of Wessex, King Æthelwulf

of Wessex, King Æthelwulf

Male UNKNOWN - 858

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  1. 1.  of Wessex, King Æthelwulfof Wessex, King Æthelwulf was born in UNKNOWN in Kingdom of Wessex (England) (son of of Wessex, King Egbert); died on 13 Jan 858 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was buried after 13 Jan 858 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Between 839 and 858; King of Wessex

    Notes:

    Æthelwulf

    King of Wessex
    Reign 839–858
    Predecessor Egbert
    Successor Æthelbald
    Died 13 January 858
    Burial Steyning then Old Minster, Winchester; remains may now be in Winchester Cathedral[1]
    Spouse Osburh
    Judith
    Issue
    Æthelstan, King of Kent
    Æthelswith, Queen of Mercia
    Æthelbald, King of Wessex
    Æthelberht, King of Wessex
    Æthelred, King of Wessex
    Alfred, King of Wessex
    House House of Wessex
    Father Egbert

    Æthelwulf
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Æthelwulf (Old English for "Noble Wolf";[2] died 13 January 858) was King of Wessex from 839 to 858.[a] In 825, his father, King Egbert, defeated King Beornwulf of Mercia, ending a long Mercian dominance over Anglo-Saxon England south of the Humber. Egbert sent Æthelwulf with an army to Kent, where he expelled the Mercian sub-king and was himself appointed sub-king. After 830, Egbert maintained good relations with Mercia, and this was continued by Æthelwulf when he became king in 839, the first son to succeed his father as West Saxon king since 641. The Vikings were not a major threat to Wessex during Æthelwulf's reign. In 843, he was defeated in a battle against the Vikings at Carhampton in Somerset, but he achieved a major victory at the Battle of Aclea in 851. In 853 he joined a successful Mercian expedition to Wales to restore the traditional Mercian hegemony, and in the same year his daughter Æthelswith married King Burgred of Mercia. In 855 Æthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome. In preparation he gave a "decimation", donating a tenth of his personal property to his subjects; he appointed his eldest surviving son Æthelbald to act as King of Wessex in his absence, and his next son Æthelberht to rule Kent and the south-east. Æthelwulf spent a year in Rome, and on his way back he married Judith, the daughter of the West Frankish King Charles the Bald.

    When Æthelwulf returned to England, Æthelbald refused to surrender the West Saxon throne, and Æthelwulf agreed to divide the kingdom, taking the east and leaving the west in Æthelbald's hands. On Æthelwulf's death in 858 he left Wessex to Æthelbald and Kent to Æthelberht, but Æthelbald's death only two years later led to the reunification of the kingdom.

    In the 20th century Æthelwulf's reputation among historians was poor: he was seen as excessively pious and impractical, and his pilgrimage was viewed as a desertion of his duties. Historians in the 21st century see him very differently, as a king who consolidated and extended the power of his dynasty, commanded respect on the continent, and dealt more effectively than most of his contemporaries with Viking attacks. He is regarded as one of the most successful West Saxon kings, who laid the foundations for the success of his son, Alfred the Great.

    Background
    At the beginning of the 9th century, England was almost completely under the control of the Anglo-Saxons, with Mercia and Wessex the most important southern kingdoms. Mercia was dominant until the 820s, and it exercised overlordship over East Anglia and Kent, but Wessex was able to maintain its independence from its more powerful neighbour. Offa, King of Mercia from 757 to 796, was the dominant figure of the second half of the 8th century. King Beorhtric of Wessex (786–802), married Offa's daughter in 789. Beorhtric and Offa drove Æthelwulf's father Egbert into exile, and he spent several years at the court of Charlemagne in Francia. Egbert was the son of Ealhmund, who had briefly been King of Kent in 784. Following Offa's death, King Coenwulf of Mercia (796–821) maintained Mercian dominance, but it is uncertain whether Beorhtric ever accepted political subordination, and when he died in 802 Egbert became king, perhaps with the support of Charlemagne.[5] For two hundred years three kindreds had fought for the West Saxon throne, and no son had followed his father as king. Egbert's best claim was that he was the great-great-grandson of Ingild, brother of King Ine (688–726), and in 802 it would have seemed very unlikely that he would establish a lasting dynasty.[6] Almost nothing is recorded of the first twenty years of Egbert's reign, apart from campaigns against the Cornish in the 810s.[7] The historian Richard Abels argues that the silence of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was probably intentional, concealing Egbert's purge of Beorhtric's magnates and suppression of rival royal lines.[8] Relations between Mercian kings and their Kentish subjects were distant. Kentish ealdormen did not attend the court of King Coenwulf, who quarrelled with Archbishop Wulfred of Canterbury (805–832) over the control of Kentish monasteries; Coenwulf's primary concern seems to have been to gain access to the wealth of Kent. His successors Ceolwulf I (821–23) and Beornwulf (823–26) restored relations with Archbishop Wulfred, and Beornwulf appointed a sub-king of Kent, Baldred.[9]

    England had suffered Viking raids in the late 8th century, but no attacks are recorded between 794 and 835, when the Isle of Sheppey in Kent was ravaged.[10] In 836 Egbert was defeated by the Vikings at Carhampton in Somerset,[7] but in 838 he was victorious over an alliance of Cornishmen and Vikings at the Battle of Hingston Down, reducing Cornwall to the status of a client kingdom.[11]

    Family
    Æthelwulf was the son of Egbert, King of Wessex from 802 to 839. His mother's name is unknown, and he had no recorded siblings. He is known to have had two wives in succession, and so far as is known, Osburh, the senior of the two, was the mother of all his children. She was the daughter of Oslac, described by Asser, biographer of their son Alfred the Great, as "King Æthelwulf's famous butler",[b] a man who was descended from Jutes who had ruled the Isle of Wight.[13][14] Æthelwulf had six known children. His eldest son, Æthelstan, was old enough to be appointed King of Kent in 839, so he must have been born by the early 820s, and he died in the early 850s.[c] The second son, Æthelbald, is first recorded as a charter witness in 841, and if, like Alfred, he began to attest when he was around six, he would have been born around 835; he was King of Wessex from 858 to 860. Æthelwulf's third son, Æthelberht, was probably born around 839 and was king from 860 to 865. The only daughter, Æthelswith, married Burgred, King of Mercia, in 853.[16] The other two sons were much younger: Æthelred was born around 848 and was king from 865 to 871, and Alfred was born around 849 and was king from 871 to 899.[17] In 856 Æthelwulf married Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald, King of West Francia and future Holy Roman Emperor, and his wife Ermentrude. Osburh had probably died, although it is possible that she had been repudiated.[d] There were no children from Æthelwulf's marriage to Judith, and after his death she married his eldest surviving son and successor, Æthelbald.[13]

    Early life
    Æthelwulf was first recorded in 825, when Egbert won the crucial Battle of Ellandun against King Beornwulf of Mercia, ending the long Mercian ascendancy over southern England. Egbert followed it up by sending Æthelwulf with Eahlstan, Bishop of Sherborne, and Wulfheard, Ealdorman of Hampshire, with a large army into Kent to expel sub-king Baldred.[e] Æthelwulf was descended from kings of Kent, and he was sub-king of Kent, and of Surrey, Sussex and Essex, which were then included in the sub-kingdom, until he inherited the throne of Wessex in 839.[22] His sub-kingship is recorded in charters, in some of which King Egbert acted with his son's permission,[13] such as a grant in 838 to Bishop Beornmod of Rochester, and Æthelwulf himself issued a charter as King of Kent in the same year.[23] Unlike their Mercian predecessors, who alienated the Kentish people by ruling from a distance, Æthelwulf and his father successfully cultivated local support by governing through Kentish ealdormen and promoting their interests.[24] In Abels' view, Egbert and Æthelwulf rewarded their friends and purged Mercian supporters.[25][f] Historians take differing views on the attitude of the new regime to the Kentish church. At Canterbury in 828 Egbert granted privileges to the bishopric of Rochester, and according to the historian of Anglo-Saxon England Simon Keynes, Egbert and Æthelwulf took steps to secure the support of Archbishop Wulfred.[27] However, the medievalist Nicholas Brooks argues that Wulfred's Mercian origin and connections proved a liability. Æthelwulf seized an estate in East Malling from the Canterbury church on the ground that it had only been granted by Baldred when he was in flight from the West Saxon forces; the issue of archiepiscopal coinage was suspended for several years; and the only estate Wulfred was granted after 825 he received from King Wiglaf of Mercia.[28]

    In 829 Egbert conquered Mercia, only for Wiglaf to recover his kingdom a year later.[29] The scholar D. P. Kirby sees Wiglaf's restoration in 830 as a dramatic reversal for Egbert, which was probably followed by his loss of control of the London mint and the Mercian recovery of Essex and Berkshire,[30] and the historian Heather Edwards states that his "immense conquest could not be maintained".[7] However, in the view of Keynes: It is interesting ... that both Egbert and his son Æthelwulf appear to have respected the separate identity of Kent and its associated provinces, as if there appears to have been no plan at this stage to absorb the southeast into an enlarged kingdom stretching across the whole of southern England. Nor does it seem to have been the intention of Egbert and his successors to maintain supremacy of any kind over the kingdom of Mercia ... It is quite possible that Egbert had relinquished Mercia of his own volition; and there is no suggestion that any residual antagonism affected relations between the rulers of Wessex and Mercia thereafter.[31]

