H.G.WILLIAMS

THE EARLY HISTORY OF BRITAIN

 

 

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Pre Roman Period

Roman Period    

The Dark Ages

1. Kent

2. East Anglia

3. Northumbria

4. Mercia

5. Wessex

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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SUMMARY BY EPOCH AND RULER  

                             Paleolithic man. 200,000 to 50,000 B.C.
 
                             post Ice Age Neolithic man. 10,000 to 1000 B.C.

                             First Celtic  (Bronze Age)    1000 B.C. to 500 B.C.

                             Second Celtic ( Iron Age)    500 B.C. to 43 A.D.

                              Roman Empire 43 A.D. to 407 A.D.


                              Dark Ages Heptarchic period. 407 A. D. to 800 A.D. 


Egbert            802-839 First of continuous rulers  
Ethelwolf      839-858 Son of Egbert  
Ethelbald      858-860 Son of Ethelwolf. First king to be called King of Britain
 
Ethelbert       860-866 Son of Ethelbald and brother to Ethelbald  
Ethelred I      871-890 Son of Ethelwolf and brother to Ethelbert  
Alfred            871-900 Son of Ethelwolf and brother to Ethelred I        
                       Known as "Alfred the Great"
Edward I        900-924   Son of Alfred the Great,  known as "Edward the Elder"
 
Athelstan      924-960   Son of Edward the Elder  
Edmond I      940-946  Son of Edward the Elder and brother to Athelstan    
 Edred           946-955   Son of Edward the Elder -Brother to Edmond I
 
Edwig            955-959   Son of Edmond I and nephew to Edred
  
Edger              957-975   Son of Edmond I and brother to Edwig
 
Edward II        975-978  Son of Edger    known as "Edward the Martyr "
 
Ethelred II      978-1016  Son of Edger and brother to Edward the Martyr
                          known as  "Ethelred the Unready" 


Edmond II      1016   Son of Ethelred II   known as "Edmond Ironsides"
 
 
Canute        1016-1035  Danish king King of England through conquest
                                         marred to Emma widow of Ethelred II  
Harold I      1035-1040   Son of Canute
  
Harthacnut   1040-1043   Son of Canute and brother to Harold I
  
Edward III      1042-106    Son of Ethelred II and Emma of Normandy
                                            known as  "Edward the Confessor"

 
Harold        1066   King by election when Edward III dies without issue.
                                Harold son of Godson most powerful noble in the
                                land and son-in-law to Canute 


William I     1066-1087    King by conquest. Duke of Normandy
                                           Known as  "William the Conqueror 

 William II     1087-1100  Son of William the Conqueror
  

 Henry I       1100-1135  Son of William the conqueror and brother to
                                          William II  
Stephen     1135-1154   King by election.   Son of Adela, daughter of William I

Henry II      1154-1189  Son of Matilda grandson of William the Conqueror
  
Richard I     1189-1199   Son of Henry II Known as "Richard the Lionhearted"
  
John    1199-1216   Son of Henry II and brother to Richard I
 
Henry III     1216-1272    Son of John
  
Edward I    1272-1307  Son of Henry III
 
Edward II   1307-1327   Son of Edward I.   Murdered by wife, Isabella
  
Edward III   1327-1377   Son of Edward II
  
Richard II   1377-1399    Son of Edward III.   Eldest son, Edward the black
                                          Prince killed in battle in France. .
Henry IV   1399-1413     King by election when Richard deposed by nobles.
                                          Henry is Duke of Lancaster son of John of Gaunt
 
Henry V   1413-1422     Son of Henry IV
  
Henry VI   1422-1461   Son of Henry IV.  Henry (House of Lancaster) opposed
                                         by Edward (House of York.)    War of the roses 1470-1471  
Edward IV  1461-1470  King by conquest in the war of the roses.    Royal
                                          lineage as great grandson on Edward I.
 
Richard III   1483-1485  King by election.     Brother to Edward IV.    
Henry VII   1485-1509   King by conquest.     Scandals around Richard 
                                         lead to Henry,  defeating Richard  at  Bosworth in 1485
 
Henry VIII   1509-1547  Son of Henry VII.      King when eldest son of Henry VII,
                                            Arthur , precedes father in death.                           
 
Edward VI   1547-1553  Son of Henry VIII
 
Mary I   1553-1558  Daughter of Henry VIII.        First Queen of England.
                                        Known as Bloody Mary.  
Elizabeth   I   1558-1603    Daughter of Henry VIII ,  sister to Mary.
                                        Non Catholic Queen  
James I   1603-1625  King by election.      Elizabeth I dies without issue.
                                  James is King of Scotland and son of Mary, Queen of Scots, 
                                  and his grandmother, Margaret is sister to Henry VIII
 
 
Charles I    1625-1649  Son of James I.       Charles I is Catholic which leads to
                                      great unrest.  Civil war starts in 1642.  In 1649 he is tried and   
                                      executed by the Commonwealth Government

 
Commonwealth  1649-1660    The civil war between 1642 and 1649 leads to the
                                                  deposing of Charles I and the establishment of the    
                                                  Commonwealth lead by Oliver Cromwell


Charles II  1660-1685   King by election when the commonwealth does not
                                       fulfill the demands of the people nor the nobles


James II  1685-1688  Son of Charles I , brother to Charles II.   Converts to
                                   Catholicism in 1660.   In 1686 proposes to return Catholicism  
                                   to England, causing great outcry.  Flees to France in 1688.


William and Mary  1689-1702   When James II flees to France the nobles and
                                                parliament invite William of Orange (Holland)
                                                and his wife Mary to assume joint rule.   
                                                Mary dies in 1694 and William rules until 1702
 
Anne   1702-1714     Daughter of James II and sister to Mary.
  
George I   1714-1727     King by election.   When Anne dies without issue
                                        dispute over succession arises. 1701 act prohibits a Catholic 

                                        James Frances Edward, The Old Pretender, son
                                        of James II and brother to Anne is Catholic and is
                                        bypassed .     George of Hanover is Elected.
                                        
                                        George is son of Sophia,  daughter of Elizabeth,
                                        daughter of James I.
                                  
George II   1727-1760  Son of George I.      Fought and defeated Charles
                                       Edward  (Bonny Prince Charlie) son of James Frances Edward the  
                                       Old Pretender, to end Catholic line.
  
George III   1760-1820   Grandson to George II.     His father Frederick Louis
                                         Prince of Wales, dies in 1751  leaving George heir 
                                         George III looses the war with the United Stated


George IV  1820-1830  Son of George III
  
William IV   1830-1837  Son of George III and brother to George IV
  
Victoria  1837-1901  Daughter of Edward, Duke of Kent, son of George III
                                  Victoria becomes Queen when William dies without issue 

 
Edward VII   1901-1910     Son of Victoria
 
George V  1910-1936    Son of Edward VII,    eldest son of Edward VII, Albert,
                                        dies in 1892 


Edward VIII   1936       Son of George V.   Abdicated throne in 1936 when
                                        parliament denies permission the marry a divorced
                                        woman, Wallis Simpson
 
George VI    1936-1952   King when brother, Edward VIII, abdicated throne.
                                           Second  Son of George V 


Elizabeth II   1952-        Daughter of George VI
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
                                             HISTORY Of BRITAIN
 
 
                                            PRE ROMAN EMPIRE
 
 
The oldest evidence of human occupation of the island comes from archaeological findings at Swanscombe where pre- Ice Age man, (Paleolithic man), left evidence of his existence. Carbon dating from this site is dated 200,000 years ago. Found at this site were spearheads, flints, scrapers and other stone implements.   These "Old Stone Age" men were of a "Long headed" race. This is from the fact that their skulls measure almost twice as long front to back as from ear to ear. This is characteristic of Neanderthal Man.   The most notable thing about these people is their great skill in drawing.   Many of the artifacts recovered have carvings of the animals that they hunted or at least lived among. Found are engraved drawings of fish, seal, an ox, an ibex, the cave bear, reindeer, and the mammoth or woolly elephant. With the arrival of the Ice Age Paleolithic man was forced to move South.   He was forced to abandon the island to the great sheet of ice that covered the land except for the very southern end. 

Following the end of the Ice Age, which ended around 10,000 years ago, the migration of continental peoples back to the island began.   The ice retreated and the people moved into the new land. The new people were advanced technologically beyond those before the Ice Age.    They were of a different race and are of the "Round Headed" type; that is their skull measures almost the same front to back and ear to ear.    This is Neolithic or "New Stone Age" man that inhabited the island for almost 9000 years.   He had advanced beyond the stone age and had learned to weave cloth, build houses, and breed cattle. The origin of these people is unknown, but they go by the names Turanians, Iberians, and Silurians by different investigators to connect them with known races.    What is known is that they were of a non-Aryan race.   The best known fact about these people is that they built Stonehenge.    This gives an insight to the fact that they were not just savages but an advanced society , for the time, capable of communal effort and organization. 


Around the year 1000 B.C. the island and its Neolithic population were confronted with the migration of Bronze Age people from the North of Germany.   These people were of the Aryan or Alpine race.  This is the race of people that migrated from the East to dominate all of Europe and is the foundation for all present day Europeans except the Hungarians and Finns.  The invasion or rather the infiltration was spread over many centuries and it is only when twenty or thirty generations have passed that any notable change can be discerned.  These Bronze Age people were the first of two migrations of the tribes known as "the Celts."
   
 The Celts having mastered the art of Bronze making had superior weapons and therefore dominated the stone age Neolithic residents.  The fact to remember is that though the Celts dominated the land they did not annihilate the populace. There was over a long period a melding of the two races into one.  These Celtic people are the Gaelic Celts and are the ancestors to the modern Scots and Irish.  They spoke a dialect of Gaelic or Erse.  The people lived either in isolated farms or in villages situated for the most part on the gravel river banks.  Each settlement was surrounded by small fields tilled either with a foot plow or at best with a light ox drawn plow which scratched the soil without turning the sod.  The dead were burnt and their ashes were preserved in urns and buried in regular cemeteries.  They made rude pottery and used flint for such things as arrow heads .  There existed an itinerant bronze foundry able to make swords, spears, axes and carpenter tools .  Their life was simple and undeveloped though there was a distinction between rich and poor.
 
Around the year 500 B.C. the second migration of Celts occurred.  This group came from the North of France in modern day Belgium and Holland.  They go by the names Cymric, Brythons, and Belgrae.  The term Brythons has held sway as the most accepted and is the source of the name of the island, Britannia.  This is the name that was known to the Romans at the time of their conquest in 55 B.C.  These Celts were of the Iron Age and more advanced socially compared to their cousins the Bronze Age Gaelic Celts.  Their arrival drove the Gaelic Celts North into present day Scotland and West into present day Wales leaving the southern end to the Brythons.  This as with the other invasions took place over an extended period of time.  The changes to the lifestyle was minor with the major change being the building of hilltop forts. Around 100 B.C. the most advanced of the new people arrived.   They were people of chariots and horsemen. They built new towns in the valleys .  They introduced for the first time coinage of silver and copper. They established a tribal aristocracy, the first in Britain.   In the East they built Wheathamspstead, Verulam (St. Albans) and Camulodunum (Colchester); in the South Calleva (Silchester) and Venta Belgarum (Winchester). 

