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Ecgric of East Anglia


Ecgric (killed c.636) was a king of East Anglia, the independent Anglo-Saxon kingdom that today includes the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. He was a member of the ruling Wuffingas dynasty, but his relationship with other known members of the dynasty is not known with any certainty. Anna of East Anglia may have been his brother, or his cousin. It has also been suggested that he was identical with Æthelric, who married the Northumbrian princess Hereswith and was the father of Ealdwulf of East Anglia. The primary source for the little that is known about Ecgric's life is Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, written by the English Benedictine monk Bede in around 731 AD.

Ecgric
King of the East Angles
Reignc.630  – c.636 (jointly with Sigeberht until c.634)
Predecessorpossibly Ricberht
SuccessorAnna
Diedkilled in battle c.630
DynastyWuffingas
ReligionAnglo-Saxon Paganism

In the years that followed the reign of Rædwald and the murder of Rædwald's son and successor Eorpwald in around 627, East Anglia lost its dominance over other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Three years after Eorpwald's murder at the hands of a pagan, Ecgric's kinsman Sigeberht returned from exile and they ruled East Anglia jointly, with Ecgric perhaps ruling the northern part of the kingdom. Sigeberht succeeded in re-establishing Christianity throughout East Anglia, but Ecgric may have remained a pagan, as Bede praises only Sigeberht for his accomplishments, and his lack of praise for his co-ruler is significant. Ecgric ruled alone after Sigeberht retired to his monastery at Beodricesworth in around 634: it has also been suggested that he was a sub-king who only became king after Sigeberht's abdication. Both Ecgric and Sigeberht were killed in battle in around 636, at an unknown location, when the East Anglians were forced to defend themselves from a Mercian military assault led by their king, Penda. Ecgric, whose grave may have been the ship burial under Mound 1 at Sutton Hoo, was succeeded by Anna.

East Anglian allegiances

 
The main Anglo-Saxon kingdoms

After 616, Rædwald, who ruled East Anglia during the first quarter of the seventh century, was the most powerful of the southern Anglo-Saxon kings.[1] In the following decades, from the reign of Sigeberht onwards, East Anglia became increasingly dominated by Mercia. Raedwald's son Eorpwald was murdered by a pagan noble soon after he was baptised in around 627, after which East Anglia reverted into paganism for three years.[2] In the void left by the death of Rædwald, the first overlord who originated north of the Thames, the pagan Penda of Mercia emerged to challenge the pre-eminence of the new overlord (or bretwalda), Edwin of Northumbria.[3] The reversion of East Anglia to rule by Eorpwald's successor, the pagan Ricberht, possibly due to Mercian influence, temporarily overthrew an important pillar of Edwin's authority.[4]

In contrast, two sons of Rædwald's brother Eni, who were both eager to renew their Christian alliances, made diplomatic marriages during this period: Anna, who was to become a devout Christian ruler, married a woman of East Saxon connection and his brother Æthelric married a Northumbrian princess, Hereswitha, who was Edwin of Northumbria's grand-niece. This marriage was probably intended to reinforce the conversion of East Anglia to Christianity.[5]

Wuffingas identity

Ecgric was a member of the Wuffingas royal family, but his exact descent is not known, as the only information historians have is from Bede, who named him as Sigeberht's cognatus or 'kinsman'.[6] The 12th century English historian William of Malmesbury contradicts Bede, stating that Sigeberht was Rædwald's stepson. The name Sigeberht is not of East Anglian, but of Frankish origin. According to Bede, Sigeberht was Rædwald's son.[7] Rædwald may have exiled his step-son so as to protect the inheritance of his son Ecgric, who was of his own blood-line.[8]