    In 838 King Egbert held an assembly at Kingston in Surrey, where Æthelwulf may have been consecrated asking by the archbishop. Egbert restored the East Malling estate to Wulfred's successor as Archbishop of Canterbury, Ceolnoth, in return for a promise of "firm and unbroken friendship" for himself and Æthelwulf and their heirs, and the same condition is specified in a grant to the see of Winchester. Egbert thus ensured support for Æthelwulf, who became the first son to succeed his father as West Saxon king since 641.[32] At the same meeting Kentish monasteries chose Æthelwulf as their lord, and he undertook that, after his death, they would have freedom to elect their heads. Wulfred had devoted his archiepiscopate to fighting against secular power over Kentish monasteries, but Ceolnoth now surrendered effective control to Æthelwulf, whose offer of freedom from control after his death was unlikely to be honoured by his successors. Kentish ecclesiastics and laymen now looked for protection against Viking attacks to West Saxon rather than Mercian royal power. [33] Egbert's conquests brought him wealth far greater than his predecessors had enjoyed, and enabled him to purchase the support which secured the West Saxon throne for his descendants.[34] The stability brought by the dynastic succession of Egbert and Æthelwulf led to an expansion of commercial and agrarian resources, and to an expansion of royal income.[35] The wealth of the West Saxon kings was also increased by the agreement in 838–39 with Archbishop Ceolnoth for the previously independent West Saxon minsters to accept the king as their secular lord in return for his protection.[36] However, there was no certainty that the hegemony of Wessex would prove more permanent than that of Mercia.[37]

    King of Wessex
    When Æthelwulf succeeded to the throne of Wessex in 839, his experience as sub-king of Kent had given him valuable training in kingship, and he in turn made his own sons sub-kings.[38] According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, on his accession "he gave to his son Æthelstan the kingdom of the people of Kent, and the kingdom of the East Saxons [Essex] and of the people of Surrey and of the South Saxons [Sussex]". However, Æthelwulf did not give Æthelstan the same power as his father had given him, and although Æthelstan attested his father's charters[g] as king, he does not appear to have been given the power to issue his own charters. Æthelwulf exercised authority in the south-east and made regular visits there. He governed Wessex and Kent as separate spheres, and assemblies in each kingdom were only attended by the nobility of that country. The historian Janet Nelson says that "Æthelwulf ran a Carolingian-style family firm of plural realms, held together by his own authority as father-king, and by the consent of distinct élites." He maintained his father's policy of governing Kent through ealdormen appointed from the local nobility and advancing their interests, but gave less support to the church.[39] In 843 Æthelwulf granted ten hides at Little Chart to Æthelmod, the brother of the leading Kentish ealdorman Ealhere, and Æthelmod succeeded to the post on his brother's death in 853.[40] In 844 Æthelwulf granted land at Horton in Kent to Ealdorman Eadred, with permission to transfer parts of it to local landowners; in a culture of reciprocity, this created a network of mutual friendships and obligations between the beneficiaries and the king.[41] Archbishops of Canterbury were firmly in the West Saxon king's sphere. His ealdormen enjoyed a high status, and were sometimes placed higher than the king's sons in lists of witnesses to charters.[42] His reign is the first for which there is evidence of royal priests,[43] and Malmesbury Abbey regarded him as an important benefactor, who is said to have been the donor of a shrine for the relics of Saint Aldhelm.[44]

    After 830, Egbert had followed a policy of maintaining good relations with Mercia, and this was continued by Æthelwulf when he became king. London was traditionally a Mercian town, but in the 830s it was under West Saxon control; soon after Æthelwulf's accession it reverted to Mercian control.[45] King Wiglaf of Mercia died in 839 and his successor, Berhtwulf, revived the Mercian mint in London; the two kingdoms appear to have struck a joint issue in the mid-840s, possibly indicating West Saxon help in reviving Mercian coinage, and showing the friendly relations between the two powers. Berkshire was still Mercian in 844, but by 849 it was part of Wessex, as Alfred was born in that year at the West Saxon royal estate in Wantage, then in Berkshire.[46][h] However, the local Mercian ealdorman, also called Æthelwulf, retained his position under the West Saxon kings.[48] Berhtwulf died in 852 and cooperation with Wessex continued under Burgred, his successor as King of Mercia, who married Æthelwulf's daughter Æthelswith in 853. In the same year Æthelwulf assisted Burgred in a successful attack on Wales to restore the traditional Mercian hegemony over the Welsh.[49] In 9th-century Mercia and Kent, royal charters were produced by religious houses, each with its own style, but in Wessex there was a single royal diplomatic tradition, probably by a single agency acting for the king. This may have originated in Egbert's reign, and it becomes clear in the 840s, when Æthelwulf had a Frankish secretary called Felix.[50] There were strong contacts between the West Saxon and Carolingian courts. The Annals of St Bertin took particular interest in Viking attacks on Britain, and in 852 Lupus, the Abbot of Ferrières and a protégé of Charles the Bald, wrote to Æthelwulf congratulating him on his victory over the Vikings and requesting a gift of lead to cover his church roof. Lupus also wrote to his "most beloved friend" Felix, asking him to manage the transport of the lead.[51] Unlike Canterbury and the south-east, Wessex did not see a sharp decline in the standard of Latin in charters in the mid-9th century, and this may have been partly due to Felix and his continental contacts.[52] Lupus thought that Felix had great influence over the King.[13] Charters were mainly issued from royal estates in counties which were the heartland of ancient Wessex, namely Hampshire, Somerset, Wiltshire and Dorset, with a few in Kent.[53]