The first written description of inhabitants of the island is from Julius Ceaser about the Brythons of southern England whom he encountered in 55 B. C.       He was not an unbiased observer, but he wrote the following: "The interior of Britannia is inhabited by people who claim to be aboriginal; the coast by Belgic immigrants who came to plunder and make war-nearly all of them retaining the names of the tribes from which they originated- and later settled down to till the soil.  The population is excessively large, the ground thickly studded with homesteads, closely resembling those of the Gauls and the cattle very numerous. For money they use either bronze or gold coins or iron ingots of fixed weights.  Tin is found inland, and small quantities of iron near the coast; copper must be imported.  There is timber of every kind, as in Gaul. Hares, fowl, and geese they think it unlawful to eat, but rear them for pleasure and amusement. By far the most civilized inhabitants are those living in Kent, whose way of life differs little from that of the Gauls. Most of the tribes in the interior do not grow corn but live on milk and meat, and wear skins. All Brythons dye their bodies with woad, which produces a blue color, and gives them a more terrifying appearance in battle.  They wear their hair long and shave the whole of their bodies except the head and upper lip.  Wives are shared between groups of ten or twelve men, especially between brothers and between fathers and sons; But the offspring of these unions are counted as the children of the man with whom a particular woman cohabited first." 


The traditions of the Celts did not contain the conception of King.  They were a tribal society and each tribe had a leader, usually the most successful at war.  Battles between the tribes in the South produced a dominate leader and his name was Cassivellaunas. This is of course the Latin name he has carried through history, his Saxon name was some precursor of this.  When Julius Caesar came to the island the first time, this is the leader with which he fought.   He was the leader of the tribe of Catuvellauni who occupied the  area around modern day Bedfordshire and Oxfordshire in middle  England.
 
In 55 B.C. Julius Caesar (he was the proconsul of Gaul -modern France), had conquered all the land to the English Cannel.  From the people of northern Gaul he obtained information of the island and the people that lay across the water.  Their stories told of a land with great wealth.  Moreover Britannia, as the island was known, was the prime center of the Druidical religion which in various forms influenced the life of both Gaul and Germany.  This lead Caesar to believe the conquering of the land would afford him great renown.  This had great appeal to him, being an ambitious man, for he had his sights on becoming the Emperor of Rome.  He gathered a legion of about 8000 men and 80 ships to transport them.  He sailed for the island on August 26, 55 B.C.   The native Brythons were on the cliffs watching the arrival of the fleet. When Caesar landed, the Brythons defended them selves in accord with their established fighting methods. The force would move into position on horse back, unmount and form a wall of men with battle axes and shields.  They would then advance is unison to engage the foe. In back of the  advancing wall would be archers who would shoot over the wall into the ranks of the enemy.  If the initial thrust was not completely successful, they would retreat in a manner that would appear to be a complete surrender.  This was done hoping to lure the enemy into chasing after them too fast and fall into the trap.
 
Caesar did manage to land his troops and did make some progress into the inland but not too far.  The Brythons defended themselves very well.  After only two days in the island Caesar retreated to his ships and returned to Gaul.  Even in his own writings he did not consider the landing a success.  The one most important piece of information he learned was that the island was indeed rich in crops and could support an army during an invasion.  The reason, he thought, for the unsuccessful campaign was that his legion was too small. So he set out to put together a larger army.  The following year he initiated a second invasion with five legions (12,000 men) and 800 ships.  This invasion included cavalry to match the Brythons.

The Brythons were overawed at the sight of this armada.  They had never seen such a force and withdrew inland and did not encounter the Romans at the shore.  Their strategy this time was to engage the Romans in the woods and swamps of the inland where their strength lay. After a twelve day delay, while Caesar repaired ships damaged in a storm, he marched inland to start the conquest.  After easily destroying the forest stockades that the British had built he crossed the Thames near Brantford. He then began his march up the Thames. Cassivellaunus, the British leader, understood that the invaders were much stronger and that outright confrontation would be disastrous.  He then used his mobile forces to stay just out of the reach of the Romans and avoid battle.  He followed the Romans on their march up the Thames keeping distance between them.  Nonetheless Caesar captured a stronghold of the British and the tribes began to make terms for themselves.  At this juncture, Cassivellaunus negotiated a treaty.  The terms included a surrender of hostages, a promise of tribute and submission.  In return Caesar was to quit the island and return to Gaul.  This Caesar did the following day.  This time he claimed complete victory and later leads the captive Brythons through the streets of Rome in a parade of triumph.
 
In spite of Caesar's claim of complete victory there was to pass 97 years before another Roman was to step foot in Britain.  The wisdom of Cassivellaunus was to pay off. During this time the islanders remained unmolested.  The Brython cities developed a life of their own and the warrior tribes enjoyed their feuds.  There existed the comforting illusion that no one was likely to attack them again.  Their contacts with the mainland and the civilization of the Roman Empire grew and trade flourished in a wide range of commodities. Roman traders established themselves in many cities of the South and carried back to Rome tales of the wealth and possibilities of Britannia, if only a stable government was set up.
 
In 41 A.D. Claudius became Emperor and the advantages of conquering the recalcitrant island were paraded before the new monarch.  He gave the order that this dramatic and possibly lucrative enterprise should proceed.  In 43 A.D. 20,000 men were prepared for the subjugation of Britain.   In about 20 AD, the over lordship of the Brythons had passed to Conobelinus, successor to Cassivellaunus, with his capitol at Colchester.    Conobelinus is the Cymbeline of Shakespeare fame.   In his old age dissensions had sprung up and was impairing his rule.  Upon his death in 40 AD, he was succeeded by his two sons Caractacus and Togodumnus.   Their rule was not everywhere recognized and during this period of disarray Plautius and the Roman Legions arrived.
 
The Brythons relied on the tactics of Cassivellaunus, to move about and not engage the Romans. They felt that this would lead to the same results as before, Pay tribute and the Romans will go home and leave them alone.   Therefore, Plautius had more trouble finding the Brythons than fighting them.   When he did find them victory was sure.  First he defeated Caractacus and then his brother in battles in East Kent.    Plautius then marched up the same path that Caesar had marched.  Coming upon the river Medway, the Brythons thought the Romans could not cross the river, and built their camp on the other side.  Plautius sent a detachment of Germans that were accustomed to swimming with heavy armor and surprised the Brythons.  They captured their horses, precluding retreat or attack. The main legion then crossed the river and captured the majority of Brythons.  With this victory a stronghold of the Roman Legion was established on British soil and thus began a 350 year domination of the island. 

This is the beginning of the Roman Empire in England.
 
 
  
 
  
                                    THE ROMAN EMPIRE

  43 A. D. to 407 A. D.
 
 
With the battle at river Medway the Romans had established themselves as permanent occupants of the island but the battles continued.  Caractacus fled West to the province of Wales.  There he united the tribes and maintained an indomitable resistance to the Romans for six years.  In 50 A.D. he was finally defeated by the Roman general Ostorius who subdued the West up to the Severn River.   Caractacus fled North to the tribe of Brigantes located at present day Chester.   The Queen of the Brigantes,   Cartimandua, handed him over to the Romans fearing retribution for opposing the advancing army. Caractacus was taken prisoner and he and his family were taken to Rome and paraded through the streets as a sample of Roman victory in Britain. When he was before Claudius he gave a memorable speech which impressed all who heard:,

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" If to my high birth and distinguished rank I had added the virtues of Rome and you held me as a friend rather than a captive, and you would not have rejected an alliance with a prince descended from illustrious ancestors and governing many nations. The reverse of my fortune is glorious to you, and humiliating to me. I had arms, and men, and horses; I possessed extraordinary riches; and can it be any wonder that I was unwilling to lose them? Because Rome aspires to universal dominion must men therefore implicitly resign themselves to subjection? I opposed for a long time the progress of your arms, and had I acted otherwise would either you have the glory of conquest or I of a brave resistance? I am now in your power. If you are determined to take revenge, my fate will soon be forgotten, and you will derive no honor from the transaction . Preserve my life , and I shall remain to the latest ages a monument of your clemency,"
  
Immediately upon this speech Claudius granted him his liberty, as he did likewise to the other royal captives.  They all returned their thanks in a manner grateful to the Emperor and as soon as their chains were taken off they went to Agrippina, wife of Claudius, and repeated the declaration of gratitude.  After this he walked the streets of Rome and is recorded as saying   " And yet ,you who possess all these things, and many others like them, actually covet the shanties of Britain?"    He and his family lived the rest of their lives in Rome and thus ends the house of Cymbelline.
 
    
The conquest of the island continued with the Roman Legion moving about the land and putting down any and all resistance, even though the next seven years  ( 52 to 59) were void of any noteworthy events.   In the year 59, Paulinus one of the two generals in Britain, Corbolo being the other, decided to conquer Anglesey ( modern Wales).  He and his men were confronted at the Menai channel with a dense mass of armed men and women dressed as Furies.  The women were running around their hair hanging down, and carrying torches.  There were Druid priests with upraised hands calling for heavenly vengeance on the Romans.  The Romans were stopped in their tracks with this unaccustomed sight.  Only after a scathing speech by Paulinus did the attack begin with the Romans winning a victory.
 
The following year, 60 A.D. , a message was brought to the Roman capitol of Camulodunum ( the modern Colchester) of an uprising among the Iceni tribe in Essex. This uprising was a result of philosopher Seneca, Emperor Nero's minister, calling due the loans made to the native Brythons at usurious rates.  The Iceni were ruled by their chief and King Prasutagus a king best known for his wealth.  Upon his death the kingdom was willed to his two sons and the Roman Emperor.  This gesture was thought, by the dead king, to appease the Roman and preclude invasion, but this was not to be the case. With the word of unrest the Romans , under Suetonius, marched into the kingdom and sacked the kings castle and looted the treasury and, in a complete loss of their senses, beat the widow of the king with rods.  Her daughters were raped in her presence.  The Iceni chiefs were removed from their houses and treated as slaves.  This event caused the entire nation of the Iceni to join in rebellion.  The leader of the rebellion was the widow of the king, her name known to posterity as Boadicea.
 
Boadicea with an army of 100,000 marched to the Roman capitol at Camulodunum.  The city was not will defended.  The four legions that were in Britain were far away; one in Caerleon upon Usk, two fighting Druids in Anglesey and quartered at Chester, the fourth at Lincoln.  Boadicea and the army attacked.   The city fell quickly and indescribable horrors of murder, rape , and insulting mutilations are reported to have been inflicted on the inhabitants.  She then marched North to meet the Ninth Legion which was marching South to rescue the city.  The Romans did not know the strength of the foe.  All the Roman foot-soldiers perished in, the ensuing battle and the Roman commander, Cerialis, retreated north with his cavalry.  The news of this situation was brought to Suetonius on the Menai straits, in North Wales, where he was camped. He immediately marched his army to the merchant village of Londinium to meet and fight Boadicea.  This is the first mention of London in history.  It was not , at this time, the center it would soon become. The entire village covered only 600 acres outlined by the modern landmarks of Cheapside street on the North, the Thames on the South, with The Tower outside the East boundary and St. Pauls outside the West boundary.  The Roman troop strength was about 10,000 men and when word of Boadicea's troop strength of over 100,000 was known, the Romans marched back to the West abandoning London.  When Boadicea and her army arrived, the same fate that had befallen Camulodunum was faithfully repeated against the village of Londinium . The Roman historian estimated that between Camulodunum, Londinium and Verulam ( another victim city) the loss of life was 70,000.   Not all the dead were Roman, but many British and Gaulish residents engaged in commerce were victims of the revenge minded Boadicea.  
Suetonius marched North to join with the Legion marching South from Chester .  The Brythons and Boadicea followed the Romans.   A battle was inevitable, but the Romans would decide where and when.  When the battle did occur,  the Romans now at full strength and full armament were better at battle than the fanatic and ill equipped barbarians.  The British were soundly defeated and 80,000 were killed.  Boadicea died by poison if you read Tacitus and Disease if you read Dion, both Roman historians.   Either way she died.
 
