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Æthelbald, King of Wessex

Æthelbald (died 860) was King of Wessex from 855 or 858 to 860. He was the second of five sons of King Æthelwulf. In 850, Æthelbald's elder brother Æthelstan defeated the Vikings in the first recorded sea battle in English history, but he is not recorded afterwards and probably died in the early 850s. The next year Æthelwulf and Æthelbald inflicted another defeat on the Vikings at the Battle of Aclea. In 855 Æthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome and appointed Æthelbald King of Wessex, while Æthelberht, the next oldest son, became King of Kent, which had been conquered by Wessex thirty years earlier.

Æthelbald
Æthelbald in the early 14th-century Genealogical Roll of the Kings of England
King of Wessex
Reign855 or 858–860
PredecessorÆthelwulf
SuccessorÆthelberht
Diedc. July 860
Burial
SpouseJudith of Flanders (m. 858)
HouseWessex
FatherÆthelwulf
MotherOsburh?

On his way back from Rome, Æthelwulf stayed for several months with Charles the Bald, King of the Franks, whose twelve-year-old daughter Judith he married. When he returned to England in 856, Æthelbald refused to give up the crown. Most historians believe that Æthelbald continued to be king of Wessex while Æthelberht gave up Kent to his father, but some think that Wessex itself was divided, with Æthelbald ruling the west and his father the east, while Æthelberht kept Kent. When Æthelwulf died in 858, Æthelbald continued as (or became again) king of Wessex and his brother resumed (or carried on) his kingship of Kent.

Æthelbald married his stepmother Judith. Asser, the biographer of his youngest brother, Alfred the Great, denounced the union as being "against God's prohibition and Christian dignity, and also contrary to the practice of all pagans",[1] but the marriage does not seem to have been condemned at the time. Æthelbald and Æthelberht appear to have been on good terms: when Æthelbald died in 860, Æthelberht became king of both Wessex and Kent, and they were never again divided.

Background

When Æthelbald's grandfather Ecgberht became king of Wessex in 802, it would have seemed very unlikely that he would establish a lasting dynasty. For two hundred years, three families had fought for the West Saxon throne, and no son had followed his father as king. Ecgberht's nearest connection to a king of Wessex was as a great-great-grandson of Ingild, brother of King Ine (688–726), but he was believed to be a paternal descendant of Cerdic, the founder of the West Saxon dynasty, which made him an ætheling, a prince who had a legitimate claim to the throne. However, in the ninth and tenth centuries Ecgberht's line controlled the kingdom, and all kings were sons of kings.[2]

At the beginning of the ninth century, England was almost wholly under the control of the Anglo-Saxons, and the Midland kingdom of Mercia dominated southern England. In 825 Ecgberht decisively defeated the Mercians at the Battle of Ellendun, ending Mercian supremacy. The two kingdoms became allies, which was important in the resistance to Viking attacks.[3] In 835 the Isle of Sheppey in Kent was ravaged. In 836 Ecgberht was defeated by the Vikings at Carhampton in Somerset, but in 838 he was victorious over an alliance of Cornishmen and Vikings at the Battle of Hingston Down, reducing Cornwall to the status of a client kingdom.[4] He died in the following year and was succeeded by his son Æthelwulf, who appointed his eldest son Æthelstan as sub-king of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex, in the same year.[5]

Early life

Æthelbald was the second son of King Æthelwulf and probably of his first wife Osburh, who was the mother of Alfred the Great. As Æthelstan was old enough to be appointed king ten years before Alfred was born in 849, and Æthelbald took part in battle in 851, some historians argue that it is more likely that the elder children were born to an unrecorded earlier wife.[6] Æthelstan died before his father, but Æthelbald and his three younger brothers were successively kings of Wessex: Æthelbald reigned from 855 to 860, Æthelberht from 860 to 865, Æthelred I from 865 to 871, and Alfred the Great from 871 to 899. Æthelbald is first recorded when he witnessed a charter of his father (S 290[a]) in 840 as filius regis (the king's son). He attested with the same designation in the 840s, to S 300 in 850 as dux filius regis and in the early 850s as dux (ealdorman).[8] In 850 his elder brother Æthelstan defeated a Danish fleet off Sandwich in the first recorded naval battle in English history,[9] but he is not recorded thereafter, and probably died soon afterwards.[5] In 851 Æthelwulf and Æthelbald defeated the Vikings at the Battle of Aclea and, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, "we have never heard of a greater slaughter of them, in any region, on any one day, before or since".[10] At Easter in 854 Æthelbald and his younger brother Æthelberht attested charters as dux, and in 855 their father went on pilgrimage to Rome and appointed Æthelbald as king of Wessex while Æthelberht became king of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex.[11]

Division of the kingdom

 
The two possible interpretations of Asser's description of the divided Wessex.

Æthelwulf spent a year in Rome. On his way back he stayed for several months with Charles the Bald, King of the West Franks, and married Charles's twelve-year-old daughter Judith, a great-granddaughter of Charlemagne; the bishop of Rheims ceremonially consecrated her and Æthelwulf conferred the title of queen on her. Æthelwulf returned with his new wife in October 856,[12] and according to Alfred the Great's biographer, Bishop Asser, during his absence a plot was hatched to prevent the king's return and keep Æthelbald on the throne. Asser regarded it as "a terrible crime: expelling the king from his own kingdom; but God did not allow it to happen, nor would the nobles of the whole Saxon land have any part in it". Asser stated that a great many men said that the initiative for "this wretched incident, unheard of in all previous ages" came from Æthelbald's chief counsellors, Eahlstan, Bishop of Sherborne and Eanwulf, Ealdorman of Somerset, who had been two of Æthelwulf's most senior advisers, while many blamed Æthelbald himself.[13]