    An ancient division between east and west Wessex continued to be important in the 9th century; the boundary
    was Selwood Forest on the borders of Somerset, Dorset and Wiltshire. The two bishoprics of Wessex were
    Selborne in the west and Winchester in the east. Æthelwulf's family connections seem to have been west of
    Selwood, but his patronage was concentrated further east, particularly on Winchester, where his father was
    buried, and where he appointed Swithun to succeed Helmstan as bishop in 852–853. However, he made a grant
    of land in Somerset to his leading ealdorman, Eanwulf, and on 26 December 846 he granted a large estate to
    himself in South Hams in west Devon. He thus changed it from royal demesne, which he was obliged to pass
    on to his successor as king, to bookland, which could be transferred as the owner pleased, so he could make
    land grants to followers to improve security in a frontier zone.[54]
    Viking threat
    Viking raids increased in the early 840s on both sides of the English Channel, and in 843 Æthelwulf was
    defeated by the companies of 35 Danish ships at Carhampton in Somerset. In 850 sub-king Æthelstan and
    Ealdorman Ealhhere of Kent won a naval victory over a large Viking fleet off Sandwich in Kent, capturing nine
    ships and driving off the rest. Æthelwulf granted Ealhhere a large estate in Kent, but Æthelstan is not heard of
    Coin of King Æthelwulf:
    "EĐELVVLF REX", moneyer Manna,
    Canterbury[58]
    again, and probably died soon afterwards. The following year the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records five different
    attacks on southern England. A Danish fleet of 350 Viking ships took London and Canterbury, and when King
    Berhtwulf of Mercia went to their relief he was defeated. The Vikings then moved on to Surrey, where they
    were defeated by Æthelwulf and his son Æthelbald at the Battle of Aclea. According to the Anglo-Saxon
    Chronicle the West Saxon levies "there made the greatest slaughter of a heathen that we have heard tell of up to
    the present day". The Chronicle frequently reported victories during Æthelwulf's reign won by levies led by
    ealdormen, unlike the 870s when royal command was emphasised, reflecting a more consensual style of
    leadership in the earlier period.[55]
    In 850 a Danish army wintered on Thanet, and in 853 ealdormen Ealhhere of Kent and Huda of Surrey were
    killed in a battle against the Vikings, also on Thanet. In 855 Danish Vikings stayed over the winter on Sheppey,
    before carrying on their pillaging of eastern England.[56] However, during Æthelwulf's reign Viking attacks
    were contained and did not present a major threat.[57]
    Coinage
    The silver penny was almost the only coin used in middle and later
    Anglo-Saxon England. Æthelwulf's coinage came from a main mint in
    Canterbury and a secondary one at Rochester; both had been used by
    Egbert for his own coinage after he gained control of Kent. During
    Æthelwulf's reign, there were four main phases of the coinage
    distinguishable at both mints, though they are not exactly parallel and it
    is uncertain when the transitions took place. The first issue at
    Canterbury carried a design known as Saxoniorum, which had been
    used by Egbert for one of his own issues. This was replaced by a
    portrait design in about 843, which can be subdivided further; the
    earliest coins have cruder designs than the later ones. At the Rochester
    mint the sequence was reversed, with an initial portrait design replaced, also in about 843, by a non-portrait
    design carrying a cross-and-wedges pattern on the obverse.[13][59]
    In about 848 both mints switched to a common design known as Dor¯b¯/Cant – the characters "Dor¯b¯" on the
    obverse of these coins indicate either Dorobernia (Canterbury) or Dorobrevia (Rochester), and "Cant",
    referring to Kent, appeared on the reverse. It is possible that the Canterbury mint continued to produce portrait
    coins at the same time. The Canterbury issue seems to have been ended in 850–851 by Viking raids, though it is
    possible that Rochester was spared, and the issue may have continued there. The final issue, again at both
    mints, was introduced in about 852; it has an inscribed cross on the reverse and a portrait on the obverse.
    Æthelwulf's coinage became debased by the end of his reign, and though the problem became worse after his
    death it is possible that the debasement prompted the changes in coin type from as early as 850.[60]
    Æthelwulf's first Rochester coinage may have begun when he was still sub-king of Kent, under Egbert. A hoard
    of coins deposited at the beginning of Æthelwulf's reign in about 840, found in the Middle Temple in London,
    contained 22 coins from Rochester and two from Canterbury of the first issue of each mint. Some numismatists
    argue that the high proportion of Rochester coins means that the issue must have commenced before Egbert's
    death, but an alternative explanation is that whoever hoarded the coins simply happened to have access to more
    Rochester coins. No coins were issued by Æthelwulf's sons during his reign.[61]
    Ceolnoth, Archbishop of Canterbury throughout Æthelwulf's reign, also minted coins of his own at Canterbury:
    there were three different portrait designs, thought to be contemporary with each of the first three of
    Æthelwulf's Canterbury issues. These were followed by an inscribed cross design that was uniform with
    Æthelwulf's final coinage. At Rochester, Bishop Beornmod produced only one issue, a cross-and-wedges
    design which was contemporary with Æthelwulf's Saxoniorum issue.[62]
    Charter S 316 dated 855, in which
    Æthelwulf granted land at Ulaham in
    Kent to his minister Ealdhere.[64]
    In the view of the numismatists Philip Grierson and Mark Blackburn, the mints of Wessex, Mercia and East
    Anglia were not greatly affected by changes in political control: "the remarkable continuity of moneyers which
    can be seen at each of these mints suggests that the actual mint organisation was largely independent of the
    royal administration and was founded in the stable trading communities of each city".[63]
    Decimation Charters
    The early 20th-century historian W. H. Stevenson observed that: "Few
    things in our early history have led to so much discussion" as
    Æthelwulf's Decimation Charters;[65] a hundred years later the charter
    expert Susan Kelly described them as "one of the most controversial
    groups of Anglo-Saxon diplomas".[66] Both Asser and the Anglo-Saxon
    Chronicle say that Æthelwulf gave a decimation,[i] in 855, shortly
    before leaving on pilgrimage to Rome. According to the Chronicle
    "King Æthelwulf conveyed by charter the tenth part of his land
    throughout all his kingdom to the praise of God and to his own eternal
    salvation". However, Asser states that "Æthelwulf, the esteemed king,
    freed the tenth part of his whole kingdom from royal service and tribute,
    and as an everlasting inheritance he made it over on the cross of Christ
    to the triune God, for the redemption of his soul and those of his
    predecessors."[68] According to Keynes, Asser's version may just be a "loose translation" of the Chronicle, and
    his implication that Æthelwulf released a tenth of all land from secular burdens was probably not intended. All
    land could be regarded as the king's land, so the Chronicle reference to "his land" does not necessarily refer to
    royal property, and since the booking of land – conveying it by charter – was always regarded as a pious act,
    Asser's statement that he made it over to God does not necessarily mean that the charters were in favour of the
    church.[69]
    The Decimation Charters are divided by Susan Kelly into four groups:
    1. Two dated at Winchester on 5 November 844. In a charter in the Malmesbury archive, Æthelwulf refers
    in the proem to the perilous state of his kingdom as the result of the assaults of pagans and barbarians.
    For the sake of his soul and in return for masses for the king and ealdormen each Wednesday, "I have
    decided to give in perpetual liberty some portion of hereditary lands to all those ranks previously in
    possession, both to God's servants and handmaidens serving God and to laymen, always the tenth hide,
    and where it is less, then the tenth part."[j]
    2. Six dated at Wilton on Easter Day, 22 April 854. In the common text of these charters, Æthelwulf states
    that "for the sake of his soul and the prosperity of the kingdom and [the salvation of] the people assigned
    to him by God, he has acted upon the advice given to him by his bishops, comites, and all his nobles. He
    has granted the tenth part of the lands throughout his kingdom, not only to the churches, but also to his
    thegns. The land is granted in perpetual liberty, so that it will remain free of royal services and all secular
    burdens. In return there will be liturgical commemoration of the king and of his bishops and
    ealdormen."[k]
    3. Five from Old Minster, Winchester, connected with the Wilton meeting but generally considered
    spurious.[l]
    4. One from Kent dated 855, the only one to have the same date as the decimation according to Chronicle
    and Asser. The king grants to his thegn Dunn property in Rochester "on account of the decimation of
    lands which by God's gift I have decided to do". Dunn left the land to his wife with reversion to
    Rochester Cathedral.[m][72]
    None of the charters are original, and Stevenson dismissed all of them as fraudulent apart from the Kentish one
    of 855. Stevenson saw the decimation as a donation of royal demesne to churches and laymen, with those
    grants which were made to laymen being on the understanding that there would be reversion to a religious
    institution.[73] Up to the 1990s, his view on the authenticity of the charters was generally accepted by scholars,
    with the exception of the historian H. P. R. Finberg, who argued in 1964 that most are based on authentic
    diplomas. Finberg coined the terms the 'First Decimation' of 844, which he saw as the removal of public dues
    on a tenth of all bookland, and the 'Second Decimation' of 854, the donation of a tenth of "the private domain of
    the royal house" to the churches. He considered it unlikely that the First Decimation had been carried into
    effect, probably due to the threat from the Vikings. Finberg's terminology has been adopted, but his defence of
    the First Decimation generally rejected. In 1994 Keynes defended the Wilton charters in group 2, and his
    arguments have been widely accepted.[74]
    Historians have been divided on how to interpret the Second Decimation, and in 1994 Keynes described it as
    "one of the most perplexing problems" in the study of 9th-century charters. He set out three alternatives:
    1. It conveyed a tenth of the royal demesne – the lands of the crown as opposed to the personal property of
    the sovereign – into the hands of churches, ecclesiastics and laymen. In Anglo-Saxon England property
    was either folkland or bookland. The transmission of folkland was governed by the customary rights of
    kinsmen, subject to the king's approval, whereas bookland was established by the grant of a royal charter,
    and could be disposed of freely by the owner. Booking land thus converted it by charter from folkland to
    bookland. The royal demesne was the crown's folkland, whereas the king's bookland was his own
    personal property which he could leave by will as he chose. In the decimation Æthelwulf may have
    conveyed royal folkland by charter to become bookland, in some cases to laymen who already leased the
    land.[75]
    2. It was the booking of a tenth of folkland to its owners, who would then be free to convey it to a
    church.[76]
    3. It was a reduction of one tenth in the secular burdens on lands already in the possession of
    landowners.[76] The secular burdens would have included the provision of supplies for the king and his
    officials, and payment of various taxes.[77]
    Some scholars, for example Frank Stenton, author of the standard history of Anglo-Saxon England, along with
    Keynes and Abels, see the Second Decimation as a donation of royal demesne. In Abels' view Æthelwulf
    sought loyalty from the aristocracy and church during the king's forthcoming absence from Wessex, and
    displayed a sense of dynastic insecurity also evident in his father's generosity towards the Kentish church in
    838, and in an "avid attention" in this period to compiling and revising royal genealogies.[78] Keynes suggests
    that "Æthelwulf's purpose was presumably to earn divine assistance in his struggles against the Vikings",[79]
    and the mid-20th century historian Eric John observes that "a lifetime of medieval studies teaches one that an
    early medieval king was never so political as when he was on his knees".[80] The view that the decimation was
    a donation of the king's own personal estate is supported by the Anglo-Saxonist Alfred Smyth, who argues that
    these were the only lands the king was entitled to alienate by book.[81][n] The historian Martin Ryan prefers the
    view that Æthelwulf freed a tenth part of land owned by laymen from secular obligations, who could now
    endow churches under their own patronage. Ryan sees it as part of a campaign of religious devotion.[84]
    According to the historian David Pratt, it "is best interpreted as a strategic 'tax cut', designed to encourage
    cooperation in defensive measures through a partial remission of royal dues".[85] Nelson states that the
    decimation took place in two phases, in Wessex in 854 and Kent in 855, reflecting that they remained separate
    kingdoms.[86]
    Kelly argues that most charters were based on genuine originals, including the First Decimation of 844. She
    says: "Commentators have been unkind [and] the 844 version has not been given the benefit of the doubt". In
    her view Æthelwulf then gave a 10% tax reduction on bookland, and ten years later he took the more generous
    step of "a widespread distribution of royal lands". Unlike Finberg, she believes that both decimations were
    carried out, although the second one may not have been completed due to opposition from Æthelwulf's son
    Æthelbald. She thinks that the grants of bookland to laymen in the Second Decimation were unconditional, not
    with reversion to religious houses as Stevenson had argued.[87] However, Keynes is not convinced by Kelly's
    arguments, and thinks that the First Decimation charters were 11th or early 12th century fabrications.[88]
    Pilgrimage to Rome and later life
    In the early 850s Æthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome. According to Abels: "Æthelwulf was at the height of
    his power and prestige. It was a propitious time for the West Saxon king to claim a place of honour among the
    kings and emperors of christendom."[89] His eldest surviving sons Æthelbald and Æthelberht were then adults,
    while Æthelred and Alfred were still young children. In 853 Æthelwulf sent his younger sons to Rome, perhaps
    accompanying envoys in connection with his own forthcoming visit. Alfred, and possibly Æthelred as well,
    were invested with the "belt of consulship". Æthelred's part in the journey is only known from a contemporary
    record in the liber vitae of San Salvatore, Brescia, as later records such as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle were only
    interested in recording the honour paid to Alfred.[13] Abels sees the embassy as paving the way for Æthelwulf's
    pilgrimage, and the presence of Alfred, his youngest and therefore most expendable son, as a gesture of
    goodwill to the papacy; confirmation by Pope Leo IV made Alfred his spiritual son, and thus created a spiritual
    link between the two "fathers".[90][o] Kirby argues that the journey may indicate that Alfred was intended for
    the church,[92] while Nelson on the contrary sees Æthelwulf's purpose as affirming his younger sons'
    throneworthiness, thus protecting them against being tonsured by their elder brothers, which would have
    rendered them ineligible for kingship.[93]
    Æthelwulf set out for Rome in the spring of 855, accompanied by Alfred and a large retinue.[94] The King left
    Wessex in the care of his oldest surviving son, Æthelbald, and the sub-kingdom of Kent to the rule of
    Æthelberht, and thereby confirmed that they were to succeed to the two kingdoms.[25] On the way the party
    stayed with Charles the Bald in Francia, where there were the usual banquets and exchange of gifts. Æthelwulf
    stayed a year in Rome,[95] and his gifts to the Diocese of Rome included a gold crown weighing 4 pounds
    (1.8 kg), two gold goblets, a sword bound with gold, four silver-gilt bowls, two silk tunics and two goldinterwoven
    veils. He also gave gold to the clergy and leading men and silver to the people of Rome. According
    to the historian Joanna Story, his gifts rivalled those of Carolingian donors and the Byzantine emperor and
    "were clearly chosen to reflect the personal generosity and spiritual wealth of the West Saxon king; here was no
    Germanic 'hillbilly' from the backwoods of the Christian world but, rather, a sophisticated, wealthy and utterly
    contemporary monarch".[96] According to the 12th-century chronicler William of Malmesbury, he helped to
    pay for the restoration of the Saxon quarter, which had recently been destroyed by fire, for English pilgrims.[97]
    The pilgrimage puzzles historians and Kelly comments that "it is extraordinary that an early medieval king
