husband AEthelred but when Edward died the Danish king Sihtric still ruled the Viking Kingdom of York formerly the southern Northumbrian kingdom of Deira In January 926 AEthelstan arranged for his only full sister to marry Sihtric The two kings agreed not to invade each other s territories or to support each other s enemies The following year Sihtric died and AEthelstan seized the chance to invade d Guthfrith a cousin of Sihtric led a fleet from Dublin to try to take the throne but AEthelstan easily prevailed He captured York and received the submission of the Danish people According to a southern chronicler he succeeded to the kingdom of the Northumbrians and it is uncertain whether he had to fight Guthfrith 45 Southern kings had never ruled the north and his usurpation was met with outrage by the Northumbrians who had always resisted southern control However at Eamont near Penrith on 12 July 927 King Constantine II of Alba King Hywel Dda of Deheubarth Ealdred of Bamburgh and King Owain of Strathclyde or Morgan ap Owain of Gwent e accepted AEthelstan s overlordship His triumph led to seven years of peace in the north 47 Whereas AEthelstan was the first English king to achieve lordship over northern Britain he inherited his authority over the Welsh kings from his father and aunt In the 910s Gwent acknowledged the lordship of Wessex and Deheubarth and Gwynedd accepted that of AEthelflaed following Edward s takeover of Mercia they transferred their allegiance to him According to William of Malmesbury after the meeting at Eamont AEthelstan summoned the Welsh kings to Hereford where he imposed a heavy annual tribute and fixed the border between England and Wales in the Hereford area at the River Wye 48 f The dominant figure in Wales was Hywel Dda of Deheubarth described by the historian of early medieval Wales Thomas Charles Edwards as the firmest ally of the emperors of Britain among all the kings of his day Welsh kings attended AEthelstan s court between 928 and 935 and witnessed charters at the head of the list of laity apart from the kings of Scotland and Strathclyde showing that their position was regarded as superior to that of the other great men present The alliance produced peace between Wales and England and within Wales lasting throughout AEthelstan s reign though some Welsh resented the status of their rulers as under kings as well as the high level of tribute imposed upon them In Armes Prydein Vawr The Great Prophecy of Britain a Welsh poet foresaw the day when the British would rise up against their Saxon oppressors and drive them into the sea 50 According to William of Malmesbury after the Hereford meeting AEthelstan went on to expel the Cornish from Exeter fortify its walls and fix the Cornish boundary at the River Tamar This account is regarded sceptically by historians however as Cornwall had been under English rule since the mid ninth century Thomas Charles Edwards describes it as an improbable story while historian John Reuben Davies sees it as the suppression of a British revolt and the confinement of the Cornish beyond the Tamar AEthelstan emphasised his control by establishing a new Cornish see and appointing its first bishop but Cornwall kept its own culture and language 51 Silver penny of King AEthelstan AEthelstan became the first king of all the Anglo Saxon peoples and in effect overlord of Britain 52 g His successes inaugurated what John Maddicott in his history of the origins of the English Parliament calls the imperial phase of English kingship between about 925 and 975 when rulers from Wales and Scotland attended the assemblies of English kings and witnessed their charters 54 AEthelstan tried to reconcile the aristocracy in his new territory of Northumbria to his rule He lavished gifts on the minsters of Beverley Chester le Street and York emphasising his Christianity He also purchased the vast territory of Amounderness in Lancashire and gave it to the Archbishop of York his most important lieutenant in the region h But he remained a resented outsider and the northern British kingdoms preferred to ally with the pagan Norse of Dublin In contrast to his strong control over southern Britain his position in the north was far more tenuous 56 Invasion of Scotland in 934 Edit Main article AEthelstan s invasion of Scotland In 934 AEthelstan invaded Scotland His reasons are unclear and historians give alternative explanations The death of his half brother Edwin in 933 might have finally removed factions in Wessex opposed to his rule Guthfrith the Norse king of Dublin who had briefly ruled Northumbria died in 934 any resulting insecurity among the Danes would have given AEthelstan an opportunity to stamp his authority on the north An entry in the Annals of Clonmacnoise recording the death in 934 of a ruler who was possibly Ealdred of Bamburgh suggests another possible explanation This points to a dispute between AEthelstan and Constantine over control of his territory The Anglo Saxon Chronicle briefly recorded the expedition without explanation but the twelfth century chronicler John of Worcester stated that Constantine had broken his treaty with AEthelstan 57 AEthelstan set out on his campaign in May 934 accompanied by four Welsh kings Hywel Dda of Deheubarth Idwal Foel of Gwynedd Morgan ap Owain of Gwent and Tewdwr ap Griffri of Brycheiniog His retinue also included eighteen bishops and thirteen earls six of whom were Danes from eastern England By late June or early July he had reached Chester le Street where he made generous gifts to the tomb of St Cuthbert including a stole and maniple ecclesiastical garments originally commissioned by his step mother AElfflaed as a gift to Bishop Frithestan of Winchester The invasion was launched by land and sea According to Symeon of Durham his land forces ravaged as far as Dunnottar in north east Scotland the furthest north that any English army had reached since Ecgfrith s disastrous invasion in 685 while the fleet raided Caithness then probably part of the Norse kingdom of Orkney 58 No battles are recorded during the campaign and chronicles do not record its outcome By September however he was back in the south of England at Buckingham where Constantine witnessed a charter as subregulus thus acknowledging AEthelstan s overlordship In 935 a charter was attested by Constantine Owain of Strathclyde Hywel Dda Idwal Foel and Morgan ap Owain At Christmas of the same year Owain of Strathclyde was once more at AEthelstan s court along with the Welsh kings but Constantine was not His return to England less than two years later would be in very different circumstances 59 Battle of Brunanburh Edit Main article Battle of Brunanburh In 934 Olaf Guthfrithson succeeded his father Guthfrith as the Norse King of Dublin The alliance between the Norse and the Scots was cemented by the marriage of Olaf to Constantine s daughter By August 937 Olaf had defeated his rivals for control of the Viking part of Ireland and he promptly launched a bid for the former Norse kingdom of York Individually Olaf and Constantine were too weak to oppose AEthelstan but together they could hope to challenge the dominance of Wessex In the autumn they joined with the Strathclyde Britons under Owain to invade England Medieval campaigning was normally conducted in the summer and AEthelstan could hardly have expected an invasion on such a large scale so late in the year He seems to have been slow to react and an old Latin poem preserved by William of Malmesbury accused him of having languished in sluggish leisure The allies plundered English territory while AEthelstan took his time gathering a West Saxon and Mercian army However Michael Wood praises his caution arguing that unlike Harold in 1066 he did not allow himself to be provoked into precipitate action When he marched north the Welsh did not join him and they did not fight on either side 60 The two sides met at the Battle of Brunanburh resulting in an overwhelming victory for AEthelstan supported by his young half brother the future King