It has been suggested by Sam Newton that Ecgric may in fact be identical to Eni's son Æthelric, whose descendants became kings of East Anglia.[9] Æthelric's son Ealdwulf ruled from about 664 to 713. After Ecgric's death, three other sons of Eni ruled in succession before Ealdwulf, an indication that Raedwald's line was extinct. Æthelric's marriage to Hereswith suggests that it was expected that he would rule East Anglia and he may have been promoted by Edwin before 632.[5] Æthelric was apparently dead by 647, at which time Anna was already ruling and Hereswith had gone to Gaul to lead a religious life.[10] It has therefore been argued that Æthelric and Ecgric were in fact the same person, a suggestion that is disputed by the historian Barbara Yorke, who notes that the two names are too distinct to be compatible.[11]

Ecgric/Æthelric placed as the son of Rædwald or the son of Eni

Tytila
?Rædwald?Eni
RægenhereEorpwaldEcgricSigeberhtEcgricAnnaÆthelhereÆthelwold

Joint rule

Rædwald's son (or stepson) Sigeberht renewed Christian rule in East Anglia after returning as a Christian from exile in Gaul (into which Rædwald had driven him). His assumption of power may have involved a military conquest.[5] His reign was devoted to the conversion of his people, the establishment of the see of Dommoc as the bishopric of Felix of Burgundy, the creation of a school of letters, the endowment of a monastery for Fursey and the building of the first monastery of Beodricesworth (Bury St Edmunds), all accomplished within about four years.[12]

During at least part of Sigeberht's reign, Ecgric ruled jointly with him over part of the kingdom of East Anglia.[13] A passage in Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum describing the reasons for Sigeberht's abdication also mentions Ecgric:

"This king became so great a lover of the heavenly kingdom, that quitting the affairs of his crown, and committing the same to his kinsman, Ecgric, who before held a part of that kingdom, he went himself into a monastery, which he had built, and having received the tonsure, applied himself rather to gain a heavenly throne":
—Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People[14]

According to Richard Hoggett, the practice of being ruled by more than one individual may have been a common occurrence in East Anglia as it was for the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Kent and Northumbria. Ecgric and Sigeberht may have simultaneously ruled the peoples known as the North-folk and South-folk, who lived in the parts of their kingdom that would later become the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.[15] However, Carver notes that Ecgric may not have reigned jointly with Sigeberht, but could just have plausibly ruled as a sub-king or served as an administrator within a region under East Anglian hegemony, only rising as king of the East Angles after Sigeberht's abdication.[16] In contrast with Sigebert, Ecgric seems to have remained a pagan. There is no evidence that he was baptised or that he promoted Christianity in East Anglia, according to D. P. Kirby, who notes that Bede wrote nothing that could imply that Ecgric was a Christian, in contrast to his praise of Sigeberht's efforts to establish Christianity in East Anglia.[17]

Reign following Sigeberht's abdication

In 633 the Christian kingdoms suffered a dual shock: Edwin of Northumbria's death at the hands of Penda of Mercia and Cadwallon ap Cadfan, and the retreat of Edwin's household and bishop from York to Kent.[18] After 633 the Northumbrian situation was stabilised under Oswald of Northumbria, and East Anglia shared with Northumbria the benefits of the Irish missions of Fursey and Aidan of Lindisfarne. Sigeberht was Fursey's patron and perhaps soon after his arrival Sigeberht abdicated and retired to the monastery at Beodricesworth (modern Bury St. Edmunds). His abdication, which cannot be dated, left Ecgric to rule the East Anglians alone.[19] Ecgric therefore ruled a kingdom that had been "evangelised in the united spirit of the Roman and Irish Churches", according to Plunkett, who notes that Felix would have respected the teachings of the Irish missionaries, despite his own strong allegiance towards Canterbury.[20]