    could consider his position safe enough to abandon his kingdom in a time of extreme crisis". She suggests that
    Æthelwulf may have been motivated by a personal religious impulse.[98] Ryan sees it as an attempt to placate
    the divine wrath displayed by Viking attacks,[84] whereas Nelson thinks he aimed to enhance his prestige in
    dealing with the demands of his adult sons.[99] In Kirby's view:
    Æthelwulf's journey to Rome is of great interest for it did not signify abdication and a retreat from
    the world as their journeys to Rome had for Cædwalla and Ine and other Anglo-Saxon kings. It
    was more a display of the king's international standing and a demonstration of the prestige his
    dynasty enjoyed in Frankish and papal circles.[100]
    On his way back from Rome Æthelwulf again stayed with King Charles the Bald, and may have joined him on
    a campaign against a Viking warband.[101] On 1 October 856 Æthelwulf married Charles's daughter, Judith,
    aged 12 or 13, at Verberie. The marriage was considered extraordinary by contemporaries and by modern
    historians. Carolingian princesses rarely married and were usually sent to nunneries, and it was almost
    unknown for them to marry foreigners. Judith was crowned queen and anointed by Hincmar, Archbishop of
    Rheims. Although empresses had been anointed before, this is the first definitely known anointing of a
    Carolingian queen. In addition West Saxon custom, described by Asser as "perverse and detestable", was that
    the wife of a king of Wessex could not be called queen or sit on the throne with her husband – she was just the
    king's wife.[102]
    King Æthelwulf's
    ring
    Æthelwulf returned to Wessex to face a revolt by Æthelbald, who attempted to prevent his father from
    recovering his throne. Historians give varying explanations for both the rebellion and the marriage. In Nelson's
    view, Æthelwulf's marriage to Judith added the West Saxon king to the family of kings and princely allies
    which Charles was creating.[103] Charles was under attack both from Vikings and from a rising among his own
    nobility, and Æthelwulf had great prestige due to his victories over the Vikings; some historians such as Kirby
    and Pauline Stafford see the marriage as sealing an anti-Viking alliance. The marriage gave Æthelwulf a share
    in Carolingian prestige, and Kirby describes the anointing of Judith as "a charismatic sanctification which
    enhanced her status, blessed her womb and conferred additional throne-worthiness on her male offspring."
    These marks of a special status implied that a son of hers would succeed to at least part of Æthelwulf's
    kingdom, and explain Æthelbald's decision to rebel.[104] The historian Michael Enright denies that an anti-
    Viking alliance between two such distant kingdoms could serve any useful purpose, and argues that the
    marriage was Æthelwulf's response to news that his son was planning to rebel; his son by an anointed
    Carolingian queen would be in a strong position to succeed as king of Wessex instead of the rebellious
    Æthelbald.[105] Abels suggests that Æthelwulf sought Judith's hand because he needed her father's money and
    support to overcome his son's rebellion,[106] but Kirby and Smyth argue that it is extremely unlikely that
    Charles the Bald would have agreed to marry his daughter to a ruler who was known to be in serious political
    difficulty.[107] Æthelbald may also have acted out of resentment at the loss of patrimony he suffered as a result
    of the decimation.[98]
    Æthelbald's rebellion was supported by Ealhstan, Bishop of Sherborne, and Eanwulf, ealdorman of Somerset,
    even though they appear to have been two of the king's most trusted advisers.[108] According to Asser, the plot
    was concerted "in the western part of Selwood", and western nobles may have backed Æthelbald because they
    resented the patronage Æthelwulf gave to eastern Wessex.[109] Asser also stated that Æthelwulf agreed to give
    up the western part of his kingdom in order to avoid a civil war. Some historians such as Keynes and Abels
    think that his rule was then confined to the south-east,[110] while others such as Kirby think it is more likely
    that it was Wessex itself which was divided, with Æthelbald keeping Wessex west of Selwood, Æthelwulf
    holding the centre and east, and Æthelberht keeping the south-east.[111] Æthelwulf insisted that Judith should
    sit beside him on the throne until the end of his life, and according to Asser this was "without any disagreement
    or dissatisfaction on the part of his nobles".[112]
    King Æthelwulf's ring
    King Æthelwulf's ring was found in a cart rut in Laverstock in Wiltshire in about
    August 1780 by one William Petty, who sold it to a silversmith in Salisbury. The
    silversmith sold it to the Earl of Radnor, and the earl's son, William, donated it to the
    British Museum in 1829. The ring, together with a similar ring of Æthelwulf's daughter
    Æthelswith, is one of two key examples of nielloed 9th-century metalwork. They
    appear to represent the emergence of a "court style" of West Saxon metalwork,
    characterised by an unusual Christian iconography, such as a pair of peacocks at the
    Fountain of Life on the Æthelwulf ring, associated with Christian immortality. The ring
    is inscribed "Æthelwulf Rex", firmly associating it with the King, and the inscription
    forms part of the design, so it cannot have been added later. Many of its features are
    typical of 9th-century metalwork, such as the design of two birds, beaded and speckled borders, and a saltire
    with arrow-like terminals on the back. It was probably manufactured in Wessex, but was typical of the
    uniformity of animal ornament in England in the 9th century. In the view of Leslie Webster, an expert on
    medieval art: "Its fine Trewhiddle style ornament would certainly fit a mid ninth-century date."[113] In Nelson's
    view, "it was surely made to be a gift from this royal lord to a brawny follower: the sign of a successful ninthcentury
    kingship".[13] The art historian David Wilson sees it as a survival of the pagan tradition of the generous
    king as the "ring-giver".[114]
    Æthelwulf's will
    A page from King Alfred's will
    Æthelwulf's will has not survived, but Alfred's has and it provides some
    information about his father's intentions. The kingdom was to be
    divided between the two oldest surviving sons, with Æthelbald getting
    Wessex and Æthelberht Kent and the south-east. The survivor of
    Æthelbald, Æthelred and Alfred was to inherit their father's bookland –
    his personal property as opposed to the royal lands which went with the
    kingship – and Abels and Yorke argue that this probably means that the
    survivor was to inherit the throne of Wessex as well.[115] Other
    historians disagree. Nelson states that the provision regarding the
    personal property had nothing to do with the kingship,[13] and Kirby
    comments: "Such an arrangement would have led to fratricidal strife.
    With three older brothers, Alfred's chances of reaching adulthood
    would, one feels, have been minimal."[116] Æthelwulf's moveable
    wealth, such as gold and silver, was to be divided between "children,
    nobles and the needs of the king's soul".[13] For the latter, he left one
    tenth of his hereditary land to be set aside to feed the poor, and he
    ordered that three hundred mancuses be sent to Rome each year, one
    hundred to be spent on lighting the lamps in St Peter's at Easter, one
    hundred for the lights of St Paul's, and one hundred for the pope.[117]
    Death and succession
    Æthelwulf died on 13 January 858. According to the Annals of St
    Neots, he was buried at Steyning in Sussex, but his body was later
    transferred to Winchester, probably by Alfred.[118] Æthelwulf was succeeded by Æthelbald in Wessex and
    Æthelberht in Kent and the south-east. The prestige conferred by a Frankish marriage was so great that
    Æthelbald then wedded his step-mother Judith, to Asser's retrospective horror; he described the marriage as a
    "great disgrace", and "against God's prohibition and Christian dignity".[13] When Æthelbald died only two
    years later, Æthelberht became King of Wessex as well as Kent, and Æthelwulf's intention of dividing his
    kingdoms between his sons was thus set aside. In the view of Yorke and Abels this was because Æthelred and
    Alfred were too young to rule, and Æthelberht agreed in return that his younger brothers would inherit the
    whole kingdom on his death,[119] whereas Kirby and Nelson think that Æthelberht just became the trustee for
    his younger brothers' share of the bookland.[120]
    After Æthelbald's death Judith sold her possessions and returned to her father, but two years later she eloped
    with Baldwin, Count of Flanders. In the 890s their son, also called Baldwin, married Æthelwulf's
    granddaughter Ælfthryth.[13]
    Historiography
    Æthelwulf's reputation among historians was poor in the twentieth century. In 1935 the historian R. H. Hodgkin
    attributed his pilgrimage to Rome to "the unpractical piety which had led him to desert his kingdom at a time of
    great danger", and described his marriage to Judith as "the folly of a man senile before his time".[121] To
    Stenton in the 1960s he was "a religious and unambitious man, for whom engagement in war and politics was
    an unwelcome consequence of rank".[122] One dissenter was Finberg, who in 1964 described him as "a king
    whose valour in war and princely munificence recalled the figures of the heroic age",[123] but in 1979 Enright
    said: "More than anything else he appears to have been an impractical religious enthusiast."[124] Early medieval
    writers, especially Asser, emphasise his religiosity and his preference for consensus, seen in the concessions
    made to avert a civil war on his return from Rome.[p] In Story's view "his legacy has been clouded by
    accusations of excessive piety which (to modern sensibilities at least) has seemed at odds with the demands of
    early medieval kingship". In 839 an unnamed Anglo-Saxon king wrote to the Holy Roman Emperor Louis the
    Pious asking for permission to travel through his territory on the way to Rome, and relating an English priest's
    dream which foretold disaster unless Christians abandoned their sins. This is now believed to have been an
    unrealised project of Egbert at the end of his life, but it was formerly attributed to Æthelwulf, and seen as
    exhibiting what Story calls his reputation for "dramatic piety", and irresponsibility for planning to abandon his
    kingdom at the beginning of his reign.[126]
    In the twenty-first century he is seen very differently by historians. Æthelwulf is not listed in the index of Peter
    Hunter Blair's An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon England, first published in 1956, but in a new introduction to
    the 2003 edition Keynes listed him among people "who have not always been accorded the attention they might
    be thought to deserve ... for it was he, more than any other, who secured the political fortune of his people in
    the ninth century, and who opened up channels of communication which led through Frankish realms and
    across the Alps to Rome".[127] According to Story: "Æthelwulf acquired and cultivated a reputation both in
    Francia and Rome which is unparalleled in the sources since the height of Offa's and Coenwulf's power at the
    turn of the ninth century".[128]
    Nelson describes him as "one of the great underrated among Anglo-Saxons", and complains that she was only
    allowed 2,500 words for him in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, compared with 15,000 for
    Edward II and 35,000 for Elizabeth I.[129] She says:
    Æthelwulf's reign has been relatively under-appreciated in modern scholarship. Yet he laid the
    foundations for Alfred's success. To the perennial problems of husbanding the kingdom's
    resources, containing conflicts within the royal family, and managing relations with neighbouring
    kingdoms, Æthelwulf found new as well as traditional answers. He consolidated old Wessex, and
    extended his reach over what is now Devon and Cornwall. He ruled Kent, working with the grain
    of its political community. He borrowed ideological props from Mercians and Franks alike, and
    went to Rome, not to die there, like his predecessor Ine, ... but to return, as Charlemagne had, with
    enhanced prestige. Æthelwulf coped more effectively with Scandinavian attacks than did most
    contemporary rulers.[13]
    Notes
    a. Egbert's death and Æthelwulf's accession is dated by historians to 839. According to Susan Ke,l l"ythere may be grounds
    for arguing that Æthelwulf's succession actually took place late in 838["3,] but Joanna Story argues that the West Saxon
    regnal lists show the length of Egbert's reign as 37 years and 7 months, and as he acceded in 802 he is unlikely to have
    died before July 839.[4]
    b. Keynes and Lapidge comment: "The office of butler (pincerna) was a distinguished one, and its holders were likely to
    have been important figures in the royal court and household["1.2]
    c. Æthelstan was sub-king of Kent ten years before Alfred was born, and some late versions of thAen glo-Saxon Chronicle
    make him the brother of Æthelwulf rather than his son. This has been accepted by some historians, but is now generally
    rejected. It has also been suggested that Æthelstan was born of an unrecorded first marriage, but historians generally
    assume that he was Osburh's son[.15]
    d. Nelson states that it is uncertain whether Osburh died or had been repudiate[d1,3] but Abels argues that it is "extremely
    unlikely" that she was repudiated, asH incmar of Rheims, who played a prominent role in Æthelwulf's and Judith's
    marriage ceremony, was a strong advocate of the indissolubility of marriage[1.8]
    e. The historians Janet Nelson and Ann Williams date Baldred's removal and the start of Æthelwulf's sub-kingship to
    825,[19] but D. P. Kirby states that Baldred was probably not driven out until 826[2.0] Simon Keynes cites the Anglo-
    Saxon Chronicle as stating that Æthelwulf expelled Baldred in 825, and secured the submission of the people of Kent,
    Surrey, Sussex and Essex; however, charter evidence suggests that Beornwulf was recognised as overlord of Kent until
    he was killed in battle while attempting to put down a rebellion in East Anglia in 826. His successor as king of Mercia,
    Ludeca, never seems to have been recognised in Kent. In a charter of 828 Egbert refers to his son Æthelwulf "whom we
    have made king in Kent" as if the appointment was fairly new.[21]
    f. Christ Church, Canterbury kept lists of patrons who had made donations to the church, and late 8th and early 9th century
    patrons who had been supporters of Mercian power were expunged from the lists towards the end of the 9th cent.u[2ry6]
    References
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    h. The scholar James Booth suggests that the part of Berkshire where Alfred was born may have beene Wst Saxon territory
    throughout the period.[47]
    i. "Decimation" is used here in the sense of a donation of a tenth part. This usually means a payment to the ruler or church
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    of.
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    n. Smyth dismisses all the Decimation Charters as spurious[8,2] with what the scholar David Pratt describes as
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    o. Abels is sceptical whether Æthelred accompanied Alfred to Rome as he is not mentioned in a letter from Leo to
    Æthelwulf reporting Alfred's reception[,91] but Nelson argues that only a fragment of the letter survives in an 11thcentury
    copy, and the scribe who selected excerpts from Leo's letters, like the editors of thAen glo-Saxon Chronicle, was
    only interested in Alfred.[13]
    p. The historian Richard North argues that the Old English poem "Deor" was written in about 856 as a satire on Æthelwulf
    and a "mocking reflection" on Æthelbald's attitude towards him[1.25]
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    55. Nelson 2004a; Story 2003, p. 227.
    56. Stenton 1971, p. 243; Abels 1998, p. 88.
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    External links
    Æthelwulf 1 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
    Regnal titles
    Preceded by
    Egbert
    King of Wessex
    839–858
    Succeeded by
    Æthelbald
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Æthelwulf&oldid=784363977"
    Categories: Burials at Winchester Cathedral West Saxon monarchs 858 deaths
    9th-century English monarchs House of Wessex
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    Family/Spouse: of Wessex, Queen Consort Osburh. Osburh (daughter of of Wessex, Oslac) was born in UNKNOWN in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in DECEASED in Kingdom of Wessex (England). [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. of Wessex, King Alfred was born in 849 in Wantage, Berkshire, England; died on 26 Oct 899 in Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, England; was buried in 1100 in Hyde Abbey (now lost), Winchester, Hampshire, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  of Wessex, King Egbertof Wessex, King Egbert was born in 781 in Kingdom of Wessex (England) (son of of Kent, Ealhmund); died in 839 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was buried in 839 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: Between 802 and 839; King of Wessex
    • Appointments / Titles: Between 825 and 839; King of Kent