Edmund Olaf escaped back to Dublin with the remnant of his forces while Constantine lost a son The English also suffered heavy losses including two of AEthelstan s cousins sons of Edward the Elder s younger brother AEthelweard 61 The battle was reported in the Annals of Ulster A great lamentable and horrible battle was cruelly fought between the Saxons and the Northmen in which several thousands of Northmen who are uncounted fell but their king Amlaib Olaf escaped with a few followers A large number of Saxons fell on the other side but AEthelstan king of the Saxons enjoyed a great victory 62 A generation later the chronicler AEthelweard reported that it was popularly remembered as the great battle and it sealed AEthelstan s posthumous reputation as victorious because of God in the words of the homilist AElfric of Eynsham 63 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle abandoned its usual terse style in favour of a heroic poem vaunting the great victory employing imperial language to present AEthelstan as ruler of an empire of Britain 64 The site of the battle is uncertain however and over thirty sites have been suggested with Bromborough on the Wirral the most favoured among historians 65 Historians disagree over the significance of the battle Alex Woolf describes it as a pyrrhic victory for AEthelstan the campaign seems to have ended in a stalemate his power appears to have declined and after he died Olaf acceded to the kingdom of Northumbria without resistance 66 Alfred Smyth describes it as the greatest battle in Anglo Saxon history but he also states that its consequences beyond AEthelstan s reign have been overstated 67 In the view of Sarah Foot on the other hand it would be difficult to exaggerate the battle s importance if the Anglo Saxons had been defeated their hegemony over the whole mainland of Britain would have disintegrated 68 Kingship EditAdministration Edit A sixteenth century painting in Beverley Minster in the East Riding of Yorkshire of AEthelstan with Saint John of Beverley Anglo Saxon kings ruled through ealdormen who had the highest lay status under the king In ninth century Wessex they each ruled a single shire but by the middle of the tenth they had authority over a much wider area a change probably introduced by AEthelstan to deal with the problems of governing his extended realm 69 One of the ealdormen who was also called AEthelstan governed the eastern Danelaw territory of East Anglia the largest and wealthiest province of England He became so powerful that he was later known as AEthelstan Half King 70 Several of the ealdormen who witnessed charters had Scandinavian names and while the localities they came from cannot be identified they were almost certainly the successors of the earls who led Danish armies in the time of Edward the Elder and who were retained by AEthelstan as his representatives in local government 71 Beneath the ealdormen reeves royal officials who were noble local landowners were in charge of a town or royal estate The authority of church and state was not separated in early medieval societies and the lay officials worked closely with their diocesan bishop and local abbots who also attended the king s royal councils 72 As the first king of all the Anglo Saxon peoples AEthelstan needed effective means to govern his extended realm Building on the foundations of his predecessors he created the most centralised government that England had yet seen 73 Previously some charters had been produced by royal priests and others by members of religious houses but between 928 and 935 they were produced exclusively by a scribe known to historians as AEthelstan A showing an unprecedented degree of royal control over an important activity Unlike earlier and later charters AEthelstan A provides full details of the date and place of adoption and an unusually long witness list providing crucial information for historians After AEthelstan A retired or died charters reverted to a simpler form suggesting that they had been the work of an individual rather than the development of a formal writing office 74 A key mechanism of government was the king s council witan in Old English 75 Anglo Saxon kings did not have a fixed capital city Their courts were peripatetic and their councils were held at varying locations around their realms AEthelstan stayed mainly in Wessex however and controlled outlying areas by summoning leading figures to his councils The small and intimate meetings that had been adequate until the enlargement of the kingdom under Edward the Elder gave way to large bodies attended by bishops ealdormen thegns magnates from distant areas and independent rulers who had submitted to his authority Frank Stenton sees AEthelstan s councils as national assemblies which did much to break down the provincialism that was a barrier to the unification of England John Maddicott goes further seeing them as the start of centralised assemblies that had a defined role in English government and AEthelstan as the true if unwitting founder of the English parliament 76 Law Edit The Anglo Saxons were the first people in northern Europe to write administrative documents in the vernacular and law codes in Old English go back to AEthelberht of Kent at the beginning of the seventh century The law code of Alfred the Great from the end of the ninth century was also written in the vernacular and he expected his ealdormen to learn it 77 His code was strongly influenced by Carolingian law going back to Charlemagne in such areas as treason peace keeping organisation of the hundreds and judicial ordeal 78 It remained in force throughout the tenth century and AEthelstan s codes were built on this foundation 79 Legal codes required the approval of the king but they were treated as guidelines which could be adapted and added to at the local level rather than a fixed canon of regulations and customary oral law was also important in the Anglo Saxon period 80 More legal texts survive from AEthelstan s reign than from any other tenth century English king The earliest appear to be his tithe edict and the Ordinance on Charities Four legal codes were adopted at Royal Councils in the early 930s at Grately in Hampshire Exeter Faversham in Kent and Thunderfield in Surrey Local legal texts survive from London and Kent and one concerning the Dunsaete on the Welsh border probably also dates to AEthelstan s reign 81 In the view of the historian of English law Patrick Wormald the laws must have been written by Wulfhelm who succeeded Athelm as Archbishop of Canterbury in 926 82 i Other historians see Wulfhelm s role as less important giving the main credit to AEthelstan himself although the significance placed on the ordeal as an ecclesiastical ritual shows the increased influence of the church Nicholas Brooks sees the role of the bishops as marking an important stage in the increasing involvement of the church in the making and enforcement of law 84 The two earliest codes were concerned with clerical matters and AEthelstan stated that he acted on the advice of Wulfhelm and his bishops The first asserts the importance of paying tithes to the church The second enforces the duty of charity on AEthelstan s reeves specifying the amount to be given to the poor and requiring reeves to free one penal slave annually His religious outlook is shown in a wider sacralization of the law in his reign 85 The later codes show his concern with threats to social order especially robbery which he regarded as the most important manifestation of social breakdown The first of these later codes issued at Grately prescribed harsh penalties including the death penalty for anyone over twelve years old caught in the act of stealing goods worth more than eight pence This apparently had little effect as AEthelstan admitted in the Exeter code I King AEthelstan declare that I have learned that the public peace has not been kept to the extent either of my wishes or of the provisions laid down at Grately and my councillors say that I have suffered