The Emperor Nero was not happy with the loss of 9000 troops, forcing him to transfer 7000 German troops to Britain .   He replaced Catus, the procurator (a political post) of Britannia, with a new procurator Classicianus.   Suetonius, the general, was in the process of laying waste to the land with fire and sword in territories that exhibited doubtful loyalty to Rome.    Classicianus, the politician, felt the real enemy was famine following the loss of crops during the uprising.   He felt that leniency would get the crops planted and avoid real problems.     Suetonius felt the rebels needed punishment to prevent another bloody revolt.   The difference of opinion lead Rome to sending an investigator, Polyclitus, to settle the matter.  Polyclitus traveled around the land in great pomp with a large entourage to impress the natives and the army with his importance.  In spite of his pomp his report to Nero supported the lenient policy of Classicianus.   Two years later Suetonius was recalled to Rome.  For the next 10 years ( 61 to 71 A. D. ) , years that had the death of Nero and civil war in Rome,  a general peace and calm covered all of Britannia.
 
With the end of the civil war in Rome, Vespasian became Emperor.
     
With him came a new impulse to expand the empire in Britain.   The Emperor sent a distant relative, Petillius Cerialis, as head of the Ninth legion.  Between the years 71 and 75 he advanced the frontier into Yorkshire and subdued the Brigantes tribe living there. The establishment of Eburacum (modern York) was done at this time.  Julius Frontunus followed Cerialis and completed the subjugation of the Silures tribe in South Wales.   In 78 A.D. Emperor Vespasian appointed Julius Agricola as Legatus ( Governor ) of Britannia.   He immediately set out to destroy the Ordovices tribe in North Wales because of a battle where the Ordovices had killed a detachment of cavalry.   This insolence must be chastised and the might of Rome displayed by the new Legatus.    The Ordovices retreated to the island of Mona feeling that the strait of water would protect them.  Again the Romans used German soldiers familiar with swimming to cross the strait and capture the natives.
 
Having shown his power he then set out to reform the administration of government, especially the financial and tax gathering part. He introduced many reforms that either omitted or modified unjust practices.  The islanders were thus won over to the rule of the Romans, feeling that there rule was just and fair.  Aricola continued to push the frontier of the Roman domain North.   In 81 A.D. he reached the Firth of Fourth and it is recorded that soon after he fought the battle of Mons Graupius.   From this Latin name comes the distorted but accepted name of Grampian for the region of Scotland.  At this time or shortly after Aricola was recalled to Rome.
With the recall of Aricola to Rome the history of Britain under Roman rule falls into a quiet period.  For the next three hundred years the island is part of the Roman Empire but there is not much to record. A peaceful coexistence developed between the islanders and their overlords. The life style of the Romans with their cities comprising temples, baths, market place, and government centers was adopted by the Celtic natives. The country side with the ordered farms and cattle fields and safe roads for travel and transportation of goods to the market was without turmoil.   All in all the good life was at hand and peace was the order of the day. All this was very attractive to the late hunter of the forest.   This lead the historian Tacitus to sarcastically observe " the simple folk called this civilization but was really the beginning of slavery".
 
The history now again falls into one of those periods of darkness that frustrates the history student. The next three hundred years records minimal events .  The only significant event is the building of Hadrian's Wall in the north to keep the Picts at bay and repel their constant aggression against the northern tribes.  The Island is now an outpost of the Roman Empire and far removed from the turmoil that engulfs the rest of the Empire.  The major noteworthy observation is that unlike the other provinces of the Empire such as Gaul, Iberia and others the British tribes do not totally convert to the Roman way of life. The relationship is one of a military occupation and not one of conversion. In Italy and Gaul and the provinces of Western Europe there is found abundant evidence of the municipalization of the conquered tribes. There is found in Europe many references to Ā° Duumver or Decurio" which represent town counselor or mayor,  but in England there is an  absence of these references.  Many references are made to centurions, tribunes and other military officers that served in the government of the Island, but no civil offices.
 
We now have a picture of England as one of large Roman villas, that is large estates, run by Roman proprietors or Romanized Celts with the native Celtic tribesman dotting the landscape with their cottages and running their lives without interference and performing the required tasks of the overlord when required. The whole system is overseen by the Roman Legions to insure the peace by holding the natural tribal instinct of raiding the neighbor in check. The only dark cloud in this otherwise peaceful picture is the references to the constant invasions of the barbarian tribes from the North, the Picts, and from the West, the Scots whom we would call Irish in this day.  With the decline of the Roman Empire in the Fourth century these invasions began to increase in number and frequency. There is recorded a noteworthy passage that in the year 367 there arrived several long boats with peoples from Saxony to the shores of England.  This is a portent to things to come.
 
The invasions of the Picts, Scots and now the Saxons increases in magnitude as the influence of Rome diminished, until in the year 410 Emperor Honorius sends his now famous message to the British tribesman that " the cantons should take steps to defend themselves" for now the Romans have abandoned the Island to its own fate. The Island is now without defenses or a government to create one. This vulnerability is an open invitation to any peoples so inclined to come and make this their new home and many did just that.
 
We now come to the end of the Roman Empire period, the year is 400 AD
 
 
  
  
   
  
                                   THE DARK AGES
                                 ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND 
                                    400 A.D TO 1066 A.D.
 
The history of Britain from this point on can not be told with out an understanding of the impact of the Christian faith. With the conversion of Emperor Constantine and the subsequent acceptance of the Christian faith in the Roman Empire, the faith spread to all the Empires regions including England and the other northern tribes. In 432 Saint Patrick returned to Ireland from which he had escaped slavery 14 years earlier to spread the faith he had learned from Bishop Germanus of Auxerre. This faith was based on the premise of returning good for bad. From his preaching the Irish isle became predominately Christian. In 429 Bishop Germanus of Auxerre himself made a trip to England and held a conference with the clergy of England at St. Albans to expel the Pelagian heresy that was prominent in the island. The Pelagian theology gave undue importance to free will and undermined the concept of original sin which was the foundation of the theology from Rome. The bishop was successful and the priests abandoned their evil opinions and adopted the dogma of Rome. The good bishop wrote about what he had seen in England and recorded that the land was rich with abundant herds and plentiful food. The civil and religious institution function well and the country is prosperous, but at war. The country is being invaded from all sides, Picts from the North; Scots from the West; Saxons from the East. From this, a picture is drawn of a Christianized Celtic people that has adopted a Roman style of life being invaded by an alliance of barbarian Picts, barbarian Saxon, and Christianized Celts of Ireland.    It is at this point of history that the story of King Arthur takes place.   The story which is still being debated as to factualness tells of a Romanized Celtic Christian who does battle with the invading barbarians.   It is a story of twelve battles where in Arthur defeats the foe and defends the land and the faith. The twelfth battle is Mount Badon in " which there fell in one day nine hundred and sixty men from the onslaught of Arthur only, and no one laid them low save he alone." All efforts to fix the location of Mount Badon have failed.  From the writings of Gildas the Wise in 545 we can deduce that the battle took place between 490 to 503.   This is but only one story that tells us that the native Celts are fighting an enemy that is invading their land.
 
The generally accepted history is that Vortigern, probably living in modern Kent, invited mercenaries from Germany to help in the fight against the Picts . Vortigern is a title not a name.  It means "High King".  His name was most likely Vitalinus , but not proved. The leader of the invited German mercenaries was Hengist and his son Horsa.  These two are credited with the founding of the Jutish kingdom in Kent. This was in the year 449.  As the Jutish mercenaries gained in numbers there power increased and then they turned against the natives and subdued them. The Jutish immigrants subdued the inhabitants , the Celtic tribe of Cantiaci ,  not totally through warfare but through their numbers and superior tribal organization.   The Jutish people in fact adopted the Celtic name of Cantiaci as their own.   In 477 Ella and his three son's migrated from Kent to the Northern kingdom of Anglia and continued the Germanic subjugation in that area.   In 495 Cerdic and his son Cynric arrived in the southern coast and established the Saxon Kingdom of Wessex.   In 547 the arrival of Ida in Northumbria continued the invasion of the Germanic peoples to the island.
 
The history of the Saxon invasion is one of gradual influx and subjugation rather than one of a military type of invasion. This is evidenced by the fact that for one hundred and fifty years the Romanized and Christianized Celtic tribes fought and resisted the Barbaric Germanic peoples with long periods of victory with the Saxons being held at bay. In the end however the invaders held the upper hand. The Britons, as the Celtic were now called, retreated to the West, modern Wales, and left the English, as the Germanic people were now called, to rule the island south of the Humber. The land to the North of the Humber was ruled by the Picts. The English lands were divided in to six separate kingdoms. The kingdom of Kent, the kingdom of West Saxon's (Wessex) , the kingdom of South Saxon's ( Sussex), the kingdom of East Anglia, the kingdom of Mercia, and the Kingdom of Northumbria.
 
The settlement in England was to modify the imported structure of Germanic life. The armed farmer-colonists found themselves forced to accept a stronger state authority owing to the stresses of continued military action. In Germany they had no Kings, they developed them in Britain from leaders who claimed descent from the ancient gods. The position of king increased in importance and his supporters gradually formed a new class in society which carried the germ of feudalism, and in the end to dominate all other conventions. The king was at first only the war-leader made permanent. Once the position was established the main purpose of the king was to make the position secure, " to be thus is nothing, but to be safely thus ".  The king must be surrounded by those who shared his deeds and his bounty.  The bounty of war, in harmony with ancient tribal feuds, lead to the constant warring between the six kingdoms and their kings seeking dominance and power.   
The picture of England at this point in history is one of barbaric Germanic tribes ruling the main portion of the southern island divided into six warring kingdoms with Christianized Britons and Picts driven to the West and North . The land has become heathen again.   In order to understand the history of the English people it is important to recognize the fact that while it is true that the dominance of the Celtic tribes was driven North and West not all the people were driven out. There was a large portion of the people who stayed and were absorbed into the Germanic invaders.  This commingling and absorption enriched both races and is a very important to the character of the English people.
 
The history between the end of the Roman Empire in 407 and around the year 565 is one of conflict and warfare between the two peoples. This is compounded by the fact that the invaders were fighting between themselves for dominance. In addition the reintroduction of Christianity leads to wars between believers and heathen. This results in a period of chaos and confusion with no common thread of history.  Between 565 and 800 the history is best followed by accounting the rise and fall of the dominance of the kingdoms of the invaders. The first to rise to dominance is the kingdom of Kent.
 