    Notes:

    Egbert

    King of Wessex
    Reign 802 – 839
    Predecessor Beorhtric
    Successor Æthelwulf

    King of Kent
    Reign 825 – 839
    Predecessor Baldred
    Successor Æthelwulf

    Born 771 or 775[1]
    Died 839 (aged 64 or 68) Burial Winchester
    Issue
    Æthelwulf, King of Wessex

    House Wessex

    Father Ealhmund of Kent

    Egbert of Wessex
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Egbert (771/775 – 839), also spelled Ecgberht, Ecgbert, or Ecgbriht, was King of Wessex from 802 until his death in 839. His father was Ealhmund of Kent. In the 780s Egbert was forced into exile by Offa of Mercia and Beorhtric of Wessex, but on Beorhtric's death in 802 Egbert returned and took the throne.

    Little is known of the first 20 years of Egbert's reign, but it is thought that he was able to maintain the independence of Wessex against the kingdom of Mercia, which at that time dominated the other southern English kingdoms. In 825 Egbert defeated Beornwulf of Mercia, ended Mercia's supremacy at the Battle of Ellandun, and proceeded to take control of the Mercian dependencies in southeastern England. In 829 Egbert defeated Wiglaf of Mercia and drove him out of his kingdom, temporarily ruling Mercia directly. Later that year Egbert received the submission of the Northumbrian king at Dore. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle subsequently described Egbert as a bretwalda or 'wide-ruler' of Anglo-Saxon lands.

    Egbert was unable to maintain this dominant position, and within a year Wiglaf regained the throne of Mercia. However, Wessex did retain control of Kent, Sussex, and Surrey; these territories were given to Egbert's son Æthelwulf to rule as a subking under Egbert. When Egbert died in 839, Æthelwulf succeeded him; the southeastern kingdoms were finally absorbed into the kingdom of Wessex after Æthelwulf's death in 858.