this too long In desperation the Council tried a different strategy offering an amnesty to thieves if they paid compensation to their victims The problem of powerful families protecting criminal relatives was to be solved by expelling them to other parts of the realm This strategy did not last long and at Thunderfield AEthelstan returned to the hard line softened by raising the minimum age for the death penalty to fifteen because he thought it too cruel to kill so many young people and for such small crimes as he understood to be the case everywhere 86 His reign saw the first introduction of the system of tithing sworn groups of ten or more men who were jointly responsible for peacekeeping later known as frankpledge Sarah Foot commented that tithing and oath taking to deal with the problem of theft had its origin in Frankia But the equation of theft with disloyalty to AEthelstan s person appears peculiar to him His preoccupation with theft tough on theft tough on the causes of theft finds no direct parallel in other kings codes 87 Historians differ widely regarding AEthelstan s legislation Patrick Wormald s verdict was harsh The hallmark of AEthelstan s law making is the gulf dividing its exalted aspirations from his spasmodic impact In his view The legislative activity of AEthelstan s reign has rightly been dubbed feverish But the extant results are frankly a mess 88 In the view of Simon Keynes however Without any doubt the most impressive aspect of King AEthelstan s government is the vitality of his law making which shows him driving his officials to do their duties and insisting on respect for the law but also demonstrates the difficulty he had in controlling a troublesome people Keynes sees the Grately code as an impressive piece of legislation showing the king s determination to maintain social order 89 Coinage Edit Coin of AEthelstan Rex small cross pattee type London mint moneyer Biorneard In the 970s AEthelstan s nephew King Edgar reformed the monetary system to give Anglo Saxon England the most advanced currency in Europe with a good quality silver coinage which was uniform and abundant 90 In AEthelstan s time however it was far less developed and minting was still organised regionally long after AEthelstan unified the country The Grately code included a provision that there was to be only one coinage across the king s dominion However this is in a section that appears to be copied from a code of his father and the list of towns with mints is confined to the south including London and Kent but not northern Wessex or other regions Early in AEthelstan s reign different styles of coin were issued in each region but after he conquered York and received the submission of the other British kings he issued a new coinage known as the circumscription cross type This advertised his newly exalted status with the inscription Rex Totius Britanniae Examples were minted in Wessex York and English Mercia in Mercia bearing the title Rex Saxorum but not in East Anglia or the Danelaw 91 In the early 930s a new coinage was issued the crowned bust type with the king shown for the first time wearing a crown with three stalks This was eventually issued in all regions apart from Mercia which issued coins without a ruler portrait suggesting in Sarah Foot s view that any Mercian affection for a West Saxon king brought up among them quickly declined 92 Church Edit Miniature of St Matthew in the Carolingian gospels presented by AEthelstan to Christ Church Priory Canterbury Church and state maintained close relations in the Anglo Saxon period both socially and politically Churchmen attended royal feasts as well as meetings of the Royal Council During AEthelstan s reign these relations became even closer especially as the archbishopric of Canterbury had come under West Saxon jurisdiction since Edward the Elder annexed Mercia and AEthelstan s conquests brought the northern church under the control of a southern king for the first time 93 AEthelstan appointed members of his own circle to bishoprics in Wessex possibly to counter the influence of the Bishop of Winchester Frithestan One of the king s mass priests priests employed to say Mass in his household AElfheah became Bishop of Wells while another Beornstan succeeded Frithestan as Bishop of Winchester Beornstan was succeeded by another member of the royal household also called AElfheah 94 Two of the leading figures in the later tenth century Benedictine monastic reform in Edgar s reign Dunstan and AEthelwold served in early life at AEthelstan s court and were ordained as priests by AElfheah of Winchester at the king s request 95 According to AEthelwold s biographer Wulfstan AEthelwold spent a long period in the royal palace in the king s inseparable companionship and learned much from the king s wise men that was useful and profitable to him 96 Oda a future Archbishop of Canterbury was also close to AEthelstan who appointed him Bishop of Ramsbury 97 Oda may have been present at the battle of Brunanburh 98 AEthelstan was a noted collector of relics and while this was a common practice at the time he was marked out by the scale of his collection and the refinement of its contents 99 The abbot of Saint Samson in Dol sent him some as a gift and in his covering letter he wrote we know you value relics more than earthly treasure 100 AEthelstan was also a generous donor of manuscripts and relics to churches and monasteries His reputation was so great that some monastic scribes later falsely claimed that their institutions had been beneficiaries of his largesse He was especially devoted to the cult of St Cuthbert in Chester le Street and his gifts to the community there included Bede s Lives of Cuthbert He commissioned it especially to present to Chester le Street and out of all manuscripts he gave to a religious foundation which survive it is the only one which was wholly written in England during his reign 101 It has a portrait of AEthelstan presenting the book to Cuthbert the earliest surviving manuscript portrait of an English king 102 In the view of Janet Nelson his rituals of largesse and devotion at sites of supernatural power enhanced royal authority and underpinned a newly united imperial realm 100 AEthelstan had a reputation for founding churches although it is unclear how justified this is According to late and dubious sources these churches included minsters at Milton Abbas in Dorset and Muchelney in Somerset In the view of historian John Blair the reputation is probably well founded but these waters are muddied by AEthelstan s almost folkloric reputation as a founder which made him a favourite hero of later origin myths 103 However while he was a generous donor to monasteries he did not give land for new ones or attempt to revive the ones in the north and east destroyed by Viking attacks 104 He also sought to build ties with continental churches Cenwald was a royal priest before his appointment as Bishop of Worcester and in 929 he accompanied two of AEthelstan s half sisters to the Saxon court so that the future Holy Roman Emperor Otto could choose one of them as his wife Cenwald went on to make a tour of German monasteries giving lavish gifts on AEthelstan s behalf and receiving in return promises that the monks would pray for the king and others close to him in perpetuity England and Saxony became closer after the marriage alliance and German names start to appear in English documents while Cenwald kept up the contacts he had made by subsequent correspondence helping the transmission of continental ideas about reformed monasticism to England 105 Learning Edit Alea evangelii a board game played at AEthelstan s court Charter S416 of AEthelstan for Wulfgar in 931 written by AEthelstan A AEthelstan built on his grandfather s efforts to revive ecclesiastical scholarship which had fallen to a low state in the second half of the ninth century John Blair described AEthelstan s achievement as a determined reconstruction visible to us especially through the circulation and