Historians give varying explanations for both the marriage and the rebellion. D. P. Kirby and Pauline Stafford see the match as sealing an anti-Viking alliance. Another factor was Judith's descent from Charlemagne: union with her gave Æthelwulf a share in Carolingian prestige.[14] Kirby describes her anointing as "a charismatic sanctification which enhanced her status, blessed her womb and conferred additional throne-worthiness on her male offspring."[15] These marks of a special status implied that a son of hers would succeed to at least part of Æthelwulf's kingdom, and explain Æthelbald's decision to rebel. He may also have feared that he would be disadvantaged if his father returned to rule Wessex while his brother kept Kent.[16] Michael Enright argues that an alliance against the Vikings between such distant territories would have served no useful purpose. He sees the marriage as following Æthelbald's rebellion and being a response to it, intending that a son of Judith would displace Æthelbald as successor to the throne.[17] Janet Nelson goes further, seeing Æthelwulf's pilgrimage as intended from the start to enhance his prestige to assist him in facing down filial resentments.[18] Kirby and Sean Miller argue that it is unlikely that Charles would have agreed to his daughter being taken to a country in a state of civil war, so Æthelbald's revolt was probably a response to the marriage, which threatened to produce sons who had a stronger claim to the throne than he had.[19] Richard Abels argues that Æthelbald probably hoped that his rule would be permanent: "All knew the dangers that attended a pilgrimage to Rome and were aware of the possibility that Æthelwulf would not return. His departure to Rome all but invited the prowling of hungry æthelings."[20] Charles may have agreed to the marriage because he was under attack both from Vikings and from a rising among his own nobility, and Æthelwulf had great prestige due to his victories over the Vikings.[21] The marriage added the West Saxon king to the network of royal and princely allies that Charles was creating.[22]

Rivalry between east and west Wessex may have also been a factor in the dispute. The ancient Selwood Forest marked the boundary between the bishoprics of Sherborne in the west and Winchester in the east. In the eighth century, the connections of Ecgberht's family were with the west, but in the early ninth century, the family became close to the clergy of Winchester, who helped them to establish an exclusive hold on the throne for their royal branch. According to Asser, the plot to rob Æthelwulf of his throne was concocted in "the western part of Selwood", and Æthelbald's chief supporters, Eahlstan and Eanwulf, were western magnates who probably resented the favour shown by Æthelwulf to the eastern Winchester diocese, and to Swithun, who was appointed by Æthelwulf as Bishop of Winchester in 852. Æthelbald's patronage was mainly directed at Sherborne.[23]

 
Memorial to Ethelbald and Ethelbert in Sherborne Abbey

Asser is the sole source for the dispute between Æthelwulf and Æthelbald, which is not mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and according to Asser when Æthelwulf returned to England he agreed to divide the kingdom to avoid a civil war. Most historians state that Æthelbald kept Wessex while Æthelberht agreed to surrender the south-eastern kingdoms of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex to Æthelwulf, although Simon Keynes thinks that Æthelwulf kept a degree of sovereignty.[24] Some historians argue that it is more likely that Wessex itself was divided, with Æthelbald keeping his power base west of Selwood, Æthelwulf taking the east and Æthelberht keeping Kent. Pauline Stafford and D. P. Kirby point out that Asser implies that Judith became queen of the West Saxons in 856.[25] Sean Miller observes that Asser complained that the "son ruled where by rightful judgment the father should have done; for the western part of the Saxon land has always been more important than the eastern", and since Kent had been conquered only thirty years previously, it did not make sense to speak of it as having always been a less important part of the kingdom.[26]

Kingship

According to Asser, at the end of his life, Æthelwulf directed that his kingdom should be divided between his two eldest sons, and this was carried out when he died on 13 January 858. Æthelbald then continued (or resumed) as king of Wessex, while Æthelberht resumed (or kept) the kingship of Kent and the south-east. Æthelwulf left a bequest to Æthelbald, Æthelred and Alfred, with the provision that whoever lived the longest was to inherit the whole; this is seen by some historians as leaving the kingship of Wessex to the survivor, but other historians dispute this and it may have been intended to provide for the younger sons.[27] Judith's charisma as a Carolingian princess was so great that rather than lose the prestige of the connection Æthelbald then married her.[5] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ignores the marriage, perhaps because mentioning such a prestigious connection of Alfred's older brother would have detracted from its focus on the achievements of Alfred himself.[28] Æthelbald's marriage to his widowed stepmother was subsequently condemned by Asser as "against God's prohibition and Christian dignity, and also contrary to the practice of all pagans",[1] although it does not appear to have aroused opposition at the time. The Frankish Annals of St Bertin reported the marriage without comment, and stated that when she returned to her father after Æthelbald's death, Judith was treated "with all the honour due to a queen".[29] To her father's fury, soon afterwards she eloped with Baldwin, Count of Flanders, and their son Baldwin II married Alfred's daughter Ælfthryth.[5]

Little is known of Æthelbald's reign and only two of his charters survive. S 1274, dated 858,[b] is a grant by Swithun of an episcopal estate at Farnham to the king for his lifetime, and in Barbara Yorke's view it is an example of Æthelbald's confiscations of the bishop of Winchester's estates for his own use.[31] S 326, dated 860, is a grant by Æthelbald of fourteen hides at Teffont in Wiltshire to a thegn called Osmund.[32] Both are attested by Judith, an indication of her high status, as ninth-century West Saxon kings' wives were not normally given the rank of queen and almost never witnessed charters. The marriage and attestations are evidence that Æthelbald intended the succession to pass to his own son, not his brothers.[33][c] S 326 is also attested by King Æthelberht, suggesting that he was on good terms with his brother.[35] S 1274 is the earliest surviving West Saxon charter to require a contribution to fortification work, and Nelson suggests that Judith's entourage may have been responsible for the innovation. A few years later Charles the Bald began a programme of rebuilding town walls and building new fortresses in West Francia.[36]