    Family
    Egbert's name, spelled Ecgbriht, from the 827 entry in the C manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

    Historians do not agree on Egbert's ancestry. The earliest version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Parker Chronicle, begins with a genealogical preface tracing the ancestry of Egbert's son Æthelwulf back through Egbert, Ealhmund (thought to be Ealhmund of Kent), and the otherwise unknown Eoppa and Eafa to Ingild, brother of King Ine of Wessex, who abdicated the throne in 726. It continues back to Cerdic, founder of the House of Wessex.[2] Egbert's descent from Ingild was accepted by Frank Stenton, but not the earlier genealogy back to Cerdic.[3] Heather Edwards in her Online Dictionary of National Biography article on Egbert argues that he was of Kentish origin, and that the West Saxon descent may have been manufactured during his reign to give him legitimacy,[4] whereas Rory Naismith considered a Kentish origin unlikely, and that it is more probable that "Egbert was born of good West Saxon royal stock".[5] Egbert's wife's name is unknown. A fifteenth century chronicle now held by Oxford University names Egbert's wife as Redburga who was supposedly a relation of Charlemagne that he married when he was banished to Francia, but this is dismissed by academic historians in view of its late date.[6] He is reputed to have had a halfsister Alburga, later to be recognised as a saint for her founding of Wilton Abbey. She was married to Wulfstan, ealdorman of Wiltshire, and on his death in 802 she became a nun, Abbess of Wilton Abbey.[7] He was believed at one time to also be the father of Saint Eadgyth of Polesworth and Æthelstan of Kent. Political context and early life

    Offa of Mercia, who reigned from 757 to 796, was the dominant force in Anglo-Saxon England in the second half of the eighth century. The relationship between Offa and Cynewulf, who was king of Wessex from 757 to 786, is not well documented, but it seems likely that Cynewulf maintained some independence from Mercian overlordship. Evidence of the relationship between kings can come from charters, which were documents which granted land to followers or to churchmen, and which were witnessed by the kings who had power to grant the land. In some cases a king will appear on a charter as a subregulus, or "subking", making it clear that he has an overlord.[8][9] Cynewulf appears as "King of the West Saxons" on a charter of Offa's in 772;[10] and he was defeated by Offa in battle in 779 at Bensington, but there is nothing else to suggest Cynewulf was not his own master, and he is not known to have acknowledged Offa as overlord.[11] Offa did have influence in the southeast of the country: a charter of 764 shows him in the company of Heahberht of Kent, suggesting that Offa's influence helped place Heahberht on the throne.[12] The extent of Offa's control of Kent between 765 and 776 is a matter of debate amongst historians, but from 776 until about 784 it appears that the Kentish kings had substantial independence from Mercia.[12][13]

    Another Egbert, Egbert II of Kent, ruled in that kingdom throughout the 770s; he is last mentioned in 779, in a charter granting land at Rochester.[12] In 784 a new king of Kent, Ealhmund, appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. According to a note in the margin, "this king Ealhmund was Egbert's father [i.e. Egbert of Wessex], Egbert was Æthelwulf's father." This is supported by the genealogical preface from the A text of the Chronicle, which gives Egbert's father's name as Ealhmund without further details. The preface probably dates from the late ninth century; the marginal note is on the F manuscript of the Chronicle, which is a Kentish version dating from about 1100.[14]

    Ealhmund does not appear to have long survived in power: there is no record of his activities after 784. There is, however, extensive evidence of Offa's domination of Kent during the late 780s, with his goals apparently going beyond overlordship to outright annexation of the kingdom,[12] and he has been described as "the rival, not the overlord, of the Kentish kings".[15] It is possible that the young Egbert fled to Wessex in 785 or so; it is suggestive that the Chronicle mentions in a later entry that Beorhtric, Cynewulf's successor, helped Offa to exile Egbert.[12]

    Cynewulf was murdered in 786. His succession was contested by Egbert, but he was defeated by Beorhtric, maybe with Offa's assistance.[16][17] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Egbert spent three years in Francia before he was king, exiled by Beorhtric and Offa. The text says "iii" for three, but this may have been a scribal error, with the correct reading being "xiii", that is, thirteen years. Beorhtric's reign lasted sixteen years, and not thirteen; and all extant texts of the Chronicle agree on "iii", but many modern accounts assume that Egbert did indeed spend thirteen years in Francia. This requires assuming that the error in transcription is common to every manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; many historians make this assumption but others have rejected it as unlikely, given the consistency of the sources.[18] In either case Egbert was probably exiled in 789, when Beorhtric, his rival, married the daughter of Offa of Mercia.[19]

    At the time Egbert was in exile, Francia was ruled by Charlemagne, who maintained Frankish influence in Northumbria and is known to have supported Offa's enemies in the south. Another exile in Gaul at this time was Odberht, a priest, who is almost certainly the same person as Eadberht, who later became king of Kent. According to a later chronicler, William of Malmesbury, Egbert learned the arts of government during his time in Gaul.[20]

    Early reign
    Beorhtric's dependency on Mercia continued into the reign of Cenwulf, who became king of Mercia a few months after Offa's death.[11] Beorhtric died in 802, and Egbert came to the throne of Wessex, probably with the support of Charlemagne and perhaps also the papacy.[21] The Mercians continued to oppose Egbert: the day of his accession, the Hwicce (who had originally formed a separate kingdom, but by that time were part of Mercia) attacked, under the leadership of their ealdorman, Æthelmund. Weohstan, a Wessex ealdorman, met him with men from Wiltshire:[14] according to a 15th-century source, Weohstan had married Alburga, Egbert's sister, and so was Egbert's brother-in-law.[22] The Hwicce were defeated, though Weohstan was killed as well as Æthelmund.[14] Nothing more is recorded of Egbert's relations with Mercia for more than twenty years after this battle. It seems likely that Egbert had no influence outside his own borders, but on the other hand there is no evidence that he ever submitted to the overlordship of Cenwulf. Cenwulf did have overlordship of the rest of southern England, but in Cenwulf's charters the title of "overlord of the southern English" never appears, presumably in consequence of the independence of the kingdom of Wessex.[23]