Death

After Ecgric had been ruling alone for two years, East Anglia was attacked by a Mercian army, led by Penda. The date of the invasion is usually given as around 636, although Kirby suggests it could have been so late as 641.[21] Ecgric was sufficiently forewarned as to be able to gather an army, described by Bede as opimus or splendid.[22] Realising that they would be inferior in battle to the war-hardened Mercians and remembering that Sigeberht was once their most vigorous and distinguished leader, the East Anglians urged him to lead them in battle, hoping that his presence would encourage them not to flee from the Mercians. After he refused, on account of his religious calling, he was borne off against his will to the battlefield. He refused to bear weapons and so was killed.[15] Ecgric was also slain during the battle and many of his countrymen either perished or were put to flight. The location of the site of the battle in which the East Anglians were routed and their king was killed is unknown, but it can be presumed to have been close to the kingdom's western border with the Middle Angles.[15]

Ecgric is a possible contender, as well as Rædwald, Eorpwald and Sigeberht, for being the East Anglian king who was buried within Mound 1 at Sutton Hoo.[23] Rupert Bruce-Mitford suggests that it is perhaps unlikely that Ecgric's successor Anna, a devout Christian, would have given him a ship burial, but he does not dismiss the theory entirely.[24]

References

  1. ^ Hoggett 2010, pp. 28–29.
  2. ^ Yorke 1990, p. 62.
  3. ^ Kirby 2000, p. 55.
  4. ^ Plunkett 2005, pp. 97–99.
  5. ^ a b c Plunkett 2005, p. 100.
  6. ^ Yorke 1990, p. 69.
  7. ^ Yorke 1990, pp. 62, 65, 67.
  8. ^ Plunkett 2005, p. 72.
  9. ^ Hoggett 2010, p. 25.
  10. ^ Hunter Blair 1985, p. 6.
  11. ^ Yorke 1990, p. 68.
  12. ^ Plunkett 2005, pp. 1, 100, 106.
  13. ^ Bede 1969, chapter 18.
  14. ^ Bede 1999, pp. 3–18.
  15. ^ a b c Hoggett 2010, p. 32.
  16. ^ Carver 2006, p. 6.
  17. ^ Kirby 2000, p. 67.
  18. ^ Lapidge 2001, p. 164.
  19. ^ Bede 1999, p. 392, note 138.
  20. ^ Plunkett 2005, p. 105.
  21. ^ Kirby 2000, p. 74.
  22. ^ Plunkett 2005, p. 106.
  23. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1975, pp. 63, 99.
  24. ^ Bruce-Mitford 1975, p. 101.

Sources

  • Bede (1969). B. Colgrave; R.A.B. Mynors (eds.). Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum. Oxford.
  • Bede (1999). McClure, Judith; Collins, Roger (eds.). The Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-283866-0.
  • Bruce-Mitford, R.L.S. (1975). The Sutton Hoo Ship-Burial, Vol. 1. London: British Museum.
  • Carver, M. O. H. (2006). The age of Sutton Hoo: the seventh century in north-western Europe. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 0-85115-330-5.
  • Hoggett, Richard (2010). The Archaeology of the East Anglian Conversion. Woodbridge, UK: The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-595-0.
  • Hunter Blair, Peter (1985). "Whitby as a centre of learning in the seventh century". In Michael Lapidge and Helmut Gneuss (ed.). Learning and Literature in Anglo-Saxon England: Studies Presented to Peter Clemoes on the Occasion of his Sixty-Fifth Birthday. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-25902-9.
  • Kirby, D. P. (2000). The Earliest English Kings. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 67, 74. ISBN 0-415-24211-8.
  • Lapidge, Michael (2001). The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-22492-1.
  • Plunkett, Steven (2005). Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-3139-0.
  • Yorke, Barbara (1990). Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England. London. ISBN 1-85264-027-8.

Further reading

  • Dumville, D.N. (1976), "The Anglian Collection of Royal Genealogies and Regnal Lists", Anglo-Saxon England, University of Cambridge, vol. 5, no. 23–50
  • D.H. Farmer (1978). The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford. ISBN 0-19-282038-9.
  • J. Morris (1980). Nennius: British History and The Welsh Annals. London and Chichester: Phillimore. ISBN 0-85033-298-2.
  • A. Williams; A.P. Smyth; D.P. Kirby (1991). A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain. Seaby. ISBN 1-85264-047-2.