 
Fake coins of Æthelwulf and Æthelbald

No coins are known to have been issued in the name of Æthelbald. The main mints in southern England were both in Kent, at Canterbury and Rochester. They minted coins in the name of Æthelwulf until 858 and then in the name of Æthelberht. There was one mint in Wessex, probably at Southampton or Winchester, but it operated at a minimal level in the mid-ninth century and only three coins from it between 839 and 871 are known, two of Æthelwulf and one of Æthelred I, all produced by the same moneyer. The fact that the Kentish mints produced coins only for Æthelberht between 858 and 860 is evidence that Æthelbald was not his brother's overlord.[37] Three coins of Æthelbald were regarded as genuine in the late nineteenth century, but in the 1900s they were found to be forgeries.[38]

Death

Æthelbald died in 860 and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gives him a reign of five years, dating the start to 855 when Æthelwulf left for Rome. Both Asser and the Annals of St Neots give Æthelbald a rule of two and a half years, and the Annals adds that he also ruled for two and a half years jointly with his father.[39] Most modern historians date his reign as 855 to 860,[40] but some as 858 to 860.[41] Only the year of his death is known, but as his father died in January 858 and he ruled for two and a half years thereafter, he probably died in about July 860. He was buried at Sherborne in Dorset and he is not known to have had any children.[42]

He was succeeded by Æthelberht, who re-united Wessex and Kent under his rule. It is not clear whether the division between Wessex and Kent had been intended to be permanent, but if so Æthelbald's early death allowed Æthelberht to reverse the division and Kent and the south-east were thereafter treated as an integral part of Wessex.[43]

Reputation

In the 890s, Bishop Asser gave the only surviving contemporary assessment of Æthelbald. Asser, who was hostile to him both because of his revolt against his father and because of his uncanonical marriage, described him as "iniquitous and grasping" and his reign as "two and a half lawless years", adding that many people attributed the rebellion "solely to arrogance on the part of King Æthelbald, because he was grasping in this affair and many other wrongdoings".[44] Post-Conquest clerical chroniclers adopted Asser's views. William of Malmesbury wrote that "Æthelbald, who was worthless and disloyal to his father, defiled his father's marriage-bed, for after his father's death he sank so low as to marry his stepmother Judith."[45] According to John of Worcester, "Æthelbald, in defiance of God's prohibition and Christian dignity, and even against all pagan customs, climbed into his father's marriage-bed, married Judith, daughter of Charles, king of the Franks, and held the government of the kingdom of the West Saxons without restraint for two and half years after his father's death".[46] Roger of Wendover condemned Æthelbald in similar terms, but claimed that in 859 he repented of his error, put aside Judith and ruled thereafter "in peace and righteousness".[47] The exception was Henry of Huntingdon, who stated that Æthelbald and Æthelberht, "young men of superlative natural quality, possessed their kingdoms very prosperously as long as they each lived. When Æthelbald, King of Wessex, had held his kingdom peacefully for five years, he was carried off by a premature death. All England lamented King Æthelbald's youth and there was great sorrow over him. And they buried him at Sherborne. After this England was conscious of what it had lost in him."[48]

Robert Howard Hodgkin also adopted Asser's views in his 1935 History of the Anglo-Saxons,[49] but later historians have been more circumspect. Frank Stenton in Anglo-Saxon England does not give any opinion on Æthelbald, and observes that his marriage to Judith does not appear to have aroused any scandal among the churchmen of her country,[50] while Sean Miller in his Dictionary of National Biography article on Æthelbald says that very little is known of his reign after his marriage, but he appears to have been on good terms with Æthelberht.[35]