    In 815 the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Egbert ravaged the whole of the territories of the remaining
    British kingdom, Dumnonia, known to the author of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the West Welsh; their
    territory was about equivalent to what is now Cornwall.[14][24] Ten years later, a charter dated 19 August 825
    indicates that Egbert was campaigning in Dumnonia again; this may have been related to a battle recorded in
    the Chronicle at Gafulford in 823, between the men of Devon and the Britons of Cornwall.[25]
    The battle of Ellendun
    It was also in 825 that one of the most important battles in Anglo-Saxon history took place, when Egbert
    defeated Beornwulf of Mercia at Ellendun—now Wroughton, near Swindon. This battle marked the end of the
    Mercian domination of southern England.[26] The Chronicle tells how Egbert followed up his victory: "Then he
    sent his son Æthelwulf from the army, and Ealhstan, his bishop, and Wulfheard, his ealdorman, to Kent with a
    great troop." Æthelwulf drove Baldred, the king of Kent, north over the Thames, and according to the
    Chronicle, the men of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex then all submitted to Æthelwulf "because earlier they
    were wrongly forced away from his relatives."[14] This may refer to Offa's interventions in Kent at the time
    Egbert's father Ealhmund became king; if so, the chronicler's remark may also indicate Ealhmund had
    connections elsewhere in southeast England.[21]
    A map of England during Egbert's reign
    The entry for 827 in the C manuscript
    of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, listing
    the eight bretwaldas
    The Chronicle's version of events makes it appear that
    Baldred was driven out shortly after the battle, but this was
    probably not the case. A document from Kent survives
    which gives the date, March 826, as being in the third year
    of the reign of Beornwulf. This makes it likely that
    Beornwulf still had authority in Kent at this date, as
    Baldred's overlord; hence Baldred was apparently still in
    power.[25][27] In Essex, Egbert expelled King Sigered,
    though the date is unknown. It may have been delayed until
    829, since a later chronicler associates the expulsion with a
    campaign of Egbert's in that year against the Mercians.[25]
    The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle does not say who was the
    aggressor at Ellendun, but one recent history asserts that
    Beornwulf was almost certainly the one who attacked.
    According to this view, Beornwulf may have taken
    advantage of the Wessex campaign in Dumnonia in the
    summer of 825. Beornwulf's motivation to launch an attack
    would have been the threat of unrest or instability in the
    southeast: the dynastic connections with Kent made Wessex
    a threat to Mercian dominance.[25]
    The consequences of Ellendun went beyond the immediate loss of Mercian power in the southeast. According
    to the Chronicle, the East Anglians asked for Egbert's protection against the Mercians in the same year, 825,
    though it may actually have been in the following year that the request was made. In 826 Beornwulf invaded
    East Anglia, presumably to recover his overlordship. He was slain, however, as was his successor, Ludeca, who
    invaded East Anglia in 827, evidently for the same reason. It may be that the Mercians were hoping for support
    from Kent: there was some reason to suppose that Wulfred, the Archbishop of Canterbury, might be
    discontented with West Saxon rule, as Egbert had terminated Wulfred's currency and had begun to mint his
    own, at Rochester and Canterbury,[25] and it is known that Egbert seized property belonging to Canterbury.[28]
    The outcome in East Anglia was a disaster for the Mercians which confirmed West Saxon power in the
    southeast.[25]
    Defeat of Mercia
    In 829 Egbert invaded Mercia and drove Wiglaf, the king of Mercia,
    into exile. This victory gave Egbert control of the London Mint, and he
    issued coins as King of Mercia.[25] It was after this victory that the West
    Saxon scribe described him as a bretwalda, meaning 'wide-ruler' or
    perhaps 'Britain-ruler', in a famous passage in the Anglo-Saxon
    Chronicle. The relevant part of the annal reads, in the C manuscript of
    the Chronicle:[29]
    ⁊†þy geare geeode Ecgbriht cing Myrcna rice ⁊†eall þæt be
    suþan Humbre wæs, ⁊†he wæs eahtaþa cing se ðe
    Bretenanwealda wæs.
    In modern English:[30]
    And the same year King Egbert conquered the kingdom of Mercia, and all that was south of the
    Humber, and he was the eighth king who was 'Wide-ruler'.
    Coin of King Egbert
    The previous seven bretwaldas are also named by the Chronicler, who gives the same seven names that Bede
    lists as holding imperium, starting with Ælle of Sussex and ending with Oswiu of Northumbria. The list is often
    thought to be incomplete, omitting as it does some dominant Mercian kings such as Penda and Offa. The exact
    meaning of the title has been much debated; it has been described as "a term of encomiastic poetry"[31] but
    there is also evidence that it implied a definite role of military leadership.[32]
    Later in 829, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Egbert received the submission of the Northumbrians at
    Dore (now a suburb of Sheffield); the Northumbrian king was probably Eanred.[33] According to a later
    chronicler, Roger of Wendover, Egbert invaded Northumbria and plundered it before Eanred submitted: "When
    Egbert had obtained all the southern kingdoms, he led a large army into Northumbria, and laid waste that
    province with severe pillaging, and made King Eanred pay tribute." Roger of Wendover is known to have
    incorporated Northumbrian annals into his version; the Chronicle does not mention these events.[34] However,
    the nature of Eanred's submission has been questioned: one historian has suggested that it is more likely that the
    meeting at Dore represented a mutual recognition of sovereignty.[35]
    In 830, Egbert led a successful expedition against the Welsh, almost certainly with the intent of extending West
    Saxon influence into the Welsh lands previously within the Mercian orbit. This marked the high point of
    Egbert's influence.[25]
    Reduction in influence after 829
    In 830, Mercia regained its independence under Wiglaf—the Chronicle
    merely says that Wiglaf "obtained the kingdom of Mercia again",[14] but
    the most likely explanation is that this was the result of a Mercian
    rebellion against Wessex rule.[36]
    Egbert's dominion over southern England came to an end with Wiglaf's
    recovery of power. Wiglaf's return is followed by evidence of his
    independence from Wessex. Charters indicate Wiglaf had authority in
    Middlesex and Berkshire, and in a charter of 836 Wiglaf uses the phrase
    "my bishops, duces, and magistrates" to describe a group that included eleven bishops from the episcopate of
    Canterbury, including bishops of sees in West Saxon territory.[37] It is significant that Wiglaf was still able to
    call together such a group of notables; the West Saxons, even if they were able to do so, held no such
    councils.[28][38] Wiglaf may also have brought Essex back into the Mercian orbit during the years after he
    recovered the throne.[25][39] In East Anglia, King Æthelstan minted coins, possibly as early as 827, but more
    likely c. 830 after Egbert's influence was reduced with Wiglaf's return to power in Mercia. This demonstration
    of independence on East Anglia's part is not surprising, as it was Æthelstan who was probably responsible for
    the defeat and death of both Beornwulf and Ludeca.[25]
    Both Wessex's sudden rise to power in the late 820s, and the subsequent failure to retain this dominant position,
    have been examined by historians looking for underlying causes. One plausible explanation for the events of
    these years is that Wessex's fortunes were to some degree dependent on Carolingian support. The Franks
    supported Eardwulf when he recovered the throne of Northumbria in 808, so it is plausible that they also
    supported Egbert's accession in 802. At Easter 839, not long before Egbert's death, he was in touch with Louis
    the Pious, king of the Franks, to arrange safe passage to Rome. Hence a continuing relationship with the Franks
    seems to be part of southern English politics during the first half of the ninth century.[25]
    Carolingian support may have been one of the factors that helped Egbert achieve the military successes of the
    late 820s. However, the Rhenish and Frankish commercial networks collapsed at some time in the 820s or 830s,
    and in addition, a rebellion broke out in February 830 against Louis the Pious—the first of a series of internal
    16th-century mortuary chest, one in a
    series set up by Bishop Foxe in
    Winchester Cathedral, which purports
    to contain Egbert's bones
    conflicts that lasted through the 830s and beyond. These distractions may have prevented Louis from
    supporting Egbert. In this view, the withdrawal of Frankish influence would have left East Anglia, Mercia and
    Wessex to find a balance of power not dependent on outside aid.[25]
    Despite the loss of dominance, Egbert's military successes fundamentally changed the political landscape of
    Anglo-Saxon England. Wessex retained control of the south-eastern kingdoms, with the possible exception of
    Essex, and Mercia did not regain control of East Anglia.[25] Egbert's victories marked the end of the
    independent existence of the kingdoms of Kent and Sussex. The conquered territories were administered as a
    subkingdom for a while, including Surrey and possibly Essex.[40] Although Æthelwulf was a subking under
    Egbert, it is clear that he maintained his own royal household, with which he travelled around his kingdom.
    Charters issued in Kent described Egbert and Æthelwulf as "kings of the West Saxons and also of the people of
    Kent." When Æthelwulf died in 858 his will, in which Wessex is left to one son and the southeastern kingdom
    to another, makes it clear that it was not until after 858 that the kingdoms were fully integrated.[41] Mercia
    remained a threat, however; Egbert's son Æthelwulf, established as king of Kent, gave estates to Christ Church,
    Canterbury, probably to counter any influence the Mercians might still have there.[25]
    In the southwest, Egbert was defeated in 836 at Carhampton by the Danes,[14] but in 838 he won a battle
    against them and their allies the West Welsh at the Battle of Hingston Down in Cornwall. The Dumnonian royal
    line continued after this time, but it is at this date that the independence of one of the last British kingdoms may
    be considered to have ended.[25] The details of Anglo-Saxon expansion into Cornwall are quite poorly
    recorded, but some evidence comes from place names.[42] The river Ottery, which flows east into the Tamar
    near Launceston, appears to be a boundary: south of the Ottery the placenames are overwhelmingly Cornish,
    whereas to the north they are more heavily influenced by the English newcomers.[43]
    Succession
    At a council at Kingston upon Thames in 838, Egbert and Æthelwulf
    granted land to the sees of Winchester and Canterbury in return for the
    promise of support for Æthelwulf's claim to the throne.[28][37][44] The
    archbishop of Canterbury, Ceolnoth, also accepted Egbert and
    Æthelwulf as the lords and protectors of the monasteries under
    Ceolnoth's control. These agreements, along with a later charter in
    which Æthelwulf confirmed church privileges, suggest that the church
    had recognised that Wessex was a new political power that must be
    dealt with.[25] Churchmen consecrated the king at coronation
    ceremonies, and helped to write the wills which specified the king's
    heir; their support had real value in establishing West Saxon control and
    a smooth succession for Egbert's line.[45] Both the record of the Council
    of Kingston, and another charter of that year, include the identical
    phrasing: that a condition of the grant is that "we ourselves and our
    heirs shall always hereafter have firm and unshakable friendships from
    Archbishop Ceolnoth and his congregation at Christ Church."[44][46][47]
    Although nothing is known of any other claimants to the throne, it is likely that there were other surviving
    descendants of Cerdic (the supposed progenitor of all the kings of Wessex) who might have contended for the
    kingdom. Egbert died in 839, and his will, according to the account of it found in the will of his grandson,
    Alfred the Great, left land only to male members of his family, so that the estates should not be lost to the royal
    house through marriage. Egbert's wealth, acquired through conquest, was no doubt one reason for his ability to
    purchase the support of the southeastern church establishment; the thriftiness of his will indicates he understood
    the importance of personal wealth to a king.[45] The kingship of Wessex had been frequently contested among
    different branches of the royal line, and it is a noteworthy achievement of Egbert's that he was able to ensure
    Æthelwulf's untroubled succession.[45] In addition, Æthelwulf's experience of kingship, in the subkingdom
    formed from Egbert's southeastern conquests, would have been valuable to him when he took the throne.[48]
    Egbert was buried in Winchester, as were his son, Æthelwulf, his grandson, Alfred the Great, and his greatgrandson,
    Edward the Elder. During the ninth century, Winchester began to show signs of urbanisation, and it is
    likely that the sequence of burials indicates that Winchester was held in high regard by the West Saxon royal
    line.[49]
    See also
    Notes
    1. Ashley, p. 313
    2. Garmonsway, G.N. ed., The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, London, J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., pp. xxxii,2,4
    3. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 65–66
    4. Edwards, Ecgbehrt
    5. Naismith, p. 16
    6. The chronicle (Hardy, Vol III, No. 326 (https://books.google.com/books?id=XPkUAAAAQAAJ&pg=AP198&redir_esc
    =y#v=onepage&q&f=false) describes Egbert's wife as "Redburga regis Francorum sororia" (sister or sister-in-law of
    the Frankish Emperor). Some nineteenth-century historians cited the manuscript to identify Redbguar as Egbert's wife,
    such W. G. Searle in his 1897 Onomasticon Anglo-Saxonicum (https://archive.org/stream/onomasticonangl00seargoog/
    onomasticonangl00seargoog_djvu.txt) and (as Rædburh) in his 1899 Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings and Nobles (http://ia7
    00408.us.archive.org/20/items/anglosaxonbishop00searuoft/anglosaxonbishop00searuoft.pf)d. Other historians of that
    time were sceptical, such as William Hunt, who did not mention Redburga in his article about Egbert in the original
    Dictionary of National Biography in 1889. In the twentieth century, popular genealogists and historians have followed
    Searle in naming Redburga as Egbert's wife, but academic historians ignore her when discussing Egbert, and Janet
    Nelson's 2004 article on his sonÆ thelwulf (http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8921?docPos=1 )in the Online
    Oxford Dictionary of National Biography states that his mother's name is unknown.
    7. Farmer, D.H.: The Oxford Dictionary of Saints, p. 10
    8. Hunter Blair, Roman Britain, pp. 14–15.
    9. P. Wormald, "The Age of Bede and Æthelbald", in Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons, pp. 95–98
    10. "Anglo-Saxons.net: S 108" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=108. )Sean Miller.
    Retrieved 8 August 2007.
    11. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 208–210.
    12. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, pp. 165–169
    13. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 207.
    14. Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 58–63.
    15. Wormald, "Bede, the bretwaldas and the origins of the Gens Anglorum", in Wormald et al., Ideal and Reality, p. 113;
    quoted in Kirby, Earliest English Kings, p. 167., and n. 30.
    16. Fletcher, Who's Who, p. 114.
    17. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, p. 141.
    18. E.g. Fletcher assumes that Egbert spent essentially all Beorhtric's reign in Francia; see Fletch, eWr ho's Who, p. 114.
    Similarly, Swanton annotates "3 years" with "in fact thirteen years . . . this error is commotno all MSS." See note 12 in
    Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 62–63. Naismith suggests that Egbert's exile may have occupied the thirteen-year
    period from 789, the year of Beorhtric's marriage with Offa's daughter, to 802, the year of his coming to power: see
    Naismith, p. 3. On the other hand, Stenton accepts the figure as three: see StentonA,n glo-Saxon England, p. 220.
    Stenton adds in a footnote that "it is very dangerous to reject a reading which is so well attested".
    19. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 220.
    20. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, pp. 176–177.
    21. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, p. 186.
    22. The source, a poem in the Chronicon Vilodunense, is described by Yorke as "admittedly . . . far from ideal". See Barbara
    Yorke, "Edward as Ætheling", in Higham & HillE, dward the Elder, p. 36.
    23. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 225.
    24. The border had been pushed back to ther iver Tamar, between Devon and Cornwall, by Ine of Wessex in 710. See Kirby,
    Earliest English Kings, p.125.
    25. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, pp. 189–195.
    26. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 231.
    References
    Primary sources
    Swanton, Michael (1996). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-92129-5.
    Egbert's charters at Anglo-Saxons.net
    Secondary sources
    Abels, Richard (2005). Alfred the Great: War, Kingship and Culture in Anglo-Saxon England. Longman.
    ISBN 0-582-04047-7.
    Ashley, Mike (1998). The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens. London: Robinson. ISBN 1-
    84119-096-9.
    Campbell, James; John, Eric; Wormald, Patrick (1991). The Anglo-Saxons. London: Penguin Books.
    ISBN 0-14-014395-5.
    Edwards, Heather (2004) Ecberht, Oxford Online Dictionary of National Biography
    Fletcher, Richard (1989). Who's Who in Roman Britain and Anglo-Saxon England. Shepheard-Walwyn.
    ISBN 0-85683-089-5.
    Higham, N.J.; Hill, D.H. (2001). Edward the Elder. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-21497-1.
    Hunter Blair, Peter (1966). Roman Britain and Early England: 55 B.C. – A.D. 871. W.W. Norton &
    Company. ISBN 0-393-00361-2.
    Kirby, D.P. (1992). The Earliest English Kings. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-09086-5.
    Naismith, Rory (2011). "The Origins of the Line of Egbert, King of the West Saxons, 802 – 839" (PDF).
    English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. CXXVI (518): 1 – 16. doi:10.1093/ehr/ceq377.
    Retrieved 23 May 2012.
    Nelson, Janet L. (2004). "Æthelwulf (d. 858)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford
    University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8921. Retrieved 14 April 2012. (subscription or UK public library
    membership required)
    27. "Anglo-Saxons.net: S 1267" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=1267. )Sean Miller.
    Retrieved 8 August 2007.
    28. P. Wormald, "The Age of Ofa and Alcuin", p. 128, in Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons.
    29. "Manuscript C: Cotton Tiberius C.i" (http://asc.jebbo.co.uk/c/c-L.html). Tony Jebson. Retrieved 12 August 2007.
    30. Translation is based on Swanton; note thatb retwalda (which Swanton translates as 'controller of Britain') in ms A
    appears as brytenwealda and variants in the other mss; here this is translated as 'wide-ruler', per Swanton. See Swanton,
    Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, pp. 60–61.
    31. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 34–35.
    32. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, p. 17.
    33. Kirby, Earliest English Kings, p. 197.
    34. P. Wormald, "The Ninth Century", p. 139, in Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons.
    35. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, p. 96.
    36. Stenton cites the annal for 839, which says Æthelwulf "granted" or "gave" the kingdom of Kent to his son, as an
    example of the language that would have been used had Wiglaf been granted the kingdom by Egbert. See Stenton,
    Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 233–235
    37. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 233–235
    38. P. Wormald, "The Ninth Century", p. 138, in Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons.
    39. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, p. 51.
    40. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, p. 32.
    41. Abels, Alfred the Great, p. 31.
    42. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, p. 155.
    43. Payton, Cornwall, p. 68.
    44. "Anglo-Saxons.net: S 1438" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=1438. )Sean Miller.
    Retrieved 1 September 2007.
    45. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, pp. 148–149.
    46. "Anglo-Saxons.net: S 281" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=281. )Sean Miller.
    Retrieved 8 August 2007.
    47. P. Wormald, "The Ninth Century", p. 140, in Campbell et al., The Anglo-Saxons.
    48. Yorke, Kings and Kingdoms, pp. 168–169.
    49. Yorke, Wessex, p. 310.
    Wikimedia Commons has
    media related to Egbert of
    Wessex.
    Payton, Philip (2004). Cornwall: A History. Cornwall Editions. ISBN 1-904880-00-2.
    Stenton, Frank M. (1971). Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-821716-1.
    Whitelock, Dorothy (1968). English Historical Documents v.l. c.500 – 1042. London: Eyre &
    Spottiswoode.
    Wormald, Patrick; Bullough, D.; Collins, R. (1983). Ideal and Reality in Frankish and Anglo-Saxon
    Society. Oxford. ISBN 0-631-12661-9.
    Yorke, Barbara (1990). Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England. London: Seaby. ISBN 1-
    85264-027-8.
    Yorke, Barbara (1995). Wessex in the Early Middle Ages. London: Leicester University Press. ISBN 0-
    7185-1856-X.
    External links
    Ecgberht 10 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
    title=Egbert_of_Wessex&oldid=775069967"
    Categories: 839 deaths 8th-century births 9th-century English monarchs Burials at Winchester Cathedral
    Founding monarchs House of Wessex Kentish monarchs Mercian monarchs West Saxon monarchs
    This page was last edited on 12 April 2017, at 13:25.
    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may
    apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered
    trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