production of books of the shattered ecclesiastical culture 106 He was renowned in his own day for his piety and promotion of sacred learning His interest in education and his reputation as a collector of books and relics attracted a cosmopolitan group of ecclesiastical scholars to his court particularly Bretons and Irish AEthelstan gave extensive aid to Breton clergy who had fled Brittany following its conquest by the Vikings in 919 He made a confraternity agreement with the clergy of Dol Cathedral in Brittany who were then in exile in central France and they sent him the relics of Breton saints apparently hoping for his patronage The contacts resulted in a surge in interest in England for commemorating Breton saints One of the most notable scholars at AEthelstan s court was Israel the Grammarian who may have been a Breton Israel and a certain Frank drew a board game called Gospel Dice for an Irish bishop Dub Innse who took it home to Bangor AEthelstan s court played a crucial role in the origins of the English monastic reform movement 107 Few prose narrative sources survive from AEthelstan s reign but it produced an abundance of poetry much of it Norse influenced praise of the King in grandiose terms such as the Brunanburh poem Sarah Foot even makes a case that Beowulf may have been composed in AEthelstan s circle 108 AEthelstan s court was the centre of a revival of the elaborate hermeneutic style of later Latin writers influenced by the West Saxon scholar Aldhelm c 639 709 and by early tenth century French monasticism Foreign scholars at AEthelstan s court such as Israel the Grammarian were practitioners The style was characterised by long convoluted sentences and a predilection for rare words and neologisms 109 The AEthelstan A charters were written in hermeneutic Latin In the view of Simon Keynes it is no coincidence that they first appear immediately after the king had for the first time united England under his rule and they show a high level of intellectual attainment and a monarchy invigorated by success and adopting the trappings of a new political order 110 The style influenced architects of the late tenth century monastic reformers educated at AEthelstan s court such as AEthelwold and Dunstan and became a hallmark of the movement 111 After AEthelstan A charters became more simple but the hermeneutic style returned in the charters of Eadwig and Edgar 112 The historian W H Stevenson commented in 1898 The object of the compilers of these charters was to express their meaning by the use of the greatest possible number of words and by the choice of the most grandiloquent bombastic words they could find Every sentence is so overloaded by the heaping up of unnecessary words that the meaning is almost buried out of sight The invocation with its appended clauses opening with pompous and partly alliterative words will proceed amongst a blaze of verbal fireworks throughout twenty lines of smallish type and the pyrotechnic display will be maintained with equal magnificence throughout the whole charter leaving the reader dazzled by the glaze and blinded by the smoke in a state of uncertainty as to the meaning of these frequently untranslatable and usually interminable sentences 113 However Michael Lapidge argues that however unpalatable the hermeneutic style seems to modern taste it was an important part of late Anglo Saxon culture and deserves more sympathetic attention than it has received from modern historians 114 In the view of historian David Woodman AEthelstan A should be accorded recognition as an individual author of no little genius a man who not only overhauled the legal form of the diploma but also had the ability to write Latin that is as enduringly fascinating as it is complex In many ways the diplomas of AEthelstan A represent the stylistic peak of the Anglo Saxon diplomatic tradition a fitting complement to AEthelstan s own momentous political feats and to the forging of what would become England 115 British monarch Edit AEthelstan in a fifteenth century stained glass window in All Souls College Chapel Oxford Historians frequently comment on AEthelstan s grand and extravagant titles On his coins and charters he is described as Rex totius Britanniae or King of the whole of Britain A gospel book he donated to Christ Church Canterbury is inscribed AEthelstan king of the English and ruler of the whole of Britain with a devout mind gave this book to the primatial see of Canterbury to the church dedicated to Christ In charters from 931 he is king of the English elevated by the right hand of the almighty to the throne of the whole kingdom of Britain and in one manuscript dedication he is even styled basileus et curagulus the titles of Byzantine emperors 116 Some historians are not impressed Clearly comments Alex Woolf King AEthelstan was a man who had pretensions 117 while in the view of Simon Keynes AEthelstan A proclaimed his master king of Britain by wishful extension 118 But according to George Molyneaux this is to apply an anachronistic standard tenth century kings had a loose but real hegemony throughout the island and their titles only appear inflated if one assumes that kingship ought to involve domination of an intensity like that seen within the English kingdom of the eleventh and later centuries 119 European relations Edit The West Saxon court had connections with the Carolingians going back to the marriage between AEthelstan s great grandfather AEthelwulf and Judith daughter of the king of West Francia and future Holy Roman Emperor Charles the Bald as well as the marriage of Alfred the Great s daughter AElfthryth to Judith s son by a later marriage Baldwin II Count of Flanders One of AEthelstan s half sisters Eadgifu married Charles the Simple king of the West Franks in the late 910s He was deposed in 922 and Eadgifu sent their son Louis to safety in England By AEthelstan s time the connection was well established and his coronation was performed with the Carolingian ceremony of anointment probably to draw a deliberate parallel between his rule and Carolingian tradition 120 His crowned bust coinage of 933 938 was the first Anglo Saxon coinage to show the king crowned following Carolingian iconography 121 Like his father AEthelstan was unwilling to marry his female relatives to his own subjects so his sisters either entered nunneries or married foreign husbands This was one reason for his close relations with European courts and he married several of his half sisters to European nobles 122 in what historian Sheila Sharp called a flurry of dynastic bridal activity unequalled again until Queen Victoria s time 123 Another reason lay in the common interest on both sides of the Channel in resisting the threat from the Vikings while the rise in the power and reputation of the royal house of Wessex made marriage with an English princess more prestigious to European rulers 124 In 926 Hugh Duke of the Franks sent AEthelstan s cousin Adelolf Count of Boulogne on an embassy to ask for the hand of one of AEthelstan s sisters According to William of Malmesbury the gifts Adelolf brought included spices jewels many swift horses a crown of solid gold the sword of Constantine the Great Charlemagne s lance and a piece of the Crown of Thorns AEthelstan sent his half sister Eadhild to be Hugh s wife 125 AEthelstan s most important European alliance was with the new Liudolfing dynasty in East Francia The Carolingian dynasty of East Francia had died out in the early tenth century and its new Liudolfing king Henry the Fowler was seen by many as an arriviste He needed a royal marriage for his son to establish his legitimacy but no suitable Carolingian princesses were available The ancient royal line of the West Saxons provided an acceptable alternative especially as they wrongly claimed descent from the seventh century king and saint Oswald who was venerated in Germany In 929 or 930 Henry sent ambassadors to AEthelstan s court seeking a wife for his son Otto who later became Holy Roman Emperor AEthelstan sent two