Notes

  1. ^ S refers to the Sawyer catalogue of Anglo-Saxon charters.[7]
  2. ^ The authenticity of charter S 1274 is disputed. Janet Nelson describes it as "untrustworthy" and David Dumville as "suspicious", but its genuineness is defended in detail by Simon Keynes.[30]
  3. ^ In S 326 Judith is styled filius regis (king's son) due to a copyist's error.[34]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 73.
  2. ^ Abels 2002, p. 85; Dumville 1979, p. 17; Stafford 2001, p. 83.
  3. ^ Keynes 1995, pp. 28, 39–41.
  4. ^ Stenton 1971, pp. 235, 241; Charles-Edwards 2013, p. 431; Edwards 2004.
  5. ^ a b c d Nelson 2004.
  6. ^ Miller 2004; Smyth 1995, p. 11.
  7. ^ "The Electronic Sawyer: Online Catalogue of Anglo-Saxon Charters". British Academy-Royal Historical Society Joint Committee on Anglo-Saxon Charters. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  8. ^ Miller 2004; Keynes 1998, pp. 1 and 2, Table XXI; Stafford 2003, pp. 255–256.
  9. ^ Stenton 1971, p. 244.
  10. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 68.
  11. ^ Miller 2004; Abels 1998, pp. 70–71.
  12. ^ Abels 1998, pp. 75, 85; Nelson 2004.
  13. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 70.
  14. ^ Kirby 2000, pp. 165–167; Stafford 1981, p. 139.
  15. ^ Kirby 2000, p. 165.
  16. ^ Kirby 2000, pp. 165–167.
  17. ^ Enright 1979, pp. 291–301.
  18. ^ Nelson 2013, pp. 239–240.
  19. ^ Kirby 2000, p. 166; Miller 2004.
  20. ^ Abels 1998, p. 70.
  21. ^ Stafford 1981, pp. 139–140.
  22. ^ Nelson 1997, p. 143.
  23. ^ Yorke 1984, p. 64; Yorke 1995, pp. 23–24, 85, 99; Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 70.
  24. ^ Stenton 1971, p. 245; Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 15; Williams 1991; Dumville 1996, p. 23.
  25. ^ Stafford 1981, p. 143; Kirby 2000, pp. 166–167.
  26. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 70; Miller 2004.
  27. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 314; Nelson 2004; Smyth 1995, pp. 416–417; Miller 2001, pp. 10–11.
  28. ^ Smyth 1995, pp. 106–107.
  29. ^ Nelson 1991b, pp. 86, 97.
  30. ^ Nelson 1991a, p. 58, n. 62; Dumville 1992, p. 43; Keynes 1994, pp. 1123–1126.
  31. ^ Yorke 1984, p. 64.
  32. ^ Keynes 1994, p. 1123.
  33. ^ Stafford 2003, pp. 257–258.
  34. ^ Keynes 1994, p. 1129.
  35. ^ a b Miller 2004.
  36. ^ Brooks 1971, p. 81; Nelson 2003, p. 297.
  37. ^ Naismith 2011, pp. 43–46; Naismith 2012, pp. 110, 125–126.
  38. ^ Grierson and Blackburn 1986, p. 337; Lawrence 1893, pp. 40–45; Lawrence 1905, pp. 407–409; Naismith 2011, p. 34.
  39. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 73; Smyth 1995, p. 192.
  40. ^ Williams 1991; Dumville 1996, p. 23; Smyth 1995, p. 10; Abels 1998, p. 347; Yorke 1995, p. 114.
  41. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 62; Nelson 2004.
  42. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, p. 73; Smyth 1995, p. 192; Stenton 1971, p. 245.
  43. ^ Williams 1999, p. 72.
  44. ^ Keynes and Lapidge 1983, pp. 70, 73.
  45. ^ Mynors, Thomson and Winterbottom 1998, p. 177.
  46. ^ Darlington, McGurk and Bray 1995, p. 275.
  47. ^ Giles 1849, p. 187.
  48. ^ Greenway 1996, p. 281.
  49. ^ Hodgkin 1935, p. 516.
  50. ^ Stenton 1971, p. 245.

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  • Williams, Ann (1999). Kingship and Government in Pre-Conquest England, c. 500–1066. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan Press. ISBN 978-0-333-56798-2.
  • Yorke, Barbara (1984). "The Bishops of Winchester, the Kings of Wessex and the Development of Winchester in the Ninth and Early Tenth Centuries". Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society. 40: 61–70. ISSN 0142-8950.
  • Yorke, Barbara (1995). Wessex in the Early Middle Ages. London: Leicester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7185-1856-1.