                        THE KINGDOM OF KENT
 
As stated previously the kingdom of Kent was established by the arrival of Hengest and his son Horsa in 449. The Celtic leader, Vortigern had invited them to the island in an effort to defend against the Picts.  Vortigern had become infatuated with the daughter of Hengest whose name was Rowena.  Her marrage to Vortigern was in exchange for more land.  This lead to unrest among the people and subsequently to a revolt by Voltimer, Vortigern's son. Voltimer embarked on making war against the Jutish people.   Hengest's son, Horsa, was killed in a battle with the new Celtic leader Voltimer . Voltimer was killed in battle, or poisoned by his step mother Rowena, and Vortigern was reestablished as king.  Being an old man he was unable to wield authority. This lead to the diminishing of power by the natives and a rise in power by the Saxon immigrants.  There exists evidence that one Aesc ruled as king in the year 473 but not much is known about him.  It is during this period that the story of Arthur arises and also of Ambrosius Aurelianus.  A period of the Christianized Celts fighting against the heathern Saxon for both land and belief. A king by the name of Eormenric ruled in the period of 530 to 565.  The name suggests a relationship with the royal family of the Franks.  This would be understandable seeing that his son married the daughter of the Frankish family.  The next record of history starts with king Ethelbert in 565.  He is the first king referred to as Bretwalda, meaning over lord, of England.   Ethelbert is married to Bertha, daughter of king Charibert king of the Franks, son of Clovis.  Bertha is Christian and as part of the marriage agreement she can practice her religion and bring her priest to England with her.  With this foothold in the heathen land Pope Gregory saw an opportunity.  In his desire to bring the straying Christians of the Celtic Church of  the North into the Roman fold and to convert the heathen peoples in the South he sent his missionary, Augustine .   In 596 Augustine, later called Saint Augustine, arrived in Kent.  With the aide of Queen Bertha he converted King Ethelbert.     Ethelbert then established on the ruins of the ancient British church of St. Martin a new church in Canterbury.   Ethelbert was motivated as much by political reasons as spiritual to see the people converted to the new faith. By being the only Christian ruler in the land he felt that by holding out the hand of common faith to the other princes of the land he would become the dominate ruler . A conference was called and held in the Severn Valley in an area between the British Christian area and the English lands. The conference degraded into petty difference between the Roman and Celtic method of calculating the date of Easter. The Celtic Bishops would not conform to the Roman way and left the conference in anger. This was also complicated by the obvious political designs of Ethelbert.  The English princes would not follow with out a fight. A third obstacle was the arrogance of St. Augustine who is reported to have challenged the Bishops with the statement " if you will not have peace from your friends you shall have war with your foes".  Augustine's mission thus came to an end. When he returned to Rome, accomplishing little he left behind Mellitas as Bishop of the East Saxons with his church at Canterbury.  King Ethelbert ruled until his death in 616 and was followed on the throne by his son Eadbald.    Eadbald was in love with his stepmother and when he assumes the throne he wishes to marry her.  The records has her name as Ymme, the daughter of Austrasian king Theodebert. This would indicate that Bertha, his real mother, died some time before 605, and his father remarried this Ymme.  This is opposed by the church and Eadbald goes insane over the dispute but holds throne till 640 when he dies.   Eadbald's sister, Ethelburga, is married to Edwin of Northumbria. Eorcenbert, son of Eadbald is king 640 to 664.  Eorcenbert first Saxon king raised as a Christian institutes Christian rituals though out the land and has all pagan images destroyed.   This leads to  confusion and disarray diminishing the power of the king.    Power has shifted to Northumbria as the dominate Kingdom.
 
Summary of Kent
 
441 Vortigen British was leader of Kent
449 Vortigen invites Jutes of help fight Picts. 

Hengst and Horsa arrive. Start of Saxon period
473 Aesc  king of Kent after death of Hengst
                  Aesc is the only Saxon name used in the Arthur legend 
Octha  rules 516 

Eormenric  possible grandson of Aesc
 
565 Ethelbert King. Married to Bertha daughter of Charibert King of the Franks and she is Christian.  Ethelbert is the son of Eormenric
568 Ethelbert defeated by Ceawlin of West Saxon but still King.
 
597 St. Augustine arrives
 
604 Ethelbert builds church in Londonia dedicated to St. Paul
 
605 St. Augustine dies in Rome.
 
616 Ethelbert dies and Kent goes into decline
 
640 Eadbald dies insane

640-664 Eorcenbert first Christian king rules, disorder in the land
                                   Married to Seaxburh, daughter of Anna, King of East Anglia.

Power center moves to The Kingdom of East Anglia 
 
   
                        THE KINGDOM OF EAST ANGLIA
 
Ricula the sister of Ethelbert, King of Kent, married a nobleman of
East Anglia and her son, Saberct, rose to be the King of East Anglia in 604. Saberct was succeed by Redwald who could be the son of Saberct but this is not known. Redwald expanded his influence over a wide area which covered the lands from the Dee in the North to the Humber in the South. Thus the influence of Redwald was second only to Ethelbert in Kent. During the rein of Redwald the power of East Anglia was at its greatest. Upon the death of Ethelbert in Kent, Redwald is recorded as the next Bretwalda. It is strongly felt that the historic relics found at Sutton Soo and housed today at the British Museum in London are those of Redwald.   Redwald aided and backed the efforts of Edwin of Northumbria to ascend to that throne. Anglia never was a dominate Kingdom but played a part in the unfolding history of the kingdom of Kent to the south and Mercia to the West in minor roles. Anglia played a major part in the history of Northumbria to the North. The history and power now flows to Northumbria.
 
 
                       The Kingdom of Northumbria
 
The Kingdom of Northumbria is made up of two sub-kingdoms, those of Bernicia and Deira. The history is one of ebb and flow of the power struggle between these two areas and the unification of them. In 547 to 560 Ida was king of Bernicia and Aelle is King of Deira. In 560 upon the death of Ida , Aelle assumes throne of both kingdoms. When Aelle dies in 588 a struggle ensues and the son of Ida, Ethelric, claims the throne of both lands. Ethelric sends the son of Aelle, Edwin, into exile lest he be killed. Refuge is taken in the palace of Redwald of East Anglia.  In 593 Ethelric dies and the throne is assumed by his son Ethelfrid.  Owing to the fact that Redwald has given refuge to Edwin, hereditary heir to the throne equal to Ethelfrid, there is constant fighting between Northumbria and East Anglia. In 617 Ethelfrid is killed in battle with Redwald who is also killed in same battle. With this event the throne is assumed by Edwin.  With the death of Redwald and the assumption of the throne of Northumbria by Edwin the power of Northumbria is supreme over all six English kingdoms. Edwin becomes the third Britwalda.   Edwin is married to Ethelburga the daughter of Ethelbert, King of Kent.    The only Kingdom not directly under his rule was Kent.  Under Edwin's rule there existed a peace not known since the arrival of the Germanic peoples 200 years before.  It is said " that a woman could walk with her new born babe throughout the Island from sea to sea without receiving any harm."  The King took such care for the good of his nation that in several places where he had seen clear springs near the highways he caused stakes to be fixed with proper drinking vessels hanging on them for the refreshment of travelers, and no man did touch them for any other purpose than that for which they were designed , either for the great fear they had of the King or for the affection which they bore him.  Edwin was killed in battle with Penda King of Mercia.  More of Penda and Mercia will follow later.  
In 625, during the rein of Edwin, Christianity was brought to the kingdom. The wife of Edwin, Ethelburga, was a Christian and in her train from Canterbury to the court in York she brought the first Roman missionary to northern England. The leader of the Christian missionary was Paulinus a member of the group that arrived with St., Augustine in 596. With the conversion of the kingdom to Christianity coupled with the rise in power and dominion over its neighbors leads to great conflict with Mercia and its heathen king Penda.  This lead to ongoing battles between the two Kings.  The heathen Penda joined forces with an odd ally, the British king Cadwallon.  This alliance between the Saxon heathen and the Celtic Christian created a formidable army against the Northumbrian Christians.   It is during the ensuing battle that Edwin is slain.
 In 634 with the death of Edwin , Oswald the son of Ethelfrid the arch enemy of Edwin, assumes the throne. He finds himself head of a newly Christianized nation but he is from the Northern kingdom of Bernicia which had not embraced the faith as heartily as the Southern kingdom of Deria, and this leads to a split between the leaders and the people. Also he is faced by hostile aggression from the heathen Mercians.  Following the battle in which Edwin was killed there was a split between Penda and his odd comrade the British King Cadwallon .  Oswald and Cadwallon fought a battle in 634 along the Roman Wall wherein the British forces were thoroughly defeated and Cadwallon the last of the great British war leaders is killed.   This is the last battle between the British and Saxon peoples bringing to an end over 250 years of conflict.
 
The destruction of Cadwallon and the clearance from Northumbria of the Western Britons, whose atrocities had united all the Saxon forces in the North, was a prelude to the struggle with King Penda. The Mercian king Penda is a true heathen. He has not given up the pagan ways of old, and detests the Christian way and any people who are Christian. This Leads to many battles between Mercia and her neighbors.

 In 642, in a battle with Penda, King Oswald was killed.  The record of the day says that Penda decapitated and dismembered the King and scattered his pieces to the wind. With the death of Oswald his brother, Oswy, assumed the throne of Bernicia and Oswin, a descendent of ancient Aelle, ascended to the throne of Deria thereby splitting the Northumbria kingdom into the two separate subĀ­kingdoms. The ensuing struggle between the two kings was unavoidable and in 651 Oswy defeats and kills Oswin in battle. There being no heirs in the line of Aelle, the throne of Deria is taken by Ethelwald the son of Oswald and Nephew of King Oswy. This made Oswy the dominate king of the kingdom. The only enemy then existing was the heathen kingdom of Mercia. In 659 King Oswy kills King Penda in battle thus bringing to close the bloody life of one of the cruelest kings in English history. King Oswy ruled over the mightiest Kingdom in the Island for the rest of his life and dies a natural death in 671. Upon the death of Oswy he is succeeded by his son Egfrid.
With the killing of Mercia king Penda the dominance of Northumbria over its Southern rival takes on a mood of cruelness for previous Mercian atrocities . One action to show total dominance is the marriage of Penda's daughter Cyneburga to King Egfrid.
 
The primacy of Northumbria was menaced and finally ended by the inherent geographical and physical weakness of its position. It was vulnerable from every quarter; from the North by the Picts, on the West by the British kingdom of Strathclyde, in the south by Mercia, whose jealous Midlands still smarting from the suppression of Penda and the punishments inflicted upon his adherents. These antagonisms were too much for Northumbria to bear, and although great efforts were made, its collapse as the leading kingdom was inevitable. King Egfrid died in battle in 685 fighting the Scots at Forfar. History will record that with the defeat of Egfrid by the Scots the decline of Northumbria begins. He was succeeded by Aldfrid who was his son or nephew which is not know for sure. While Aldfrid ruled as King of Northumbria there was returned to a sub-throne in Deria Alchfrid who was a son of Oswy. This shows that the kingdom is declining into a period of unrest and can not be ruled by one King. Fighting between the people and the Picts of the North is a constant fact of life and its toll is great on both life and moral. At this point in history the dominance of Northumbria is still the greatest in the Island but has deteriorated to the point where other kingdoms have the freedom to grow and usurp dominance from Northumbria in the regions of there home lands. In 705 King Aldfrid dies and is succeeded by Osred his son who reigns from 705 till 729 when he dies. Osred is succeeded by Ceowolf his son and reigns 729 till 737 when he abdicates the throne to his cousin Eadbert who reins 737 till 758 when he dies. Eadbert is succeeded by his son Oswulf who reins 758 till 774 when he is thrown off the throne and the throne is usurped by Ethelwald Mull who reins till 779. When in 779 Ethelwald Mull dies he is succeeded by his son Ethelred who reins till 796 when he is assassinated. This is the end of notable rulers of Northumbria for by this time the dominance of the Island had passe to Mercia and Wessex and the trials and tribulations of the north kingdom were of minor consequences.
 
The gradual decline of Northumbria makes it hard to find an end point but it is undisputable that the defeat in 685 was the beginning. By 716 during the rein of King Osred the decline is great enough to allow the rise of competing kings in Mercia and Wessex. It can be said that with the kingship of Ethelbald in Mercia in 716 the power had shifted to Mercia which takes us to their period in the history.
 
Summary of Northumbria
 
560 Ida ruling King of Bernicia dies and rival king Aelle , king of Deria assumes kinship of both sub-kingdoms  
588 Aelles line is ousted and Ethelric, son of Ida, is king
 
593 Ethelric dies and is succeeded by his son, Ethelfrid who is fierce pagan king.
 
603 Ethelfrid fights Aidan, King of Scots. first mention in history of Scots as nation of the north. Battle of Dawson Rig and Scots beaten badly.
 