of his half sisters and Otto chose Eadgyth Fifty years later AEthelweard a descendant of Alfred the Great s older brother addressed his Latin version of the Anglo Saxon Chronicle to Mathilde Abbess of Essen who was Eadgyth s granddaughter and had apparently requested it The other sister whose name is uncertain was married to a prince from near the Alps who has not definitely been identified 126 In early medieval Europe it was common for kings to act as foster fathers for the sons of other kings AEthelstan was known for the support he gave to dispossessed young royalty In 936 he sent an English fleet to help his foster son Alan II Duke of Brittany to regain his ancestral lands which had been conquered by the Vikings In the same year he assisted the son of his half sister Eadgifu Louis to take the throne of West Francia and in 939 he sent another fleet that unsuccessfully attempted to help Louis in a struggle with rebellious magnates According to later Scandinavian sources he helped another possible foster son Hakon son of Harald Fairhair king of Norway to reclaim his throne 127 and he was known among Norwegians as AEthelstan the Good 128 AEthelstan s court was perhaps the most cosmopolitan of the Anglo Saxon period 129 The close contacts between the English and European courts ended soon after his death but descent from the English royal house long remained a source of prestige for continental ruling families 130 According to Frank Stenton in his history of the period Anglo Saxon England Between Offa and Cnut there is no English king who played so prominent or so sustained a part in the general affairs of Europe 131 Foreign contemporaries described him in panegyrical terms The French chronicler Flodoard described him as the king from overseas and the Annals of Ulster as the pillar of the dignity of the western world 132 Some historians take a similar view Michael Wood titled an essay The Making of King Aethelstan s Empire an English Charlemagne and described him as the most powerful ruler that Britain had seen since the Romans 133 In the view of Veronica Ortenberg he was the most powerful ruler in Europe with an army that had repeatedly defeated the Vikings continental rulers saw him as a Carolingian emperor who was clearly treated as the new Charlemagne She wrote Wessex kings carried an aura of power and success which made them increasingly powerful in the 920s while most Continental houses were in military trouble and engaged in internecine warfare While the civil wars and the Viking attacks on the Continent had spelled the end of unity of the Carolingian empire which had already disintegrated into separate kingdoms military success had enabled AEthelstan to triumph at home and to attempt to go beyond the reputation of a great heroic dynasty of warrior kings in order to develop a Carolingian ideology of kingship 134 Death Edit Empty fifteenth century tomb of King AEthelstan at Malmesbury Abbey AEthelstan died at Gloucester on 27 October 939 j His grandfather Alfred his father Edward and his half brother AElfweard had been buried at Winchester but AEthelstan chose not to honour the city associated with opposition to his rule By his own wish he was buried at Malmesbury Abbey where he had buried his cousins who died at Brunanburh No other member of the West Saxon royal family was buried there and according to William of Malmesbury AEthelstan s choice reflected his devotion to the abbey and to the memory of its seventh century abbot Saint Aldhelm William described AEthelstan as fair haired as I have seen for myself in his remains beautifully intertwined with gold threads His bones were lost during the Reformation but he is commemorated by an empty fifteenth century tomb 136 Aftermath EditAfter AEthelstan s death the men of York immediately chose the Viking king of Dublin Olaf Guthfrithson as their king and Anglo Saxon control of the north seemingly made safe by the victory of Brunanburh collapsed The reigns of AEthelstan s half brothers Edmund 939 946 and Eadred 946 955 were largely devoted to regaining control Olaf seized the east midlands leading to the establishment of a frontier at Watling Street In 941 Olaf died and Edmund took back control of the east midlands in 942 and then York in 944 Following Edmund s death York again switched back to Viking control and it was only when the Northumbrians finally drove out their Norwegian Viking king Eric Bloodaxe in 954 and submitted to Eadred that Anglo Saxon control of the whole of England was finally restored 137 Primary sources EditChronicle sources for the life of AEthelstan are limited and the first biography by Sarah Foot was only published in 2011 138 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle in AEthelstan s reign is principally devoted to military events and it is largely silent apart from recording his most important victories An important source is the twelfth century chronicle of William of Malmesbury but historians are cautious about accepting his testimony much of which cannot be verified from other sources David Dumville goes so far as to dismiss William s account entirely regarding him as a treacherous witness whose account is unfortunately influential 139 However Sarah Foot is inclined to accept Michael Wood s argument that William s chronicle draws on a lost life of AEthelstan She cautions however that we have no means of discovering how far William improved on the original 140 In Dumville s view AEthelstan has been regarded by historians as a shadowy figure because of an ostensible lack of source material but he argues that the lack is more apparent than real 141 Charters law codes and coins throw considerable light on AEthelstan s government 142 The scribe known to historians as AEthelstan A who was responsible for drafting all charters between 928 and 935 provides very detailed information including signatories dates and locations illuminating AEthelstan s progress around his realm AEthelstan A may have been Bishop AElfwine of Lichfield who was close to the king 143 By contrast with this extensive source of information no charters survive from 910 to 924 a gap which historians struggle to explain and which makes it difficult to assess the degree of continuity in personnel and the operation of government between the reigns of Edward and AEthelstan 144 Historians are also paying increasing attention to less conventional sources such as contemporary poetry in his praise and manuscripts associated with his name 145 Legacy EditThe reign of AEthelstan has been overshadowed by the achievements of his grandfather Alfred the Great but he is now considered one of the greatest kings of the West Saxon dynasty 146 Modern historians endorse the view of twelfth century chronicler William of Malmesbury that no one more just or more learned ever governed the kingdom 147 Frank Stenton and Simon Keynes both describe him as the one Anglo Saxon king who will bear comparison with Alfred In Keynes s view he has long been regarded with good reason as a towering figure in the landscape of the tenth century he has also been hailed as the first king of England as a statesman of international standing 148 David Dumville describes AEthelstan as the father of mediaeval and modern England 149 while Michael Wood regards Offa Alfred and AEthelstan as the three greatest Anglo Saxon kings and AEthelstan as one of the more important lay intellectuals in Anglo Saxon history 150 AEthelstan is regarded as the first King of England by modern historians k Although it was his successors who would achieve the permanent conquest of Viking York AEthelstan s campaigns made this success possible 146 His nephew Edgar called himself King of the English and revived the claim to rule over all the peoples of Britain Simon Keynes argued that the consistent usages of Edgar s reign represent nothing less than a determined reaffirmation of the polity created by AEthelstan in the 930s 152 Historian Charles Insley however sees AEthelstan s hegemony as fragile The level of overlordship wielded