External links

English royalty
Preceded by King of East Anglia

with Sigeberht until c.634
c.630 – c.636

Succeeded by

ecgric, east, anglia, ecgric, killed, king, east, anglia, independent, anglo, saxon, kingdom, that, today, includes, english, counties, norfolk, suffolk, member, ruling, wuffingas, dynasty, relationship, with, other, known, members, dynasty, known, with, certa. Ecgric killed c 636 was a king of East Anglia the independent Anglo Saxon kingdom that today includes the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk He was a member of the ruling Wuffingas dynasty but his relationship with other known members of the dynasty is not known with any certainty Anna of East Anglia may have been his brother or his cousin It has also been suggested that he was identical with AEthelric who married the Northumbrian princess Hereswith and was the father of Ealdwulf of East Anglia The primary source for the little that is known about Ecgric s life is Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum written by the English Benedictine monk Bede in around 731 AD EcgricKing of the East AnglesReignc 630 c 636 jointly with Sigeberht until c 634 Predecessorpossibly RicberhtSuccessorAnnaDiedkilled in battle c 630DynastyWuffingasReligionAnglo Saxon PaganismIn the years that followed the reign of Raedwald and the murder of Raedwald s son and successor Eorpwald in around 627 East Anglia lost its dominance over other Anglo Saxon kingdoms Three years after Eorpwald s murder at the hands of a pagan Ecgric s kinsman Sigeberht returned from exile and they ruled East Anglia jointly with Ecgric perhaps ruling the northern part of the kingdom Sigeberht succeeded in re establishing Christianity throughout East Anglia but Ecgric may have remained a pagan as Bede praises only Sigeberht for his accomplishments and his lack of praise for his co ruler is significant Ecgric ruled alone after Sigeberht retired to his monastery at Beodricesworth in around 634 it has also been suggested that he was a sub king who only became king after Sigeberht s abdication Both Ecgric and Sigeberht were killed in battle in around 636 at an unknown location when the East Anglians were forced to defend themselves from a Mercian military assault led by their king Penda Ecgric whose grave may have been the ship burial under Mound 1 at Sutton Hoo was succeeded by Anna Contents 1 East Anglian allegiances 2 Wuffingas identity 3 Joint rule 4 Reign following Sigeberht s abdication 5 Death 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEast Anglian allegiances Edit The main Anglo Saxon kingdoms After 616 Raedwald who ruled East Anglia during the first quarter of the seventh century was the most powerful of the southern Anglo Saxon kings 1 In the following decades from the reign of Sigeberht onwards East Anglia became increasingly dominated by Mercia Raedwald s son Eorpwald was murdered by a pagan noble soon after he was baptised in around 627 after which East Anglia reverted into paganism for three years 2 In the void left by the death of Raedwald the first overlord who originated north of the Thames the pagan Penda of Mercia emerged to challenge the pre eminence of the new overlord or bretwalda Edwin of Northumbria 3 The reversion of East Anglia to rule by Eorpwald s successor the pagan Ricberht possibly due to Mercian influence temporarily overthrew an important pillar of Edwin s authority 4 In contrast two sons of Raedwald s brother Eni who were both eager to renew their Christian alliances made diplomatic marriages during this period Anna who was to become a devout Christian ruler married a woman of East Saxon connection and his brother AEthelric married a Northumbrian princess Hereswitha who was Edwin of Northumbria s grand niece This marriage was probably intended to reinforce the conversion of East Anglia to Christianity 5 Wuffingas identity EditEcgric was a member of the Wuffingas royal family but his exact descent is not known as the only information historians have is from Bede who named him as Sigeberht s cognatus or kinsman 6 The 12th century English historian William of Malmesbury contradicts Bede stating that Sigeberht was Raedwald s stepson The name Sigeberht is not of East Anglian but of