613 Ethelfrid fights Britons of the West and wins battle at Chester. Destroys city.
 
617 Ethelfrid fights Redwald of Anglia and dies in battle. Edwin son of Ella and brother-in-law to Ethelfrid is King.  
618 Edwin new king makes York his capitol. Ancient Roman city of Eburacum and Anglican city of Eoforwic.
 
624 Edwin marries Ethelburga, Christian daughter of Ethelbert King of Kent.
 
626 Assassination attempt against Edwin by agents of Wessex king Cynegils.
 
633 Edwin fights Mercian king Penda at Hatfield Chase and is killed in battle. Ethelburga and sons flee to Kent. Osric is king in Deria. Osric is son of Elfric brother to Edwin. Eanfrid, son of Ethelfrid is king in Bernicia.
 
634 Oswald succeeds brother, Eanfrid as king of Bernicia. fights battle with British king Cadwallon and wins battle ending British influence in North. Assumes total kingship when Osric pledges fidelity.
 
642 Oswald fights Penda at Masterfield and is killed. Kingdom is now split again. Oswy, brother to Oswald, is now king in Bernicia. Oswin son of Osric king in Deria
 
651 Oswin is killed in battle with Oswy and leaves no heirs. Oswin assumes total kingship of both kingdoms
655 Oswy defeats Penda in battle of West Riding in Yorkshire
making him mightiest king in the Island.
 
664 Plague his Island for the first time and many die.
 
671 Oswy dies and Egfrid, his son, is king.
 
672 Egfrid fights Picts and wins battle.
 
679 Egfrid fights Ethelred of Mercia and wins back peace between the two kingdoms.
 684 Egfrid invades Ireland and inflicts great damage to the harmless island and its people.
 685 Egfrid invades Picts of the north. In battle of Forfar the Picts win battle and Egfrid killed. Scots win land north of the Cheviot Mountains. Decline begins. Egfrid succeeded by Aldfrid, his son or nephew it is not know which.
 705 Aldfrid dies and is succeeded by Osred his son who is eight years old. Kingdom is in great decay and confusion
 729 Osred dies and Ceolwulf his son is King.
 737 Ceolwulf abdicates throne and becomes monk in monastery. Eadbert his brother is king.
 756 Ceolwulf attacks Picts and suffers a great defeat with most of his army killed.
 758 Ceolwulf abdicates throne and becomes monk in monastery. Oswulf his son is king.
 
758 and after is a period of kings coming and kings going but by
this time the history has passed to the kingdoms of the South.
The only noteworthy event is the recording of the first invasion
by the Vikings in 793 on the coast of Northumbria.
 
 
THE KINGDOM OF MERCIA
 
 
Anglican migration began around the year 400 to 425 and eventually gained dominance in the area from Chester south to Oxford and between the Welsh marsh and the High Peak district. History is unrecorded until the rise to the Kingship by Penda in 626. Penda was a pagan king worshiping the ancient god Woodin. This put him at great odds with his neighbor kings of Northumbria and Anglia when they converted to Christianity. This in turn lead to many battles and long lasting feuds.
 In 633 Penda forms an alliance with the British king Cadwallon and attacks Northumbria and slays "Christians" in great number. Penda kills the Northumbrian king Edwin, in battle. This establishes Penda as one of the major Kings of the land. He is still not as powerful as the Northumbrian kings. In 637 he attacks King Sigebert of Anglia and kills him in battle. In 642 Penda attacks King Oswald of Northumbria and kills him. Also in 642 Penda's daughter, Cyneburga, marries Alchfrid the King of Northumbria. From this marriage the influence of the Christian faith was brought close to Penda and his family.
 
With the defeat and death of Penda in 655, Mercia fell under the dominance of its powerful and conquering neighbor to the North . For the next 50 years the Mercian kingdom was in a rebuilding and reuniting mode. With the death of Penda the throne was assumed by his son Peada who held it from 655 till 659. Under the influence of his sister, Peada was converted to Christianity in 653. When he succeeded to the throne in 655 he was the first Christian king of Mercia. He was killed in battle in southern Mercia fighting the West Saxons in 659. He was succeeded by his brother Wulfhere who ruled from 659 till 675 when he died. He was succeeded by the youngest brother Ethelred. Ethelred was king of Mercia from 675 till 690.Ethelred was married to Osthryo the daughter of Eanfrid of Northumbria. Upon his death he was succeeded by his son Ceolred . Ceolred had heredity rights to the throne but suffered from mental problems and finally died insane in 716. Needless to say the kingdom did not prosper under his rule. He dies without children. The throne is then open and is taken by Ethelbald a descendent of Creoda who was one of the original Angles settling in the land in 590 and had established a noble family line. With the succession of Ethelbald to the throne the line of the heathen king Penda comes to an end.
 
Ethelbald reins as king from 716 till 757 and proves to be a great leader. By this time the Northumbrian kingdom has declined and the kingdom of Mercia is now the most powerful kingdom in the Island. The rise in power is attributable to the leadership of Ethelbald. While Ethelbald was young the land of Mercia is ravaged by the Northumbrian conquerors and young Ethelbald is sent to the continent by his parent to escape the dangers at home. While living on the continent he learned from monks and holy men the Christian faith and even lived with a hermit. When he returned to Mercia and assumed the throne he did not discard his new learned faith. Thus he was the first real Christian ruler of Mercia. However his new faith did not remove his earthly desires. " St. Guthlac comforted him in misfortune and poverty, but St., Boniface was given to rebuke him for his immorality." The moral sense had grown so strong in matters of sex that churchmen could now brand a king as licentious. Boniface of Germany censured Ethelbald for the " two-fold sin " which he committed in nunneries by using the advantages of royal position to gain himself favors. This is the first recorded time that the church was in a powerful enough position to stand up to a king in the Island.  
In 733 Ethelbald invaded the kingdom to the South, Wessex, and in 740 he laid parts of Northumbria waste. After these raids he began to call himself "King of Britain" the first to do so, and in the lands south of the Humber the claim was good. In 757 King Ethelbald was murdered by his guards who were strict Christians and felt that he was too much a heathen still. Ethelbald was succeeded by Offa who was a distant Cousin to Ethelbald. Not much is written about Offa but his influence during his rein was great both at home and on the Continent. Offa was a contemporary of Charlemagne and held in great respect.
 
In a testimony to Offa 's position there are records of negotiations between Charlemagne and Offa in regards to the marriage of there sons and daughters. There are agreements on trade between the two countries for European goods and English coal. So here we have an English King who ruled over the greatest part of the Island and whose trade was important, and whose daughters were fit consorts for the sons of Charles the Great. During his rein he defeated the West Saxons in Oxford shire and subjugated Berkshire. He decapitated the King of East Anglia and was the master of London. He over through the throne of Kent and put down a Kentish uprising with extreme severity. This leads to a quaint twist of history. After subjugating Kent He captured their mint and inscribed his name on the coins he found there. One of the coins was a gold dinar nicely copied from an Arabic die and Off a over stamped "Rex Offa" on the face. He would have been outraged if he knew that the coin also read in Arabic " There is no God but one and Mohamed is his prophet".
 
Offa established a good relationship with the Pope and was called "Rex anglorum". The papal envoys were received in the halls of Off a in 787. in 779 Offa defeats the West Saxons at Benson and is regarded as overlord of all England. With all the seeming importance of Offa there should be more known about him but history is very scant. The only real lasting tribute to Offa is the earthen dike he had built between Mercia and the hostile British in Wales. This dike is still visible today for most of its length. Offa dies in 796 and is succeeded by his son Ecgferth. After only four months on the throne, Ecgferth dies and is succeeded by Cenwulf I who is a distant cousin of the line of Offa springing from Cenwealh the brother of Penda. Cenwulf reins from 796 till 821 and rules over Mercia, Kent, Essex Suffex and Anglia. Cenwulf's only son is killed by political opponents which shows the turmoil in the land. Upon Cenwulf's death in 821 he is succeeded by an usurper named Beornwulf whose heredity is unknown. Beornwulf rules 821 till 827.
 
  
In 822 Egbert of Wessex wins a major battle over the Mercians. In 827 Beornwulf is killed in battle with East Anglia. Beornwulf is succeeded by his son Burhred who rules 827 till 860. In 852 the Welsh under Rhodri Mawr invade Mercia and King Ethelwulf of Wessex is asked to help defend the land. This results in Mercia being a sub protectorate of Wessex. Burhred marries Ethelwulf's daughter thereby completing the dominion of Wessex. In 869 the Viking's invaded the land and again Wessex is called to defend the land.. In 871 Burhred goes on pilgrimage to Rome and dies in 874 in Rome. With the rise of Egbert as King in Wessex in 802 the power shifted away from Mercia and rested in Winchester and the throne of Wessex. From that point Mercia is in decline and the history moves to Wessex.
 
 
Summary of Mercia
 
400 Area settled by Anglian settlers
 626 Penda is elected King.
 633 Penda in alliance with Cadwallon, British King in Wales
battle Edwin of Northumbria and kill Edwin at Hatfield
Chase (Doncaster)
 642 Penda fights King Oswald of Northumbria and kills him.
Mercia established as power. Cyneburga Penda's
daughter marries Alchfrid, son of Oswy new king of
Northumbria and Christian.
 
653 Peada son of Penda converts to Christianity under the
influence of his wife Alchfleda , daughter of Oswy.
 
655 Penda killed in battle with Oswy succeeded by his son
Peada
 659 Peada killed in battle with Ethelred his brother who
succeeds him as king.
 
659 Ethelred marries Osthryu daughter of Eanfled King of
Northumbria.
 
690 Ethelred dies and is succeeded by his son Ceolred
  716 Ceolred dies insane without issue and is succeeded
by Ethelbald descendent of noble ancient Anglian
family. Mercia rises to most powerful kingdom under
Ethelbald and replaces Northumbria.
 
757 Ethelbald dies and is succeeded by Offa a distant
cousin and only living heir. Under Ethelbald and Offa
Mercia dominate history and establish trade with
continent and bring prosperity to land.
 
779 Off a defeats West Saxons at Benson becomes overlord
of all England.
 
780 Offa begins building the Dike between Wales and
England, showing great organization.
 
796 Offa dies and is succeeded by his son Ecgfirth who dies
after only four months as King and is succeeded by
Cenwulf who has heredity back to Penda.
 
821 Cenwulf dies after expanding the kingdom to include
Kent, Sussex, Essex, and East Anglia. Cenwulf's only
son is murdered by pagan enemies. His only brother is
exiled to Rome. Throne is usurped by Beornwulf.
 
822 Egbert wars against Beornwulf and wins major battle.
 
826 Beornwulf is killed in battle against East Anglia and is
succeed by his son Burhred.
 
853 Welsh under Rhodre Mawr invade Mercia and King
Ethelwulf of Wessex is called to help defend land.
Welsh repelled and Burhred marries daughter of
Ethelwulf.
 
869 Vikings invade at Chester and Burhred again asks help
of Wessex to defend land. Front is put up but Dane's
establish foothold without battle being fought.
 