External links

Preceded by King of Wessex
855–860
Succeeded by

Æthelbald, king, wessex, Æthelbald, died, king, wessex, from, second, five, sons, king, Æthelwulf, Æthelbald, elder, brother, Æthelstan, defeated, vikings, first, recorded, battle, english, history, recorded, afterwards, probably, died, early, 850s, next, year. AEthelbald died 860 was King of Wessex from 855 or 858 to 860 He was the second of five sons of King AEthelwulf In 850 AEthelbald s elder brother AEthelstan defeated the Vikings in the first recorded sea battle in English history but he is not recorded afterwards and probably died in the early 850s The next year AEthelwulf and AEthelbald inflicted another defeat on the Vikings at the Battle of Aclea In 855 AEthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome and appointed AEthelbald King of Wessex while AEthelberht the next oldest son became King of Kent which had been conquered by Wessex thirty years earlier AEthelbaldAEthelbald in the early 14th century Genealogical Roll of the Kings of EnglandKing of WessexReign855 or 858 860PredecessorAEthelwulfSuccessorAEthelberhtDiedc July 860BurialSherborne DorsetSpouseJudith of Flanders m 858 HouseWessexFatherAEthelwulfMotherOsburh On his way back from Rome AEthelwulf stayed for several months with Charles the Bald King of the Franks whose twelve year old daughter Judith he married When he returned to England in 856 AEthelbald refused to give up the crown Most historians believe that AEthelbald continued to be king of Wessex while AEthelberht gave up Kent to his father but some think that Wessex itself was divided with AEthelbald ruling the west and his father the east while AEthelberht kept Kent When AEthelwulf died in 858 AEthelbald continued as or became again king of Wessex and his brother resumed or carried on his kingship of Kent AEthelbald married his stepmother Judith Asser the biographer of his youngest brother Alfred the Great denounced the union as being against God s prohibition and Christian dignity and also contrary to the practice of all pagans 1 but the marriage does not seem to have been condemned at the time AEthelbald and AEthelberht appear to have been on good terms when AEthelbald died in 860 AEthelberht became king of both Wessex and Kent and they were never again divided Contents 1 Background 2 Early life 3 Division of the kingdom 4 Kingship 4 1 Death 5 Reputation 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 Sources 9 External linksBackground EditWhen AEthelbald s grandfather Ecgberht became king of Wessex in 802 it would have seemed very unlikely that he would establish a lasting dynasty For two hundred years three families had fought for the West Saxon throne and no son had followed his father as king Ecgberht s nearest connection to a king of Wessex was as a great great grandson of Ingild brother of King Ine 688 726 but he was believed to be a paternal descendant of Cerdic the founder of the West Saxon dynasty which made him an aetheling a prince who had a legitimate claim to the throne However in the ninth and tenth centuries Ecgberht s line controlled the kingdom and all kings were sons of kings 2 At the beginning of the ninth century England was almost wholly under the control of the Anglo Saxons and the Midland kingdom of Mercia dominated southern England In 825 Ecgberht decisively defeated the Mercians at the Battle of Ellendun ending Mercian supremacy The two kingdoms became allies which was important in the resistance to Viking attacks 3 In 835 the Isle of Sheppey in Kent was ravaged In 836 Ecgberht was defeated by the Vikings at Carhampton in Somerset but in 838 he was victorious over an alliance of Cornishmen and Vikings at the Battle of Hingston Down reducing Cornwall to the status of a client kingdom 4 He died in the following year and was succeeded by his son AEthelwulf who appointed his eldest son AEthelstan as sub king of Kent Essex Surrey and Sussex in the same year 5 Early life EditAEthelbald was the second son of King AEthelwulf and probably of his first wife Osburh who was the mother of Alfred the Great As AEthelstan was old enough to be appointed king ten years before Alfred was born in 849 and AEthelbald took part in battle in 851 some historians argue that it is more likely that the elder children were born to an unrecorded earlier wife 6 AEthelstan died before his father but AEthelbald and his three younger brothers were successively kings of Wessex AEthelbald reigned from 855 to 860 AEthelberht from 860 to 865 AEthelred I from 865 to 871 and Alfred the Great from 871 to 899 AEthelbald is first recorded when he witnessed a charter of his father S 290 a in 840 as filius regis the king s son He attested with the same designation in the 840s to S 300 in 850 as dux filius regis and in the early 850s as dux ealdorman 8 In 850 his elder brother AEthelstan defeated a Danish fleet off Sandwich in the first recorded naval battle in English history 9 but he is not recorded thereafter and probably died soon afterwards 5 In 851 AEthelwulf and AEthelbald defeated the Vikings at the Battle of Aclea and according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle we have never heard of a greater slaughter of them in any region on any one day before or since 10 At Easter in 854 AEthelbald and his younger brother AEthelberht attested charters as dux and in 855 their father went on pilgrimage to Rome and appointed AEthelbald as king of Wessex while AEthelberht became king of Kent Essex Surrey and Sussex 11 Division of the kingdom Edit The two possible interpretations of Asser s description of the divided Wessex AEthelwulf spent a year in Rome On his way back he stayed for several months with Charles the Bald King of the West Franks and married Charles s twelve year old daughter Judith a great granddaughter of Charlemagne the bishop of Rheims ceremonially consecrated her and AEthelwulf conferred the title of queen on her AEthelwulf returned with his new wife in October 856 12 and according to Alfred the Great s biographer Bishop Asser during his absence a plot was hatched to prevent the king s return and keep AEthelbald on the throne Asser regarded it as a terrible crime expelling the king from his own kingdom but God did not allow it to happen nor would the nobles of the whole Saxon land have any part in it Asser stated that a great many men said that the initiative for this wretched incident unheard of in all previous ages came from AEthelbald s chief counsellors Eahlstan Bishop of Sherborne and Eanwulf Ealdorman of Somerset who had been two of AEthelwulf s most senior advisers while many blamed AEthelbald himself 13 Historians give varying explanations for both the marriage and the rebellion D P Kirby and Pauline Stafford see the match as sealing an anti Viking alliance Another factor was Judith s descent from Charlemagne union with her gave AEthelwulf