Frankish origin According to Bede Sigeberht was Raedwald s son 7 Raedwald may have exiled his step son so as to protect the inheritance of his son Ecgric who was of his own blood line 8 It has been suggested by Sam Newton that Ecgric may in fact be identical to Eni s son AEthelric whose descendants became kings of East Anglia 9 AEthelric s son Ealdwulf ruled from about 664 to 713 After Ecgric s death three other sons of Eni ruled in succession before Ealdwulf an indication that Raedwald s line was extinct AEthelric s marriage to Hereswith suggests that it was expected that he would rule East Anglia and he may have been promoted by Edwin before 632 5 AEthelric was apparently dead by 647 at which time Anna was already ruling and Hereswith had gone to Gaul to lead a religious life 10 It has therefore been argued that AEthelric and Ecgric were in fact the same person a suggestion that is disputed by the historian Barbara Yorke who notes that the two names are too distinct to be compatible 11 Ecgric AEthelric placed as the son of Raedwald or the son of Eni Tytila Raedwald EniRaegenhereEorpwaldEcgricSigeberhtEcgricAnnaAEthelhereAEthelwoldJoint rule EditRaedwald s son or stepson Sigeberht renewed Christian rule in East Anglia after returning as a Christian from exile in Gaul into which Raedwald had driven him His assumption of power may have involved a military conquest 5 His reign was devoted to the conversion of his people the establishment of the see of Dommoc as the bishopric of Felix of Burgundy the creation of a school of letters the endowment of a monastery for Fursey and the building of the first monastery of Beodricesworth Bury St Edmunds all accomplished within about four years 12 During at least part of Sigeberht s reign Ecgric ruled jointly with him over part of the kingdom of East Anglia 13 A passage in Bede s Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum describing the reasons for Sigeberht s abdication also mentions Ecgric This king became so great a lover of the heavenly kingdom that quitting the affairs of his crown and committing the same to his kinsman Ecgric who before held a part of that kingdom he went himself into a monastery which he had built and having received the tonsure applied himself rather to gain a heavenly throne Bede Ecclesiastical History of the English People 14 According to Richard Hoggett the practice of being ruled by more than one individual may have been a common occurrence in East Anglia as it was for the Anglo Saxon kingdoms of Kent and Northumbria Ecgric and Sigeberht may have simultaneously ruled the peoples known as the North folk and South folk who lived in the parts of their kingdom that would later become the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk 15 However Carver notes that Ecgric may not have reigned jointly with Sigeberht but could just have plausibly ruled as a sub king or served as an administrator within a region under East Anglian hegemony only rising as king of the East Angles after Sigeberht s abdication 16 In contrast with Sigebert Ecgric seems to have remained a pagan There is no evidence that he was baptised or that he promoted Christianity in East Anglia according to D P Kirby who notes that Bede wrote nothing that could imply that Ecgric was a Christian in contrast to his praise of Sigeberht s efforts to establish Christianity in East Anglia 17 Reign following Sigeberht s abdication EditIn 633 the Christian kingdoms suffered a dual shock Edwin of Northumbria s death at the hands of Penda of Mercia and Cadwallon ap Cadfan and the retreat of Edwin s household and bishop from York to Kent 18 After 633 the Northumbrian situation was stabilised under Oswald of Northumbria and East Anglia shared with Northumbria the benefits of the Irish missions of Fursey and Aidan of Lindisfarne Sigeberht was Fursey s patron and perhaps soon after his arrival Sigeberht abdicated and retired to the monastery at Beodricesworth modern Bury St Edmunds His abdication which cannot be dated left Ecgric to rule the East Anglians alone 19 Ecgric therefore ruled a kingdom that had been evangelised in the united spirit of the Roman and Irish Churches according to Plunkett who notes that Felix would have respected the teachings