871 Vikings expand presence and move to larger area and
Burhred goes to Rome on pilgrimage.
 
874 Burhred dies in Rome last of independent kings of
Mercia.
 
We now come to the end of four hundred years of history since the Germanic tribes started their migration to the Island. For the first 150 years the history was one of battles with the Romanized Celtic tribes ,now called the British, to establish dominion. The land then dominated by the invaders and the British tribes were driven North into Scotland and West into Wales. The island was divided in seven kingdoms; Kent, East Anglia, East Saxons, South Saxons, West Saxons, Mercia and Northumbria. Each kingdom waged battle with its neighbors to establish dominance. This lead to a shifting of dominance depending upon the period at hand, First Kent was dominate followed by East Anglia for a short period. Then Northumbria rose to the front and was replaced by Mercia. With the arrival of the start of the Ninth century the power shifted to the West Saxons. The West Saxon kingdom is to be the dominate power for the next 250 years and indirectly precursor to the holders of the throne up to the present day. The current holder of the throne, Elizebeth II, has heredity lines back to Egbert the West Saxon king who was crowned in 802.


 
 THE KINGDOM OF WESSEX


Summary of the history of Wessex prior to Egbert.
 
495 Cerdic and son, Cynric land in Portsmouth with title of
"Ealdorman" not king
 
508 Cerdic defeats British king named Natanleod at
Netley and establishes kingdom on West Saxons
 
519 Cerdic now called king defeats British at Salisbury
 
534 Cerdic dies at royal residence at Winchester and is
succeeded by Cynric.
 
560 Cynric dies and is succeeded by his son Ceawin. He
expands kingdom north to include Oxford ; west to Bath
and south to include Somerset, cutting "Welshmen" off
from their brothers in the modern day Wales.
 
593 Caewin is killed in battle with his brother Ceolrec who
assumes throne. Subservience to Ethelbert of Kent.
 
597 Ceolrec dies and is succeeded by Coelwulf his son.
St. Augustine arrives in Canterbury.
 
597 to 610 is dark history; not much recorded
 
610 Cynegils is king of Wessex and is assumed to be the
son of Coelwulf
626 dual kings of Wessex are Cynegils and Cwichelm
assumed to be father and son.
Cwichelm sends assassin to kill Edwin of Northumbria
but fails and Edwin invades Wessex and defeats the
dual kings and makes Wessex subservient to him.
 
628 Cynegils and Cwichelm invade Mercia and King Penda
They fight battle at Cirencester and lose. Treaty cedes
land north of the Thames to Mercia.
 
641 Cynegils dies and is succeeded by Cenwalh who is
brother of Cwichelm. Fate of Cwichelm unknown but
best guess is he was killed in battle with Penda.
Cenwalh is married to Penda's daughter
 
644 Cenwalh divorces wife as unfit woman.
 
645 Penda offended by divorce and attacks Wessex and
exiles Cenwalh to East Anglia under rule by King
Anna. Cenwalh converts to Christianity while there.
 
648 Cenwalh returns to Wessex as Christian King. Has
capitol at Dorchester not Winchester.
 
672 Cenwalh dies and kingdom falls into chaos. Throne is
assumed by Cadwalla who is fourth generation of
Ceawlin ( the race of the Gewissas) and tries to unite
lands and end chaos.
 
688 Cadwalla dies while on pilgrimage to Rome. He is
succeeded by I ne who it is recorded as a descendent of
Cerdic but not Ceawlin.
 
710 King Ine fights West Welshmen and wins battle.
 
715 King Ine fights Ceolred of Mercia and wins battle,
however there seems to be no change of lands.
 
720 King Ine issues " dooms" first written laws of the land
recorded in history.
 
726 King Ine abdicates throne to Ethelheard whose heredity
is unknown and goes on pilgrimage to Rome where he
dies.

726 - 740 Ethelheard rules with nothing of note recorded.

740-756 Cuthred II Could be brother to Ethelheard

756-757 Segebert voted out of kingdom for "his unlawful acts"

 757-786  Cynewulf whose lineage is listed only as
" back to Cerdic", assumes throne after defeating
Segebert in battle in 756.   He is murdered by  enemies

786 Cynewulf  is succeeded by his son Beorhtic.
Beorhtic is married to Eadburh, daughter of Offa King
of Mercia.  Eadburh is very power hungry woman and
offends many and is exiled to France.
 
787 Egbert has design on throne and is exiled by Beorhtic ;
can't go to Mercia because Beorihtic's wife is daughter
of King Offa and he can't go to Northumbria because
King Ethelred is also married to Offa"s daughter, Elfleda.
He frees to the court of Charles the Great in Europe.
 
802 Egbert is elected King of Wessex.
 
 
With the enthronement of Egbert as King of Wessex we begin the part of our history where there exists written accounts of events in enough detail to establish credibility to extend beyond general major events. This detail is most notably from the Anglo-Saxon chronicles written during the rein of Alfred the Great in about 892. Being written within 90 years of the events as they happened the account is considered accurate. As previously noted an event occurred at this point in history that was to have a major impact on the Island. In the year 789 news was carried to the King ( Beorhtic ) at his palace in Dorchester that three ships had arrived on the coast, probably Portsmouth. The King's Reeve " leapt on his horse and rode with a few men to the harbor, thinking that they were merchants and not enemies, commands they be sent to the King's town to pay homage". However, the "merchants" killed the reeve on the spot and all who were with him. They then sacked the town. This was a foretaste of the murderous struggle which was to devastate England for two hundred and fifty years. It was the beginning of the Viking Age.
 
A second major fact that will play a major role in the history is the one of the conversion to Christianity. By the beginning of the Ninth century the influence of Christianity covered all of Europe including the British Isle. This was the only international organization which existed. It was indeed the only coherent surviving structure and at the head was the Bishop of Rome the revived head, in a spiritual way at least, of the power of the Caesars. The Christian Church became the sole repository of learning and knowledge. The virtual monopoly of learning and the art of writing made the Churchmen indispensable to the chieftains of all lands. The clerics became the civil servants and often the statesmen of the King. They fell naturally into the role previously held by the Roman magistrates, in fact they began to wear the robes of the Roman magistrates, a garb they wear even to this day.
 
The history of Britain for the next 250 years will be dominated by the Vikings with their invasions and the interplay between the Kings and the now powerful Church. From both of these forces will come many bloody events.
 
     
With the rise of Egbert to the throne of Wessex in 802 we begin the continuous history of Britain. The kingdom of Wessex, while languishing in relative obscurity for most of the time the Saxons ruled the island, it was destined to become the lasting and dominate kingdom. In 822 Egbert fought and defeated the usurper King of Mercia, Beolwulf, at the battle of Ellandun and established himself as ruler of that kingdom. Shortly afterward he set his son, Ethelwulf, on the throne of Kent. The kingdom of Northumbria submits to his over lordship. Thus it might be said that Egbert is the first King to rule all the lands south of the Humber thereby the first King of England, although he never called himself that. In 835 Egbert fights and loses to an invading party of Danes in Kent. At this time the Danes are merely looters and are not interested in settlement , so a lose in battle merely means that the Danes got their loot and went home. In 839 Egbert fights an invasion by Danes in the district of Cornwall at Hingston Down and defeats them. While on the way back from this battle Egbert dies. He is succeeded by his son , Ethelwulf, the King of Kent. Between the years 839 and 854 history is filled with continuous battles between the Saxons and the Danes. In 855 Ethelwulf makes a pilgrimage to Rome, taking his five year old son Albert. Ethelwulf , returning from Rome, stops at the court of Charles the Bald, King of the Franks. While there, he is taken by the 13 year old daughter of Charles, Judith, and makes her his wife. When he returns to Winchester great uproar is made over this marriage. In 858, however, Ethelwulf dies and ends the uproar. He is succeeded by his oldest son Ethelbald. Ethelbald is enamored with his stepĀ­mother, who is only 3 years older than himself, and marries her. In 860 after ruling only 2 years Ethelbald dies and Judith returns to France. When she gets back to her father's court she tells him that she has always loved the the Kings forester named Baldwin and is given permission to marry him. Charles the Bald gives the newlyweds land in the North and the title Duke of Baldwin. This is the foundation of the nation of Belgium. Upon the Death of Ethelbald his brother, Ethelbert is made King of the West and East kingdom. The kingdom of Mercia is given to a younger brother Ethelred as sub-king to his brother. The fighting with the invading Danes goes on.  
In 866 Ethelbert dies and Ethelred becomes King as Ethelred I. By this time the Danes have established a permanence in Kent. In 867 the Danes march north into East Anglia and ravage the land. They establish a permanent settlement there. They continue their march North until they reach York, which by this time has become a Danish city. In 869 the King of Anglia, Edmund , is captured during battle with the Danes and tortured to death. This makes him a martyr to the Anglians. At this time the East coast of the Island is controlled by the Vikings from Kent to York.
 
In 871 Ethelred I is killed in battle at Merton Field fighting the Danes.
    
 He is succeeded by his brother Alfred. The Danes march into Somerset and Cornwall and engage the English in battle. Many encounters are made but neither side wins a decisive battle. In 875 a peace treaty is made where by the Danes will return to the north and the English will not bother them. This will result in four years of peace.
 
In 878 the Danes again invade the South. This time they have a much larger force and gain the upper hand against the Saxons. King Alfred is driven in to hiding. He takes up refuge on the Isle of Athelney. It is at this point that the famous story about the cakes takes place. The story goes like this. The King was forced to assume the dress and actions of a serf in order to avoid Danish capture. The King was housed in a serf house where the lady of the house did not know his real position. One day while making bread the bread burnt and she admonished the King with " Alack, man, why have you not turned over the bread when you see that it is burning, especially as you so much like eating it hot". This story took on a special place in the folklore of the Saxon people because it shows the humility of the great King. In 879 Alfred rally's support and forms an army to fight the Danes. The Saxon are successful and subdue the Danes and their General, Guthrum, at the battle of Ethandune in Wessex. Alfred in a gesture of peace and Christian devotion persuades Guthrum to be baptized in the Christian faith and also becomes the God-Parent to Guthrum's two sons. A peace treaty is negotiated where by the Danes will go back North and the Saxons will not interfere with them, this is known as the Treaty of Wedmore. This treaty results in 14 years of peace between the two peoples. I n 886 Alfred captures London from the Danes and begins to rebuild the city, which had fallen into great decay. At this point Alfred is recognized as King of England, however the Danes rule the East coast and the North countries of Northumbria.  
Alfred is a " learned man" and has a great interest in improving the level of learning among the Saxons. He is aware that many years of battle has resulted in the decline of literacy and knowledge in the land. He states the people of Europe at one time came to the Island to learn and get instruction, but now no one comes to get instruction. The English must go to Europe to get instruction and knowledge. He ordered the writing of the " Anglo Saxon Chronicles" and other books of history. These books were made available in all churches and people were encouraged to come and learn to read them. He also had a " dooms" written and distributed to all the cities wherein the laws could be read and know to them. This is an update of the dooms of King Ine 200 years earlier. He was very interested in the improvement of the lives and living condition of his people. This is why he is the only King of England to have been granted the title of "The Great". In 894 to 896 Alfred translated the world history of Orostius and also the History of the English Nation by the Venerable Bede. It is this last tome that most of the history of the time comes to use today.
 
   There was to be one last battle with the Danes by Alfred. In 981 Guthrum the Dane dies. Also in 891 the Viking invaders were finally driven out of France by Count Odo after a siege of six years. The Vikings were an angry lot at being denied the booty of Paris and were anxious for victory and loot. This angry army sailed north to the shores of Kent. In 892 two hundred and fifty ships appeared off Lympne in Kent with the "Great Heathen Army". The battles between the Danes and the English began anew. During a battle at Benfleet , south of London, the English defeated the Danes and captured many including the wife and two sons of the Viking General named Haesten. The English saw them as precious hostages but King Alfred sent the wife back to Haesten and had the two sons baptized with him being the godfather to one and his ally King Ethelred of Mercia godfather to the other. This made them Christian brethren and therefore removed from the wrongs of their heathen father.
 