a share in Carolingian prestige 14 Kirby describes her anointing as a charismatic sanctification which enhanced her status blessed her womb and conferred additional throne worthiness on her male offspring 15 These marks of a special status implied that a son of hers would succeed to at least part of AEthelwulf s kingdom and explain AEthelbald s decision to rebel He may also have feared that he would be disadvantaged if his father returned to rule Wessex while his brother kept Kent 16 Michael Enright argues that an alliance against the Vikings between such distant territories would have served no useful purpose He sees the marriage as following AEthelbald s rebellion and being a response to it intending that a son of Judith would displace AEthelbald as successor to the throne 17 Janet Nelson goes further seeing AEthelwulf s pilgrimage as intended from the start to enhance his prestige to assist him in facing down filial resentments 18 Kirby and Sean Miller argue that it is unlikely that Charles would have agreed to his daughter being taken to a country in a state of civil war so AEthelbald s revolt was probably a response to the marriage which threatened to produce sons who had a stronger claim to the throne than he had 19 Richard Abels argues that AEthelbald probably hoped that his rule would be permanent All knew the dangers that attended a pilgrimage to Rome and were aware of the possibility that AEthelwulf would not return His departure to Rome all but invited the prowling of hungry aethelings 20 Charles may have agreed to the marriage because he was under attack both from Vikings and from a rising among his own nobility and AEthelwulf had great prestige due to his victories over the Vikings 21 The marriage added the West Saxon king to the network of royal and princely allies that Charles was creating 22 Rivalry between east and west Wessex may have also been a factor in the dispute The ancient Selwood Forest marked the boundary between the bishoprics of Sherborne in the west and Winchester in the east In the eighth century the connections of Ecgberht s family were with the west but in the early ninth century the family became close to the clergy of Winchester who helped them to establish an exclusive hold on the throne for their royal branch According to Asser the plot to rob AEthelwulf of his throne was concocted in the western part of Selwood and AEthelbald s chief supporters Eahlstan and Eanwulf were western magnates who probably resented the favour shown by AEthelwulf to the eastern Winchester diocese and to Swithun who was appointed by AEthelwulf as Bishop of Winchester in 852 AEthelbald s patronage was mainly directed at Sherborne 23 Memorial to Ethelbald and Ethelbert in Sherborne Abbey Asser is the sole source for the dispute between AEthelwulf and AEthelbald which is not mentioned in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle and according to Asser when AEthelwulf returned to England he agreed to divide the kingdom to avoid a civil war Most historians state that AEthelbald kept Wessex while AEthelberht agreed to surrender the south eastern kingdoms of Kent Essex Surrey and Sussex to AEthelwulf although Simon Keynes thinks that AEthelwulf kept a degree of sovereignty 24 Some historians argue that it is more likely that Wessex itself was divided with AEthelbald keeping his power base west of Selwood AEthelwulf taking the east and AEthelberht keeping Kent Pauline Stafford and D P Kirby point out that Asser implies that Judith became queen of the West Saxons in 856 25 Sean Miller observes that Asser complained that the son ruled where by rightful judgment the father should have done for the western part of the Saxon land has always been more important than the eastern and since Kent had been conquered only thirty years previously it did not make sense to speak of it as having always been a less important part of the kingdom 26 Kingship EditAccording to Asser at the end of his life AEthelwulf directed that his kingdom should be divided between his two eldest sons and this was carried out when he died on 13 January 858 AEthelbald then continued or resumed as king of Wessex while AEthelberht resumed or kept the kingship of Kent and the south east AEthelwulf left a bequest to AEthelbald AEthelred and Alfred with the provision that whoever lived the longest was to inherit the whole this is seen by some historians as leaving the kingship of Wessex to the survivor but other historians dispute this and it may have been intended to provide for the younger sons 27 Judith s charisma as a Carolingian princess was so great that rather than lose the prestige of the connection AEthelbald then married her 5 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle ignores the marriage perhaps because mentioning such a prestigious connection of Alfred s older brother would have detracted from its focus on the achievements of Alfred himself 28 AEthelbald s marriage to his widowed stepmother was subsequently condemned by Asser as against God s prohibition and Christian dignity and also contrary to the practice of all pagans 1 although it does not appear to have aroused opposition at the time The Frankish Annals of St Bertin reported the marriage without comment and stated that when she returned to her father after AEthelbald s death Judith was treated with all the honour due to a queen 29 To her father s fury soon afterwards she eloped with Baldwin Count of Flanders and their son Baldwin II married Alfred s daughter AElfthryth 5 Little is known of AEthelbald s reign and only two of his charters survive S 1274 dated 858 b is a grant by Swithun of an episcopal estate at Farnham to the king for his lifetime and in Barbara Yorke s view it is an example of AEthelbald s confiscations of the bishop of Winchester s estates for his own use 31 S 326 dated 860 is a grant by AEthelbald of fourteen hides at Teffont in Wiltshire to a thegn called Osmund 32 Both are attested by Judith an indication of her high status as ninth century West Saxon kings wives were not normally given the rank of queen and almost never witnessed charters The marriage and attestations are evidence that AEthelbald intended the succession to pass to his own son not his brothers 33 c S 326 is also attested by King AEthelberht suggesting that he was on good terms with his brother 35 S 1274 is the earliest surviving West Saxon charter to require a contribution to fortification work and Nelson suggests that Judith s entourage may have been responsible for the innovation A few years later Charles the Bald began a programme of rebuilding town walls and building new fortresses in West Francia 36 Fake coins of AEthelwulf and AEthelbald No coins are known to have been issued in the name of AEthelbald The main mints in southern England were both in Kent at Canterbury and Rochester They minted coins in the name of