of the Irish missionaries despite his own strong allegiance towards Canterbury 20 Death EditAfter Ecgric had been ruling alone for two years East Anglia was attacked by a Mercian army led by Penda The date of the invasion is usually given as around 636 although Kirby suggests it could have been so late as 641 21 Ecgric was sufficiently forewarned as to be able to gather an army described by Bede as opimus or splendid 22 Realising that they would be inferior in battle to the war hardened Mercians and remembering that Sigeberht was once their most vigorous and distinguished leader the East Anglians urged him to lead them in battle hoping that his presence would encourage them not to flee from the Mercians After he refused on account of his religious calling he was borne off against his will to the battlefield He refused to bear weapons and so was killed 15 Ecgric was also slain during the battle and many of his countrymen either perished or were put to flight The location of the site of the battle in which the East Anglians were routed and their king was killed is unknown but it can be presumed to have been close to the kingdom s western border with the Middle Angles 15 Ecgric is a possible contender as well as Raedwald Eorpwald and Sigeberht for being the East Anglian king who was buried within Mound 1 at Sutton Hoo 23 Rupert Bruce Mitford suggests that it is perhaps unlikely that Ecgric s successor Anna a devout Christian would have given him a ship burial but he does not dismiss the theory entirely 24 References Edit Hoggett 2010 pp 28 29 Yorke 1990 p 62 Kirby 2000 p 55 Plunkett 2005 pp 97 99 a b c Plunkett 2005 p 100 Yorke 1990 p 69 Yorke 1990 pp 62 65 67 Plunkett 2005 p 72 Hoggett 2010 p 25 Hunter Blair 1985 p 6 Yorke 1990 p 68 Plunkett 2005 pp 1 100 106 Bede 1969 chapter 18 Bede 1999 pp 3 18 a b c Hoggett 2010 p 32 Carver 2006 p 6 Kirby 2000 p 67 Lapidge 2001 p 164 Bede 1999 p 392 note 138 Plunkett 2005 p 105 Kirby 2000 p 74 Plunkett 2005 p 106 Bruce Mitford 1975 pp 63 99 Bruce Mitford 1975 p 101 Sources EditBede 1969 B Colgrave R A B Mynors eds Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum Oxford Bede 1999 McClure Judith Collins Roger eds The Ecclesiastical History of the English People Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283866 0 Bruce Mitford R L S 1975 The Sutton Hoo Ship Burial Vol 1 London British Museum Carver M O H 2006 The age of Sutton Hoo the seventh century in north western Europe Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 0 85115 330 5 Hoggett Richard 2010 The Archaeology of the East Anglian Conversion Woodbridge UK The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 595 0 Hunter Blair Peter 1985 Whitby as a centre of learning in the seventh century In Michael Lapidge and Helmut Gneuss ed Learning and Literature in Anglo Saxon England Studies Presented to Peter Clemoes on the Occasion of his Sixty Fifth Birthday New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 25902 9 Kirby D P 2000 The Earliest English Kings London and New York Routledge pp 67 74 ISBN 0 415 24211 8 Lapidge Michael 2001 The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Plunkett Steven 2005 Suffolk in Anglo Saxon Times Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 3139 0 Yorke Barbara 1990 Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo Saxon England London ISBN 1 85264 027 8 Further reading EditDumville D N 1976 The Anglian Collection of Royal Genealogies and Regnal Lists Anglo Saxon England University of Cambridge vol 5 no 23 50 D H Farmer 1978 The Oxford Dictionary of Saints Oxford ISBN 0 19 282038 9 J Morris 1980 Nennius British History and The Welsh Annals London and Chichester Phillimore ISBN 0 85033 298 2 A Williams A P Smyth D P Kirby 1991 A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain Seaby ISBN 1 85264 047 2 External links EditEcgric 1 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon EnglandEnglish royaltyPreceded byRicberht King of East Anglia with Sigeberht until c 634 c 630 c 636 Succeeded byAnna Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ecgric of East Anglia amp oldid 1063869681, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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