by AEthelstan during the 930s over the rest of Britain was perhaps not attained again by an English king until Edward I 153 George Molyneaux argues that The tendency of some modern historians to celebrate AEthelstan as the first king of England is however problematic since there is little sign that in his day the title rex Anglorum was closely or consistently tied to an area similar to that which we consider England When AEthelstan s rule was associated with any definite geographical expanse the territory in question was usually the whole island of Britain 154 Simon Keynes saw AEthelstan s law making as his greatest achievement 79 His reign predates the sophisticated state of the later Anglo Saxon period but his creation of the most centralised government England had yet seen with the king and his council working strategically to ensure acceptance of his authority and laws laid the foundations on which his brothers and nephews would create one of the wealthiest and most advanced systems of government in Europe 155 AEthelstan s reign built upon his grandfather s ecclesiastical programme consolidating the ecclesiastical revival and laying the foundation for the monastic reform movement later in the century 156 AEthelstan s reputation was at its height when he died According to Sarah Foot He found acclaim in his own day not only as a successful military leader and effective monarch but also as a man of devotion committed to the promotion of religion and the patronage of learning Later in the century AEthelweard praised him as a very mighty king worthy of honour and AEthelred the Unready who named his eight sons after his predecessors put AEthelstan first as the name of his eldest son 157 In his biography of AEthelred Levi Roach commented The king was clearly proud of his family and the fact that AEthelstan stands atop this list speaks volumes though later overtaken by Alfred the Great in fame in the 980s it must have seemed as if everything had begun with the king s great uncle a view with which many modern historians would be inclined to concur 158 Memory of AEthelstan then declined until it was revived by William of Malmesbury who took a special interest in him as the one king who had chosen to be buried in his own house William s account kept his memory alive and he was praised by other medieval chroniclers In the early sixteenth century William Tyndale justified his English translation of the Bible by stating that he had read that King AEthelstan had caused the Holy Scriptures to be translated into Anglo Saxon 159 From the sixteenth century onwards Alfred s reputation became dominant and AEthelstan largely disappeared from popular consciousness Sharon Turner s History of the Anglo Saxons first published between 1799 and 1805 played a crucial role in promoting Anglo Saxon studies and he helped to establish Brunanburh as a key battle in English history but his treatment of AEthelstan was slight in comparison with Alfred Charles Dickens had only one paragraph on AEthelstan in his Child s History of England and although Anglo Saxon history was a popular subject for nineteenth century artists and Alfred was frequently depicted in paintings at the Royal Academy between 1769 and 1904 there was not one picture of AEthelstan 160 Williams comments If AEthelstan has not had the reputation which accrued to his grandfather the fault lies in the surviving sources AEthelstan had no biographer and the Chronicle for his reign is scanty In his own day he was the roof tree of the honour of the western world 161 Notes Edit Ninth century kings of Wessex up to the reign of Alfred the Great used the title king of the West Saxons In the 880s AEthelred Lord of the Mercians accepted West Saxon lordship and Alfred then adopted a new title king of the Anglo Saxons representing his conception of a new polity of all the English people who were not under Viking rule This endured until 927 when AEthelstan conquered the last Viking stronghold York and adopted the title king of the English 5 An allusion in the twelfth century Liber Eliensis to Eadgyth daughter of king AEthelstan is probably a mistaken reference to his sister 35 An exception is George Molyneaux who states that There are however grounds to suspect that AEthelstan may have had a hand in the death of AElfweard s full brother Edwin in 933 40 Some historians believe that Sihtric renounced his wife soon after the marriage and reverted to paganism 42 while others merely state that AEthelstan took advantage of Sihtric s death to invade 43 In the view of Alex Woolf it is unlikely that Sihtric repudiated her because AEthelstan would almost certainly have declared war on him 44 According to William of Malmesbury it was Owain of Strathclyde who was present at Eamont but the Anglo Saxon Chronicle says Owain of Gwent It could have been both 46 William of Malmesbury s report of the Hereford meeting is not mentioned in the first volume of the Oxford History of Wales Wales and the Britons 350 1064 by Thomas Charles Edwards 49 The situation in northern Northumbria however is unclear In the view of Ann Williams the submission of Ealdred of Bamburgh was probably nominal and it is likely that he acknowledged Constantine as his lord but Alex Woolf sees Ealdred as a semi independent ruler acknowledging West Saxon authority like AEthelred of Mercia a generation earlier 53 In the view of Janet Nelson AEthelstan had limited control over the north west and the donation of Amounderness in an area which had recently attracted many Scandinavian immigrants to a powerful but far from reliable local potentate was a political gesture rather than a sign of prior control 55 Wormald discusses the codes in detail in The Making of English Law 83 Murray Beaven commented in 1918 that as the Anglo Saxon day started at 4 p m the previous evening it is more likely that he died on 26 October but as the exact date is not known Beaven preferred to keep the accepted date 135 David Dumville s chapter on AEthelstan in Wessex and England is headed Between Alfred the Great and Edgar the Peacemaker AEthelstan The First King of England and the title of Sarah Foot s biography is AEthelstan The First King of England 151 Citations Edit Foot 2011 pp 120 21 Blunt 1974 pp 47 48 Parker Library 2015 Foot 2011 p 110 Keynes 2014 pp 534 36 Wood 2005 p 7 Stenton 1971 pp 95 236 Keynes amp Lapidge 1983 pp 11 13 16 23 Stenton 1971 pp 259 69 321 22 Miller 2004 a b Costambeys 2004 Charles Edwards 2013 pp 510 12 548 Foot 2011 pp 29 30 Keynes 1999 p 467 Abels 1998 p 307 Yorke 2001 pp 26 33 Foot 2011 pp 29 31 Yorke 2004 a b Foot 2011 pp 31 33 Lapidge 1993 p 68 n 96 Wood 1999 pp 157 58 Nelson 1999a pp 63 64 Ryan 2013 p 296 Lapidge 1993 pp 60 68 Lapidge 1993 p 69 Wood 1999 p 158 Wood 1999 p 157 Wood 2007 p 199 Wood 2010 p 137 Foot 2011 pp 32 110 12 Williams 1991a p 6 Miller 2004 Foot 2011 pp xv 44 52 Foot 2011 pp 17 34 36 206 Foot 2011a Foot 2011 p 17 Keynes 2001 p 51 Charles Edwards 2013 p 510 Foot 2011 p 17 Keynes 2014 pp 535 36 Keynes 1985 p 187 n 206 Foot 2011 pp 73 74 Keynes 1999 pp 467 68 Dumville 1992 p 151 Nelson 1999b p 104 Foot 2011 p 249 Foot 2011 p 59 Foot 2011 pp 73 74 Nelson 2008 pp 125 26 Foot 2011 p 40 Foot 2011 pp 75 83 n 98 Thacker 2001 pp 254 55 Molyneaux 2015 p 29 Foot 2011 pp 39 43 86 87 Stenton 1971 pp 355 56 Hart 2004 Thacker 2001 p 257 Foot 2011 p 18 Stenton 1971 p 340 Miller 2014 p 18 Woolf 2007 pp 150 51 Foot 2011 pp 12 19 48 Foot 2011 p 162 n 15 Woolf 2007 p 151 Charles Edwards 2013 pp 511 12 Higham 1993 p 190 Foot 2011 p 20 Stenton 1971 pp 340 41 Foot 2011 p 163 Charles Edwards 2013 pp 510 19 Charles Edwards 2013 pp 497 523 Charles Edwards 2013 p 432 Davies 2013 pp 342 43 Foot 2011 p 164 Stenton 1971 pp 341 42 Foot 2011 p 20 Williams 1991c pp 116 17 Woolf 2007 p 158 Maddicott 2010 pp 7 8 13 Nelson 1999b pp 116 17 Higham 1993 p 192 Keynes 1999 p 469 Foot 2011 pp 164 65 Woolf 2007 pp 158 65 Foot 2011 pp 87 88 122 23 165 67 Woolf 2007 pp 158 66 Hunter Blair 2003 p 46 Foot 2011 pp 88 89 Woolf 2007 pp 166 68 Higham 1993 p 