AEthelwulf until 858 and then in the name of AEthelberht There was one mint in Wessex probably at Southampton or Winchester but it operated at a minimal level in the mid ninth century and only three coins from it between 839 and 871 are known two of AEthelwulf and one of AEthelred I all produced by the same moneyer The fact that the Kentish mints produced coins only for AEthelberht between 858 and 860 is evidence that AEthelbald was not his brother s overlord 37 Three coins of AEthelbald were regarded as genuine in the late nineteenth century but in the 1900s they were found to be forgeries 38 Death Edit AEthelbald died in 860 and the Anglo Saxon Chronicle gives him a reign of five years dating the start to 855 when AEthelwulf left for Rome Both Asser and the Annals of St Neots give AEthelbald a rule of two and a half years and the Annals adds that he also ruled for two and a half years jointly with his father 39 Most modern historians date his reign as 855 to 860 40 but some as 858 to 860 41 Only the year of his death is known but as his father died in January 858 and he ruled for two and a half years thereafter he probably died in about July 860 He was buried at Sherborne in Dorset and he is not known to have had any children 42 He was succeeded by AEthelberht who re united Wessex and Kent under his rule It is not clear whether the division between Wessex and Kent had been intended to be permanent but if so AEthelbald s early death allowed AEthelberht to reverse the division and Kent and the south east were thereafter treated as an integral part of Wessex 43 Reputation EditIn the 890s Bishop Asser gave the only surviving contemporary assessment of AEthelbald Asser who was hostile to him both because of his revolt against his father and because of his uncanonical marriage described him as iniquitous and grasping and his reign as two and a half lawless years adding that many people attributed the rebellion solely to arrogance on the part of King AEthelbald because he was grasping in this affair and many other wrongdoings 44 Post Conquest clerical chroniclers adopted Asser s views William of Malmesbury wrote that AEthelbald who was worthless and disloyal to his father defiled his father s marriage bed for after his father s death he sank so low as to marry his stepmother Judith 45 According to John of Worcester AEthelbald in defiance of God s prohibition and Christian dignity and even against all pagan customs climbed into his father s marriage bed married Judith daughter of Charles king of the Franks and held the government of the kingdom of the West Saxons without restraint for two and half years after his father s death 46 Roger of Wendover condemned AEthelbald in similar terms but claimed that in 859 he repented of his error put aside Judith and ruled thereafter in peace and righteousness 47 The exception was Henry of Huntingdon who stated that AEthelbald and AEthelberht young men of superlative natural quality possessed their kingdoms very prosperously as long as they each lived When AEthelbald King of Wessex had held his kingdom peacefully for five years he was carried off by a premature death All England lamented King AEthelbald s youth and there was great sorrow over him And they buried him at Sherborne After this England was conscious of what it had lost in him 48 Robert Howard Hodgkin also adopted Asser s views in his 1935 History of the Anglo Saxons 49 but later historians have been more circumspect Frank Stenton in Anglo Saxon England does not give any opinion on AEthelbald and observes that his marriage to Judith does not appear to have aroused any scandal among the churchmen of her country 50 while Sean Miller in his Dictionary of National Biography article on AEthelbald says that very little is known of his reign after his marriage but he appears to have been on good terms with AEthelberht 35 Notes Edit S refers to the Sawyer catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters 7 The authenticity of charter S 1274 is disputed Janet Nelson describes it as untrustworthy and David Dumville as suspicious but its genuineness is defended in detail by Simon Keynes 30 In S 326 Judith is styled filius regis king s son due to a copyist s error 34 Citations Edit a b Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 73 Abels 2002 p 85 Dumville 1979 p 17 Stafford 2001 p 83 Keynes 1995 pp 28 39 41 Stenton 1971 pp 235 241 Charles Edwards 2013 p 431 Edwards 2004 a b c d Nelson 2004 Miller 2004 Smyth 1995 p 11 The Electronic Sawyer Online Catalogue of Anglo Saxon Charters British Academy Royal Historical Society Joint Committee on Anglo Saxon Charters Retrieved 8 September 2018 Miller 2004 Keynes 1998 pp 1 and 2 Table XXI Stafford 2003 pp 255 256 Stenton 1971 p 244 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 68 Miller 2004 Abels 1998 pp 70 71 Abels 1998 pp 75 85 Nelson 2004 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 70 Kirby 2000 pp 165 167 Stafford 1981 p 139 Kirby 2000 p 165 Kirby 2000 pp 165 167 Enright 1979 pp 291 301 Nelson 2013 pp 239 240 Kirby 2000 p 166 Miller 2004 Abels 1998 p 70 Stafford 1981 pp 139 140 Nelson 1997 p 143 Yorke 1984 p 64 Yorke 1995 pp 23 24 85 99 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 70 Stenton 1971 p 245 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 15 Williams 1991 Dumville 1996 p 23 Stafford 1981 p 143 Kirby 2000 pp 166 167 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 70 Miller 2004 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 314 Nelson 2004 Smyth 1995 pp 416 417 Miller 2001 pp 10 11 Smyth 1995 pp 106 107 Nelson 1991b pp 86 97 Nelson 1991a p 58 n 62 Dumville 1992 p 43 Keynes 1994 pp 1123 1126 Yorke 1984 p 64 Keynes 1994 p 1123 Stafford 2003 pp 257 258 Keynes 1994 p 1129 a b Miller 2004 Brooks 1971 p 81 Nelson 2003 p 297 Naismith 2011 pp 43 46 Naismith 2012 pp 110 125 126 Grierson and Blackburn 1986 p 337 Lawrence 1893 pp 40 45 Lawrence 1905 pp 407 409 Naismith 2011 p 34 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 73 Smyth 1995 p 192 Williams 1991 Dumville 1996 p 23 Smyth 1995 p 10 Abels 1998 p 347 Yorke 1995 p 114 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 62 Nelson 2004 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 p 73 Smyth 1995 p 192 Stenton 1971 p 245 Williams 1999 p 72 Keynes and Lapidge 1983 pp 70 73 Mynors Thomson and Winterbottom 1998 p 177 Darlington McGurk and Bray 1995 p 275 Giles 1849 p 187 Greenway 1996 p 281 Hodgkin 1935 p 516 Stenton 1971 p 245 Sources EditAbels Richard 1998 Alfred the Great War Kingship and Culture in Anglo Saxon England Harlow UK Longman ISBN 978 0 582 04047 2 Abels Richard 2002 Royal Succession and the Growth of Political Stability in Ninth Century Wessex The Haskins Society Journal Studies in Medieval History 12 83 97 ISBN 978 1 84383 008 5 Brooks Nicholas 1971 The Development of Military Obligations in