This was very hard for the Ninth century mind to understand but is one of the reasons Alfred was later called The Great. The war went on but there is no mention of Haesten again. It may be that mercy and chivalry were not in vain. By 896 the battles were grinding to a halt. The Danes were loosing there energy to continue the war and saw that coexistence was better than dyeing. In 899 King Alfred dies. He is succeeded by his son Edward the Elder. When Edward becomes King his cousin Ethelwald, the son of King Ethelred brother of Edwards father Alfred, feels that his claim to the throne is superior to Edwards. This claim has merit because under the linage rule later to be addopted this is the way it would be. Ethelwald flees North to York and forms an alliance with the King Denmark and raises an army to challenge Edward. In the ensuing battle Edward defeats the latest Danish excursion and kills Ethelwald in the process. Guthrum II is installed as King of the Danelaw with conditions similar to the treaty of 886.
After a 10 year peace, the Danes in 910 break the peace and invade Mercia. Again Edward must fight and in a battle at Tettenhall in Staffordshire the Danes were soundly defeated. Edward's sister, Ethelfleda, was married to Ethelred, King of Mercia, and was a extraordinary woman for her time. She was known as "the Lady of the Mercians". In 911 when her husband Ethelred dies she becomes the ruler of that land. This alliance of blood and common interest between Edward of Wessex and his sister the Lady of the Mercians formed an indomitable combination. They quickly set out to complete the conquest of the Danes once and for all. This task occupied the next 10 years of history. In 918 Edward defeated the Danes at Tempsford near Bedford and King Gutrum II is killed and the Danish resistance in East Anglia is at an end. Also in 918, Ethelfreda conquered, the Danes in Leicester and received from the Danes in York their letters of submission. At this moment of triumph the Lady of the Mercians dies and the nobles of Mercia invite Edward to occupy the throne.
 
   
Alfred's son in now the undisputed King of England holding dominion over all lands south of the Humber. The British princes in Wales both North and South offer perpetual allegiance. Edward built forts at Manchester, Thelwall in Cheshire and at Bakewell in the Peak Country. The Danes of Northumbria saw their end approaching. Edward reined for five more years and died in 925 at Farndon . Sixteen days later his oldest son , Elfweard ,also dies before he can be made King. This then leaves the throne to Athelstan the only remaining son. Athelstan was the third of the great West Saxon Kings to rule the land. In 925 Athelstan invades and subdues Northumbria and its Danish king, Sihtic, and is acknowledged overlord by the Northern Nobles. Danish king Sihtic is followed by Guthrum son of Sihtic but vows allegiance to Athelstan. The last vestiges of rebellion boiled to overflow in 937 when the whole of North Britain united. Celtic, Danish, and Norwegian, Pagan, and Christian . Under Constantine, King of the Scots, and Olaf of Dublin with Viking reinforcements from Norway a united front was formed against the Saxon King. This time there was no maneuvering for position , no small battles to establish rights no negotiating and no sparring; both armies formed and faced each other to engage in one single battle with winner take all. The battle was fought at Brananburh and the rebels were overwhelmingly defeated by Athelstan. It was the greatest victory and the most decisive in all the battles that ravaged the last 125 years of fighting between the Saxons and the Danes. Ethelstan styled himself as "King of all Britannia". This claim was accepted by all on the Continent. The three sisters of Ethelstan were married (1) Edgive to Charles the Simple King of the Franks, (2) Eadhila to Hugh Capen known as Hugh the Great, Duke of France and father of soon to be King of France and (3) Edgitha to Otto, the Saxon, King of Germany and future Holy Roman Emperor. Eadhila who is married to Hugh the Great of France as noted above sends her son Louis to be raised at the Court of her brother Athelstan. This son Louis will become Louis IV , King of France. Ethelstan installed his nominee as Norwegian Prince and has him baptized at York and received his allegiance. Athelstan dies in 939 and is succeeded by his half brother Edmund I who is only 18 years of age at the time. Because of his age the rebels of the Danish North were invigorated to rebellion and several battles had to be waged. In all these Edmund I held his own and lost nothing. In 946 after only 6 years on the throne a thief broke into a banquet where the King was eating and stabbed the King a wound from which he died. He is succeeded by his brother, Edred.   Edred rules as King 946 till 955 during which time the battles with the Danes continues. There are no major victory's nor defeats for either side. There seems to be a general decline of uprisings by the Danes and some feel that the battles are coming to an end. Historians select the year 954 as the end of the first great episode in the Viking history in England. A hundred and twenty years have passed since the  Vikings first invaded the Island.

 

 For forty years English Christian society has struggled for life. For eighty years five Saxon Kings ( Alfred, Edward, Athelstan, Edmund and Edred) fought and defeated the Danes. The English rule was now established over the whole country. Yet under the English rule there was now a Danish settlement covering the great eastern plans of East Anglia and Northern Northumbria in which Danish blood and Danish customs survived . Under the rule of Edgar the consolidation of rule was step by step moved forward on a very conscious path. The Shires were reorganized, each with its sheriff or reeve ( a royal officer ) directly responsible to the Crown. The hundreds ( a civil subdivision of the shire) were created to give a voice to the citizens. The towns were prepared for defense. An elaborate system of courts were established to maintain law and order and punish criminals. Taxation was reassessed and levied on a more equitable base. Thus the foundation of the civil system that is in use today has its roots during the ancient period. The beginnings of English literature and arts have there roots also during this period. The "Catholic Homilies of Aelfric, Abbot of Eynshan" is written and is recorded as the first achievement of the English language as a literary language; the earliest vernacular to reach eminence in the whole of Europe.
In 955 Edred dies. The reign of Edred, as noted, is one of general peace even though many small battles with the Danes is waged. Poor Edred suffered with Dyspepsia ( a congenital condition resulting in trouble digesting food resulting is constant stomach upset) and therefore could not devote full attention to the tasks of being King. Edred is buried at Winchester and is succeeded by Edwy ( or Eadwig) who is son of Edmund I brother of Edred.  Edwy's brother, Edgar, is made sub-king in Mercia. There seems to be some problem with Edwy as king. A record of the coronation party records that the new King who is a lad of 18 years leaves the gathering to go to his room . This is breach of etiquette and the Bishop is sent to return him to the banquet. The Bishop finds the new king in the company of " two women, one older and one younger" and in very close embrace. The younger woman is noted as Ethelgiva and the older is called Elgiva. Later it is recorded as "King Edwy marries one named Ethelgiva" and it is assumed to be the same person. Subsequently in 958 it is recorded the the Bishop of Cantabury , Oda, causes the King to be separated from his wife because " of being too close in kin". In other records the genealogy of Edwy shows that he is son of Edmund I and his wife is Elgia. Edmund and Elgia also have a daughter named Ethelgiva. This seems to indicate that the problem with Edwy is that he marries his sister. In the following year 959 Edwy dies, and is succeeded by his brother Edgar the sub-king of Mercia. The rein of Edgar continues in a period of peace with only minor problems with the Danes. Edgar becomes known as " Edgar the Peaceful". It is during the rein of Edgar that church reformation begins. There is general movement to instill a more strict level of mores. Fundamentalism has its roots during the period. The church during the previous periods has fallen into a morass of corruption and graft. There is then a movement to clean up the church; the morals of the people can not be greater than the morals of the church leaders who are to be the example of good.


After a period of 13 years with Edgar being King, he is finally crowned in a ceremony at Bath in 973. This is the ceremony that has been the foundation of the crowning ceremony of all Kings and Queens of England to this day. History does not record the reason for the delay in crowning Edgar, but historians feel that there was a question as to his possible envolement in the seeming untimely death of his brother, Edwy. This would be knotty problem for the time. First there is a problem with Edwy and the marriage to his sister and the subsequent turmoil followed by the implication that his murderer is now the King, this then leaves the people of the day with the dilemma of leaser of two evils. Edgar dies in 975 which has lead some to speculate that Edgar in his later years repented for acts done and was therefore given permission to be crowned. Edgar is succeeded by Edward his son by his second wife Ethelfled, The Duck. At the time of succession Edward is 13 years old. This then leads to his mother, The Duck, being the real power who rules as regent. This is further complicated by the fact that there is also a son of Edgar , (Ethelred ), by his first wife Elfreda, who is also alive and claims superior succession rights. Ethelred and his mother ( Elfreda ) form a counter movement to the Kingship of Edward. In the year 978 three years after becoming King, Edward is murdered at Corfe Castle in Donetshire by agents of Ethelred and his mother Elfreda. Thus at the age of 10 years Ethelred is crowned as King at Kingston-on-Thames . From this beginning it is not surprising that we now embark upon a period that is recorded as the most inept of all time. With the kingships of Edwy and Edgar and their questionable morals much decay was inflected into the ruling faction. This followed by the infighting between the heirs, Edward and Ethelred, caused more decay and disjointed leadership. All this was to naturally give the Danes much encouragement to renew their efforts to gain control of the Island. During the first twelve years of Ethelred II `s rein the history is one long list of battles between the Saxon's and the Danes. Battles are fought and ransoms are paid to the Danes followed by more battles and more bribes. There exists a complete absence of any direction or plan. The King is surrounded by able advisors but he seems to ignore them and embark upon non-understandable plans and actions. All this leads some to ask " is the King completely bereft of reason? ". In the year 994 the King of Denmark, Sweyn Forkbeard sails up the Thames and besieges London. This leads Ethelred to pay a large ransom for the city. After payment, Sweyn returns to Denmark. In 1002 Ethelred is guilty of his biggest lapse of judgment. 

On St. Brice Day he orders all Danes living in England to be slain. One of the victims was Gunnhild, wife of Pallig a chief Viking and also the sister of the Danish King. This massacre naturally upsets the Danes beyond self constraint. Therefore it is not surprising to record that the King of Denmark, Sweyn Forkbeard, in the year 1003 invades England by sailing up the Humber and sets up a camp. Sweyn has sworn revenge upon the islanders. Sweyn is accompanied by his son Canute, which much will be heard from later. By late 1014 Sweyn has gained control of the North up to Edinburgh , West to Bath, South to London leaving only the Southwest un-conquered. All the areas of his march record massacres which shows how widely he applied retaliation. At this point Ethelred II flees to Normandy to the protection of his Brother-in-law Richard, Dude of Normandy. Sweyn is proclaimed King of England. One month after becoming King of England Sweyn dies. The Nobles of England, called Wittin is Saxon, recall Ethelred to be king on condition he will be " a better king than before". So in 1015 the land is divided with Ethelred ruling the North with his son, Edmund ruling Northumbria, and Canute ruling the South ( Wessex, Somerset, South Mercia and Kent). In 1016 Ethelred II dies at the age of 49, bringing to an end to this sorry era. History will give Ethelred the title of the "unready" which is a take off on the real name of " redeless " rede is Saxon for council. The young Danish prince, Canute, set forth to claim the English crown. At this time the flame of Alfred's line rose again in Ethelred's son, Edmund- Edmund Ironside. At twenty years of age he was famous. He had, while acting as general for his father, gathered forces and in a brilliant campaign struck a succession of heavy blows against the Danes. He liberated London and large areas around London. Following Ethelred's death in 1016 the Witins proclaimed Edmund King. Canute is King of the Danes in the North. In spite of all odds Edmund Ironside was strong enough to partition the realm and make peace with Canute. This follows a battle at Ashingdon in Essex where Canute defeats Edmund but a treaty is made whereby they split the land with an agreement that Canute will succeed Edmund. Edmund Ironsides then set himself to rally his forces for the renewal of the struggle; but in 1016 at the age of twenty two years , Edmund Ironside died. His death considering his young age was probably the result of murder at the hands of forces of Canute. With his death the entire realm abandoned itself to despair. This despair was present even before Edmund was king. The aristocracy of the day along with the leaders of the church had decried the decay that existed in the royal line. At Southampton in 1016 while Edmund was still alive the nobles both lay and spiritual had agreed to excise the royal line of Ethelred from the throne. Edmund was to be last King from the house of Wessex.