193 Livingston 2011 pp 13 18 23 Wood 1999 p 166 Wood 2005 p 158 Foot 2011 pp 169 71 Stenton 1971 pp 342 43 Woolf 2007 pp 168 69 Smyth 1979 pp 202 04 Woolf 2007 p 169 Foot 2011 pp 3 210 211 Foot 2008 p 144 Foot 2011 pp 172 79 Scragg 2014 p 58 Higham 1993 p 193 Hill 2004 pp 139 53 Livingston 2011 pp 18 20 Woolf 2013 p 256 Smyth 1984 p 204 Smyth 1979 p 63 Foot 2011 pp 172 72 John 1982 p 172 Stafford 2014 pp 156 57 Hart 1992 p 575 Foot 2011 p 129 Foot 2011 p 130 Foot 2011 p 10 Foot 2011 pp 71 72 Yorke 2014 pp 126 27 Foot 2011 pp 63 77 79 Stenton 1971 p 352 Maddicott 2010 p 4 Foot 2011 p 136 Pratt 2010 p 332 a b Keynes 1999 p 471 Roach 2013 pp 477 79 Foot 2011 pp 136 37 Pratt 2010 pp 335 36 345 46 Foot 2011 pp 299 300 Wormald 1999 pp 299 300 Wormald 1999 pp 290 308 430 40 Foot 2011 pp 138 146 48 Pratt 2010 pp 336 350 Keynes 1999 p 471 Brooks 1984 p 218 Foot 2011 pp 136 40 146 47 Foot 2011 pp 140 42 Pratt 2010 pp 339 47 Foot 2011 pp 143 45 Wormald 1999 pp 300 308 Pratt 2010 p 349 Campbell 2000 pp 32 33 181 Foot 2011 p 152 Foot 2011 pp 151 55 Foot 2011 pp 155 56 Foot 2011 pp 95 96 Foot 2011 p 97 Lapidge 2004 Yorke 2004 Wood 2010 pp 148 49 Foot 2011 pp 97 98 215 Cubitt amp Costambeys 2004 Brooke 2001 p 115 a b Nelson 1999b p 112 Foot 2011 pp 117 24 Keynes 1985 p 180 Karkov 2004 p 55 Blair 2005 p 348 Foot 2011 pp 135 36 Foot 2011 pp 101 02 Blair 2005 p 348 Dumville 1992 p 156 Foot 2011 pp 94 99 107 190 91 Keynes 1985 pp 197 98 Brett 1991 pp 44 45 Foot 2011 pp 109 17 Lapidge 1993 p 107 Gretsch 1999 pp 332 34 336 Keynes 1999 p 470 Gretsch 1999 pp 348 49 Foot 2011 pp 72 214 15 Foot 2011 p 214 quoting an unpublished lecture by Stevenson Lapidge 1993 p 140 Woodman 2013 p 247 Foot 2011 pp 212 13 Ortenberg 2010 p 215 Woolf 2007 p 158 Keynes 2001 p 61 Molyneaux 2015 p 211 Ortenberg 2010 pp 211 15 Foot 2011 p 46 Karkov 2004 pp 66 67 Foot 2011 pp xv 44 45 Sharp 1997 p 198 Ortenberg 2010 pp 217 18 Sharp 2001 p 82 Foot 2011 pp 46 49 192 93 Ortenberg 2010 pp 218 19 Foot 2011 pp xvi 48 52 Ortenberg 2010 pp 231 32 Nelson 1999b p 112 Wormald 2004 Foot 2011 pp 22 23 52 53 167 68 167 69 183 84 Zacher 2011 p 84 Zacher 2011 p 82 MacLean 2013 pp 359 61 Stenton 1971 p 344 Ortenberg 2010 p 211 Foot 2011 p 210 Wood 1983 p 250 Ortenberg 2010 pp 211 22 Beaven 1918 p 1 n 2 Foot 2011 pp 25 186 87 Thacker 2001 pp 254 55 Keynes 1999 pp 472 73 Cooper 2013 p 189 Dumville 1992 pp 146 167 68 Foot 2011 pp 251 58 discussing an unpublished essay by Michael Wood Dumville 1992 pp 142 43 Miller 2014 p 18 Foot 2011 pp 71 73 82 89 98 Keynes 1999 pp 465 67 Foot 2011 p 247 a b Williams 1991b p 50 Lapidge 1993 p 49 Stenton 1971 p 356 Keynes 1999 p 466 Dumville 1992 p 171 Wood 2005 p 7 Wood 2007 p 192 Dumville 1992 chapter IV Foot 2011 Keynes 2008 p 25 Insley 2013 p 323 Molyneaux 2015 p 200 Foot 2011 pp 10 70 Dumville 1992 p 167 Foot 2011 pp 94 211 228 Roach 2016 pp 95 96 Foot 2011 pp 227 33 Foot 2011 pp 233 42 Williams 1991b p 51 Sources EditAbels Richard 1998 Alfred the Great War Kingship and Culture in Anglo Saxon England Harlow Essex Longman ISBN 978 0 582 04047 2 Beaven Murray 1918 King Edmund I and the Danes of York English Historical Review 33 129 1 9 doi 10 1093 ehr XXXIII CXXIX 1 ISSN 0013 8266 Blair John 2005 The Church in Anglo Saxon Society Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 921117 3 Blunt Christopher 1974 The Coinage of AEthelstan King of England 924 939 British Numismatic Journal XLII 35 160 and plates ISSN 0143 8956 Brett Caroline 1991 A Breton pilgrim in England in the reign of King AEthelstan In Jondorf Gillian Dumville D N eds France and the British Isles in the Middle Ages and Renaissance Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 487 9 Brooke Christopher 2001 The Saxon and Norman Kings Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 23131 8 Brooks Nicholas 1984 The Early History of the Church of Canterbury Leicester UK Leicester University Press ISBN 978 0 7185 1182 1 Campbell James 2000 The Anglo Saxon State London UK Hambledon amp London ISBN 978 1 85285 176 7 Charles Edwards T M 2013 Wales and the Britons 350 1064 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 821731 2 Cooper Tracy Anne March 2013 Review of AEthelstan The First King of England by Sarah Foot Journal of World History 24 1 189 192 doi 10 1353 jwh 2013 0025 ISSN 1045 6007 S2CID 162023751 Costambeys Marios 2004 AEthelflaed Ethelfleda d 918 ruler of the Mercians Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8907 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 subscription or UK public library membership required Cubitt Catherine Costambeys Marios 2004 Oda St Oda Odo d 958 archbishop of Canterbury Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 20541 subscription or UK public library membership required Davies John Reuben 2013 Wales and West Britain In Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 118 42513 8 Dumville David 1992 Wessex and England from Alfred to Edgar Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 308 7 Foot Sarah 2008 Where English Becomes British Rethinking Contexts for Brunanburh In Barrow Julia Wareham Andrew eds Myth Rulership Church and Charters Abingdon Oxfordshire Ashgate pp 127 144 ISBN 978 0 7546 5120 8 Foot Sarah 2011 AEthelstan The First King of England New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12535 1 Foot Sarah 2011a AEthelstan Athelstan 893 4 939 king of England Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 833 subscription or UK public library membership required Gretsch Mechtild 1999 The Intellectual Foundations of the English Benedictine Reform Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03052 6 Hart Cyril 1992 The Danelaw London UK The Hambledon Press ISBN 978 1 85285 044 9 Hart Cyril 2004 Sihtric Caech Sigtryggr Caech d 927 king of York Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49273 subscription or UK public library membership required Higham N J 1993 The Kingdom of Northumbria AD 350 1100 Stroud Gloucestershire Alan Sutton ISBN 978 0 86299 730 4 Hill Paul 2004 The Age of Athelstan Britain s Forgotten History Stroud Gloucestershire Tempus Publishing ISBN 978 0 7524 2566 5 Hunter Blair Peter 2003 An Introduction to Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83085 0 Insley Charles 2013 Southumbria In Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 118 42513 8 John Eric 1982 The Age of Edgar In Campbell James ed The Anglo Saxons London UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 014395 9 Karkov Catherine 2004 The Ruler Portraits of Anglo Saxon England Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell ISBN 978 1 84383 059 7 Keynes Simon Lapidge Michael eds 1983 Alfred the Great Asser s Life of King Alfred amp Other Contemporary Sources London UK Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0 14 044409 4 Keynes Simon 1985 King AEthelstan s books In Lapidge Michael Gneuss Helmut eds Learning and Literature in Anglo Saxon England Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 143 201 ISBN 978 0 521 25902 6 Keynes Simon 1999 England c 900 1016 In Reuter Timothy ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol III Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 456 484 ISBN 978 0 521 36447 8 Keynes Simon 2001 Edward King of the Anglo Saxons In Higham N J Hill D H eds Edward the Elder 899 924 Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge pp 40 66 ISBN 978 0 415 21497 1 Keynes Simon 2008 Edgar rex admirabilis In Scragg Donald ed Edgar King of the English New Interpretations Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press pp 3 58 ISBN 978 1 84383 399 4 Keynes Simon 2014 1st edition 1999 Appendix I Rulers of the English c 450 1066 In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Second ed Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell pp 521 38 ISBN 978 0 470 65632 7 Lapidge Michael 1993 Anglo Latin Literature 900 1066 London UK The Hambledon Press ISBN 978 1 85285 012 8 Lapidge Michael 2004 Dunstan St Dunstan d 988 archbishop of