Eighth and Ninth Century England In Clemoes Peter Hughes Kathleen eds England Before the Conquest Studies in Primary Sources Presented to Dorothy Whitelock Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 69 84 ISBN 978 0 521 08191 7 Charles Edwards T M 2013 Wales and the Britons 350 1064 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 821731 2 Darlington R R McGurk P Bray Jennifer eds 1995 The Chronicle of John of Worcester Vol 2 Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822261 3 Dumville David 1979 The AEtheling a Study in Anglo Saxon constitutional history Anglo Saxon England 8 1 33 doi 10 1017 S026367510000301X ISSN 0263 6751 S2CID 159954001 Dumville David 1992 Wessex and England from Alfred to Edgar Six Essays on Political Cultural and Ecclesiastical Revival Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 308 7 Dumville David 1996 The Local Rulers of Anglo Saxon England to 927 In Fryde E B Greenway D E Porter S Roy I eds Handbook of British Chronology 3rd with corrections ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 1 25 ISBN 0 521 56350 X Edwards Heather 2004 Ecgberht Egbert d 839 king of the West Saxons Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8581 Retrieved 5 April 2015 subscription or UK public library membership required Enright Michael J 1979 Charles the Bald and AEthelwulf of Wessex Alliance of 856 and Strategies of Royal Succession Journal of Medieval History 5 1 291 302 doi 10 1016 0304 4181 79 90003 4 ISSN 0304 4181 Giles J A ed 1849 Roger of Wendover s Flowers of History Vol 1 London Henry G Bohn OCLC 633664910 Greenway Diana ed and trans 1996 Henry Archdeacon of Huntingdon Historia Anglorum Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822224 8 Grierson Philip Blackburn Mark 1986 Medieval European Coinage Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 26009 4 Hodgkin R H 1935 A History of the Anglo Saxons Vol 2 Oxford UK Clarendon Press OCLC 459347986 Keynes Simon Lapidge Michael eds 1983 Alfred the Great Asser s Life of King Alfred amp Other Contemporary Sources London Penguin Classics ISBN 978 0 14 044409 4 Keynes Simon November 1994 The West Saxon Charters of King AEthelwulf and his sons English Historical Review 109 434 1109 1149 doi 10 1093 ehr cix 434 1109 ISSN 0013 8266 Keynes Simon 1995 England 700 900 In McKitterick Rosamond ed The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol II Cambridge University Press pp 18 42 ISBN 978 0 521 36292 4 Keynes Simon 1998 An Atlas of Attestations in Anglo Saxon Charters c 670 1066 Cambridge Dept of Anglo Saxon Norse and Celtic University of Cambridge OCLC 41975443 Kirby D P 2000 The Earliest English Kings Revised ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 24211 0 Lawrence L A 1893 Coinage of Aethelbald The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Numismatic Society 3rd 13 40 45 ISSN 2054 9172 Lawrence L A 1905 Forgery in Relation to Numismatics British Numismatic Journal 2 397 409 OCLC 1537348 Miller Sean ed 2001 Charters of the New Minster Winchester Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 726223 8 Miller Sean 2004 AEthelbald d 860 king of the West Saxons Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8901 Retrieved 24 July 2018 subscription or UK public library membership required Mynors R A B Thomson R M Winterbottom M eds 1998 William of Malmesbury Gesta Regum Anglorum The History of the English Kings Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 820678 1 Naismith Rory 2011 The Coinage of Southern England 796 865 Vol 1 London Spink amp Son ISBN 978 1 907427 09 1 Naismith Rory 2012 Money and Power in Anglo Saxon England The Southern English Kingdoms 757 965 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 66969 7 Nelson Janet 1991a Reconstructing a Royal Family Reflections on Alfred from Asser Chapter 2 In Wood Ian Lund Niels eds People and places in Northern Europe 500 1600 Essays in Honour of Peter Hayes Sawyer Woodbridge UK Boydell Press pp 48 66 ISBN 978 0 851 15547 0 Nelson Janet ed and trans 1991b The Annals of St Bertin Manchester UK Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 3426 8 Nelson Janet L 1997 The Franks and the English in the Ninth Century Reconsidered PDF In Szarmach Paul E Rosenthal Joel T eds The Preservation and Transmission of Anglo Saxon Culture Selected Papers from the 1991 Meeting of the International Society of Anglo Saxonists Kalamazoo Michigan Medieval Institute Publications Western Michigan University pp 141 158 ISBN 978 1 879288 90 4 Archived PDF from the original on 3 January 2017 Nelson Janet 2003 Alfred s Carolingian Contemporaries In Reuter Timothy ed Alfred the Great Aldershot UK Ashgate pp 293 310 ISBN 978 0 7546 0957 5 Nelson Janet L 2004 AEthelwulf d 858 king of the West Saxons Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8921 Retrieved 24 July 2018 subscription or UK public library membership required Nelson Janet L 2013 Britain Ireland and Europe c 750 c 900 In Stafford Pauline ed A Companion to the Early Middle Ages Britain and Ireland c 500 c 1100 Chichester UK Wiley Blackwell pp 231 247 ISBN 978 1 4051 0628 3 Smyth Alfred P 1995 King Alfred the Great Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 822989 6 Stafford Pauline 1981 Charles the Bald Judith and England In Gibson Margaret Nelson Janet L eds Charles the Bald Court and Kingdom Oxford UK B A R pp 137 51 ISBN 978 0 86054 115 8 Stafford Pauline 2001 Queen Emma and Queen Edith Oxford UK Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 16679 5 Stafford Pauline 2003 Succession and Inheritance a Gendered Perspective on Alfred s Family History In Reuter Timothy ed Alfred the Great Aldershot UK Ashgate pp 251 264 ISBN 978 1 138 24830 4 Stenton Frank M 1971 Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280139 5 Williams Ann 1991 AEthelbald king of Wessex 855 860 In Williams Ann Smyth Alfred P Kirby D P eds A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain London Seaby p 18 ISBN 1 85264 047 2 Williams Ann 1999 Kingship and Government in Pre Conquest England c 500 1066 Basingstoke UK Macmillan Press ISBN 978 0 333 56798 2 Yorke Barbara 1984 The Bishops of Winchester the Kings of Wessex and the Development of Winchester in the Ninth and Early Tenth Centuries Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society 40 61 70 ISSN 0142 8950 Yorke Barbara 1995 Wessex in the Early Middle Ages London Leicester University Press ISBN 978 0 7185 1856 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to AEthelbald of Wessex AEthelbald 13 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon EnglandPreceded byAEthelwulf King of Wessex855 860 Succeeded byAEthelberht Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AEthelbald King of Wessex amp oldid 1124522101, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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