 Canute was declared king by the witten in 1016 upon Edmund's death. Canute sends the two sons of Edmund Ironsides, ( Edward and Edmund )  to the King of Sweden with orders to have them executed. The king of Sweden has no stomach for this and sends the two lads to Hungary for protection. Edmund dies while in Hungary at a young age. Edward known as The Exile marries the niece of Henry III of Germany and has a daughter named Margaret who marries Malcom III of Scotland. This line will be the common thread of heredity between ancient Saxon and modern kings. In 1017 Canute orders the murder of Edwy son of Ethelred by his first wife and half brother to Edward and Alfred exiled in Normandy with their mother Emma Thus the only remaining direct heirs of Ethelred still living are the exiles in Normandy. The only other heirs are the two sons of Edmund Ironsides, Edmund and Edward , both living in Hungary.   At this point ( in the year 1017) Canute marries the widow of Ethelred, Emma, and the mother of the heirs to the house of Wessex ,12 year old Alfred and 10 year old Edward. This action was effective in forestalling any effort by Robert the Duke of Normandy to enter into actions to uphold the rights of his nephew's, Edward and Alfred.  Canute thus became the ruling sovereign of the Southern half of the Island as King of England. He was already the King of Denmark and had made good on his claim as King of Norway. Scotland offered their homage and the princes of Wales gave their submission to his over lordship. His daughter, Gunhild, was married to Henry III King of Germany who was to expand the kingdom to its largest dominance in Europe. Canute liked the Saxon way of life and therefore chose England as his residence. He embarked on a course to instill good government in his rein. He built churches and professed high devotion to the Christian faith. He honored the memory of St. Edmund the Saxon martyred king of East Anglia killed by the Danes. He also honored the murdered Bishop of Canterbury, St. Alphege. who was killed by the Danes when he refused to order the payment of bribes. In 1027 Canute made a pilgrimage to Rome to attend the coronation of the Pope. From Rome he wrote his people promising to administer equal justice and laying particular emphasis on the payment of Church dues. All in all he was a good king and ruled with justice and brought peace to a ravaged land.
In 1035 Canute dies. He left three sons; two by Elgiva of Northampton his first wife, Swyn and Harold; and one named Hardicanute by Emma the widow of Ethelred and Canute's second wife. Upon the death of Canute Hardicanute becomes King of Denmark, Swyn becomes the King of Norway, and Harold becomes the King of England. All three sons are a through-back to the heathen Viking ways. They are ignorant and boorish which leads to a longing for a return of the old Saxon line. Harold ruled from 1035 till 1040 with cruelty and abandon. Hardicanute ruled 1040 till 1042 of which it is recorded " he never did anything worthy of a king while he reined" . 

In 1036 Alfred the son of Ethelred and Emma comes to England from Normandy ostensibly to visit his again widowed mother.      While traveling  towards London he and his party are detained by a force of men under the leadership of the Earl of Wessex, Godwin. All in the party are killed and the prince, Alfred, is blinded by hot pokers being thrust into his eyes. He is taken to the Abby at Ely where he dies from the wounds. Guilt for the crime is generally ascribed to Godwin. Godwin's history is clouded but he seems to have been a landowner when the Danish army marched across Essex. He assisted the Danish general and gave them his homage. In return the Danes rewarded him with larger land grants probably in Kent. By the time of the murder of Alfred, Godwin was the leader of the Danish Party in England and chief advisor to King Harold. He is married to Gytha the sister of Ulf a Danish Earl who is married to Canute's sister. This makes Godwin a brother-in-law to Canute. In as much as the King, Harold, is ineffective the power of Godwin is great. In 1040 Harold dies and the throne is assumed by Hardicanute who comes over from Denmark. He is not any better than his brother and unrest continues to build. In 1042 Hardicanute dies and the throne of England is vacant and the sons of Canute have no heirs. Living in Normandy is the remaining son of Ethelred II and Emma the brother of the murdered Alfred , the quiet and sickly Edward. In these days of reviving anarchy all men's minds turned to the search for some stable institution. This could only be found in the line of Alfred the Great. This line possessed unequaled claims to longevity. It was the line that produced six generations of greatness and had provided the resistance to the Danes. This Saxon line was the oldest in Europe. The rulers of France, the Capets, two generations back were little more than just lords of Paris; the powerful Dukes of Normandy were little more than roving marauders two generations previous. The German Kings, called the Holy Roman Emperors, were masters of only small provinces and cities. While the house of Wessex had ruled as Kings for over three hundred years. The ever ambitious Godwin sees that he can consolidate his power by uniting the Danes and the Saxons together under the kingship of Edward. He goes to Normandy and bargains with Edward. He uses the threat of putting a nephew of Canute's on the throne if Edward does not meet the conditions of Godwin which include the exclusion of Norman advisors in England. Edward makes no difficulty with Godwin and is welcomed home to England and is crowned King in 1042. Edward was a quiet and reflective man who had spent all his life in the solitude of the monastery and knew nothing but religion and prayer. Such a man was no match for Godwin and his drive for power. For the next 24 years with a short interlude Godwin and his sons ruled the land and it is recorded in the Chronicle of Florence of Worcester " He had been to such an extent exalted as if he were King of England".
Edward known to later ages as the "Confessor" was a kindly, weak, chubby, albino. He was quiet and pious without a" liking for war nor of  much aptitude for administration". Norman prelates appeared in the English Church and in the government to the degree allowed by Godwin. Edward in 1045 was obliged to marry Godwin's daughter, Edith. We are assured by contemporary writers that the marriage was no more than formal and Edward probably died a virgin. The marriage of course had no children. Godwin ruled much as a dictator and as was the custom in that day nepotism was the way of life. Large land grants and titles were bestowed on Godwin's sons. This resulted in a rift between the increasing power of the Norman advisors and Godwin and in 1051 the Norman party succeeded in driving Godwin into Exile. The murder of Alfred was the foundation of the trial and subsequent disgrace of Godwin. He fled to Count Baldwins Court (Flanders) for refuge. During the absence of Godwin the Duke of Normandy, William, paid a visit to Edward during which it is argued that Edward promised the throne of England to William upon his death. The following year 1052 Godwin in concert with his sons returns to England and forced Edward to restore his lands and titles. In 1053 Godwin dies after 35 years of power and influence in England greater than any non king before or since. As a side note, in 1052 Edward begins the construction of Westminster Abbey the site of the coronation of every monarch of England since 1066. It is also the resting place of most of the kings and queens since that time .

With the death of Godwin his estate is divided up between his three sons. Harold receives the land in the South Kent , Wessex and Somerset. Swyn gets Mercia and Tostig becomes the Earl of Northumbria. Swyn gets into trouble when he rapes a nun and has to flee to the continent. Harold assumes the power of " advisor to the King " . In 1064 Harold Godwinson visits the court of William of Normandy and is reported to have given an oath to support William's claim to the throne. In 1066 on January 5 Edward the Confessor dies and leaving no heirs ends the line of Saxon Kings which have ruled the land for over six hundred years. Upon his deathbed Harold claims that Edward had conveyed the throne to him. The nobles quickly bestow the crown on Harold as King of England. William in Normandy prepares to invade to claim the throne he feels was promised to him. Trouble is also brewing in the North where Tostig , Harold's exiled and revengeful half brother, is feeling that he has a claim and forms an alliance with the King of Norway , Harold Hardrada a descendent of Canute, who feels that Harold Godwinson is an usurper of the Danish throne in England and together they mount an uprising in the North. Harold Godwinson with the King's army march north to meet the uprising. In September he heard that the rebels had sailed up the Humber and beaten the forces of the Earl Edwin and Morcar and then marched north to York. Harold in a very fast march surprises the invaders ten miles West of York at Stamford Bridge and the battle began. At first the Norwegian army held and deflected the English. Harold using a feinted retreat, a common tactic of the day, drew the invaders out of their defenses. This was Harold's break and he then made his advance. Harold Hardrada was killed by an arrow to the throat and Tostig assumed the command. Harold offered his half brother peace but the offer was refused. A reinforcement of Norsemen arrived from the ships but their march had left them exhausted and not much help. The battle was fierce but the English won a decisive victory. Almost all the invaders were killed . Harold buried the body of Harold Hardrada in six feet of English soil with the remark that " that is all he will own". Tostig was also killed but how is not noted. The son of Hardrada, Olaf, was sent back to Norway.


The battle at Stamford Bridge was a great victory, however it is overshadowed by Hastings and does not get the historical note that it deserves.  It marks the last invasion by Vikings in English history ending over 200 years of strife.  It also marks the last victory by the Saxon English against the forces trying to take the land they themselves took over 600 years before. The victory however was not long to be enjoyed for the day after the battle Harold received news that William the "Bastard" had landed in the South.


A summary of the Norman history is now required in order to show the interplay of all European history. The history of the Scandinavian's from 550 to 780 is nonexistent. The only facts known is that tribal settlement fell into three or four main groups, the Norwegians on the western coast of the Scandinavian peninsula, the Danes in Jutland (Denmark) , the Swedes and the Goths facing the Baltic Sea in the Eastern part of the peninsula. All of these tribes were seafarers and fishermen from the earliest of times. There civilization was a blend of primitive barbarism and some culture. There strongest organization was the group, usually made up of family members, with its blood feuds with a strong eye for an eye justice. Women held an equal place in society and a woman could hold high office and Queens were not uncommon. Because of the lack of arable land and the fisherman history the general means of survival became the raiding of neighboring lands and making off with goods and treasure. This became the mark of a good and brave man when he was successful in plunder. The basic creed was that every man was to rely on himself and his own wisdom and cunning. There developed an acceptance of any means employed to gain in wealth and position, leading to the custom of great deceit and cruelty. There main God was Woden ( Odin ) the God of War a wily and inspired chief of the war band and lover of battle, adventure, feasting and minstrels, who called the slain heroes of war to the hall of fame in Valhalla. The second most God was Thor a rough, fighting farmers god, with his invincible thunder-hammer, who protected the boundaries and warred with the clumsy giants of the frost . Both gods were appeased at times by human sacrifice.    
  
By the years 793 and 794 the Norsemen began the western push and commenced to raid the shores of Northern England and the coastal towns in Northern Germany and France. By the year 834 the raids had become wider in scope and more frequent. Charlemagne both fought and bribed the Vikings in an effort to control the constant irritant. The Saxons in England did the same as we have recorded above. By the year 866 the Vikings had advanced to the point were raids on Paris were made and the city was burnt to the ground great ransom was paid to get rid of the raiders only to have it repeated in 877 and another ransom paid. There arose a strong opponent in the person of Robert, The Strong, Marquess of Neusria and the Vikings withdrew from France where strong opposition now existed and chances of success were small.  There was a better opportunity in the island in the north , England. This lead to the almost 100 year battle between the Saxon's and the Viking's.  Back in France Charles "the Bald" made piece with the Viking's and their leader Rollo by giving them land to the north of Paris.  There they formed what was to become Normandy named after the Northmen as the French called them
 
 
 
 
The story takes a break here because the balance "as written" was lost in a hard drive crash and  is the process of reconstruction.    It will be uploaded when available. 
 
 
  

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