Canterbury Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8288 subscription or UK public library membership required Livingston Michael 2011 The Roads to Brunanburh In Livingston Michael ed The Battle of Brunanburh A Casebook Exeter Devon University of Exeter Press pp 1 26 ISBN 978 0 85989 862 1 MacLean Simon 2013 Britain Ireland and Europe c 900 c 1100 In Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 118 42513 8 Maddicott John 2010 The Origins of the English Parliament 924 1327 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 958550 2 Miller Sean 2014 AEthelstan In Michael Lapidge John Blair Simon Keynes Donald Scragg eds The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester West Sussex Blackwell Publishing pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Miller Sean 2004 Edward called Edward the Elder 870s 924 king of the Anglo Saxons Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8514 subscription or UK public library membership required Molyneaux George 2015 The Formation of the English Kingdom in the Tenth Century Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 871791 1 Nelson Janet 1999a Rulers and Ruling Families in Early Medieval Europe Farnham Surrey Ashgate ISBN 978 0 86078 802 7 Nelson Janet L 1999b Rulers and government In Reuter Timothy ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume III c 900 c 1024 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 95 129 ISBN 0 521 36447 7 Nelson Janet 2008 The First Use of the Second Anglo Saxon Ordo In Barrow Julia Wareham Andrew eds Myth Rulership Church and Charters Farnham Surrey Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 5120 8 Ortenberg Veronica 2010 The King from Overseas Why did AEthelstan Matter in Tenth Century Continental Affairs In Rollason David Leyser Conrad Williams Hannah eds England and the Continent in the Tenth Century Studies in Honour of Wilhelm Levison 1876 1947 Turnhout Belgium Brepols ISBN 978 2 503 53208 0 Parker Library 8 September 2015 History by the Month September and the Coronation of AEthelstan Corpus Christi College University of Cambridge Pratt David 2010 Written Law and the Communication of Authority in Tenth Century England In Rollason David Leyser Conrad Williams Hannah eds England and the Continent in the Tenth Century Studies in Honour of Wilhelm Levison 1876 1947 Turnhout Belgium Brepols ISBN 978 2 503 53208 0 Roach Levi August 2013 Law codes and legal norms in later Anglo Saxon England Historical Research Institute of Historical Research 86 233 465 486 doi 10 1111 1468 2281 12001 Roach Levi 2016 AEthelred the Unready New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22972 1 Ryan Martin J 2013 Conquest Reform and the Making of England In Higham Nicholas J Ryan Martin J eds The Anglo Saxon World New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press pp 284 334 ISBN 978 0 300 12534 4 Scragg Donald 2014 Battle of Brunanburh In Michael Lapidge John Blair Simon Keynes Donald Scragg eds The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester West Sussex Blackwell Publishing pp 57 58 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Sharp Sheila Autumn 1997 England Europe and the Celtic World King Athelstan s Foreign Policy Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 79 3 197 219 doi 10 7227 BJRL 79 3 15 ISSN 2054 9318 Sharp Sheila 2001 The West Saxon Tradition of Dynastic Marriage In Higham N J Hill D H eds Edward the Elder 899 924 Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 21497 1 Smyth Alfred P 1979 Scandinavian York and Dublin Vol 2 Atlantic Highlands New Jersey Humanities Press ISBN 978 0 391 01049 9 Smyth Alfred 1984 Warlords and Holy Men Scotland AD 80 1000 London UK Edward Arnold ISBN 978 0 7131 6305 6 Stafford Pauline 2014 Ealdorman In Michael Lapidge John Blair Simon Keynes Donald Scragg eds The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester West Sussex Blackwell Publishing pp 156 57 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Stenton Frank 1971 Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280139 5 Thacker Alan 2001 Dynastic Monasteries and Family Cults In N J Higham D H Hill eds Edward the Elder 899 924 Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 0 415 21497 1 Williams Ann 1991a AElfflaed queen d after 920 In Williams Ann Smyth Alfred P Kirby D P eds A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain London UK Seaby p 6 ISBN 1 85264 047 2 Williams Ann 1991b Athelstan king of Wessex 924 39 In Ann Williams Alfred P Smyth D P Kirby eds A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain London UK Seaby pp 50 51 ISBN 1 85264 047 2 Williams Ann 1991c Ealdred of Bamburgh In Ann Williams Alfred P Smyth D P Kirby eds A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain London UK Seaby pp 116 17 ISBN 1 85264 047 2 Wood Michael 1983 The Making of King Aethelstan s Empire An English Charlemagne In Wormald Patrick Bullough Donald Collins Roger eds Ideal and Reality in Frankish and Anglo Saxon Society Oxford UK Basil Blackwell pp 250 272 ISBN 978 0 631 12661 4 Wood Michael 1999 In Search of England London UK Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 024733 6 Wood Michael 2005 In Search of the Dark Ages London UK BBC Books ISBN 978 0 563 53431 0 Wood Michael 2007 Stand strong against the monsters kingship and learning in the empire of king AEthelstan In Wormald Patrick Nelson Janet eds Lay Intellectuals in the Carolingian World Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83453 7 Wood Michael 2010 A Carolingian Scholar in the Court of King AEthelstan In Rollason David Leyser Conrad Williams Hannah eds England and the Continent in the Tenth Century Studies in Honour of Wilhelm Levison 1876 1947 Turnhout Belgium Brepols ISBN 978 2 503 53208 0 Woodman D A December 2013 AEthelstan A and the rhetoric of rule Anglo Saxon England Cambridge University Press 42 217 248 doi 10 1017 S0263675113000112 ISSN 0263 6751 S2CID 159948509 Woolf Alex 2007 From Pictland to Alba 789 1070 Edinburgh UK Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1233 8 Woolf Alex 2013 Scotland In Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 118 42513 8 Wormald Patrick 1999 The Making of English Law King Alfred to the Twelfth Century Vol 1 Chichester West Sussex Blackwell ISBN 0 631 13496 4 Wormald Patrick 2004 AEthelweard Ethelwerd d 998 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8918 subscription or UK public library membership required Yorke Barbara 2001 Edward as AEtheling In N J Higham D H Hill eds Edward the Elder 899 924 Abingdon Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 21497 1 Yorke Barbara 2004 AEthelwold St AEthelwold Ethelwold 904x9 984 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8920 subscription or UK public library membership required Yorke Barbara 2014 1st edition 1999 Council King s In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo Saxon England Second ed Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell pp 126 27 ISBN 978 0 470 65632 7 Zacher Samantha 2011 Multilingualism at the Court of King AEthelstan Latin Praise Poetry and The Battle of Brunanburh In Tyler Elizabeth M ed Conceptualizing Multilingualism in England c 800 c 1250 Turnhout Belgium Brepols ISBN 978 2 503 52856 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to AEthelstan of England AEthelstan 18 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England Athelstan on In Our Time at the BBC Foot Sarah 11 April 2013 Athelstan The Essay Anglo Saxon Portraits BBC Radio 3 Sillito David 27 August 2009 Viking hoard reveals its story BBC Radio 4 Today Programme On The Vale of York Hoard AEthelstanHouse of WessexBorn c 893 895 Died 27 October 939Regnal titlesPreceded byEdward the Elder King of the Anglo Saxons924 927 Conquest of YorkNew title King of the English927 27 October 939 Succeeded byEdmund I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AEthelstan amp oldid 1135545210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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