    Children:
    1. 1. of Wessex, King Æthelwulf was born in UNKNOWN in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died on 13 Jan 858 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was buried after 13 Jan 858 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  of Kent, Ealhmund

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Appointments / Titles: 784; King of Kent

    Notes:

    Ealhmund of Kent
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Ealhmund was King of Kent in 784. He is reputed to be the father of King Egbert who was King of Wessex and, later, King of Kent.

    Biography
    He is not known to have struck any coins,[1] and the only contemporary evidence of him is an abstract of a charter dated 784, in which Ealhmund granted land to the Abbot of Reculver.[2] By the following year Offa of Mercia seems to have been ruling directly, as he issued a charter [3] without any mention of a local king. General consensus among historians is this is the same Ealhmund found in two pedigrees in the Winchester (Parker) Chronicle, compiled during the reign of Alfred the Great.[4] The genealogical preface to this manuscript, as well as the annual entry (covering years 855–859) describing the death of Æthelwulf, both make King Egbert of Wessex the son of an Ealhmund, who was son of Eafa, grandson of Eoppa, and great-grandson of Ingild, the brother of King Ine of Wessex, and descendant of founder Cerdic,[5] and therefore a member of the House of Wessex (see House of Wessex family tree). A further entry has been added in a later hand to the 784 annal, reporting Ealhmund's reign in Kent.

    Finally, in the Canterbury Bilingual Epitome, originally compiled after the Norman conquest of England, a later scribe has likewise added to the 784 annal not only Ealhmund's reign in Kent, but his explicit identification with the father of Egbert.[6] Based on this reconstruction, in which a Wessex scion became King of Kent, his own Kentish name and that of his son, Egbert, it has been suggested that his mother derived from the royal house of Kent,[7] a connection dismissed by a recent critical review.[4] Historian Heather Edwards has suggested that Ealhmund was probably a Kentish royal scion, whose pedigree was forged to give his son Egbert the descent from Cerdic requisite to reigning in Wessex.[8]

    Notes
    1. Grierson and Blackburn, p. 269
    2. "S 38" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=seek&query=S+38.) Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
    3. "S 123" (http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=seek&query=S+123.) Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 2012-02-10.
    4. Bierbrier, p. 382
    5. Garmonsway, pp. xxxii, 2, 4
    6. Garmonsway, pp. xxxix-xxxx, 52
    7. Kelley
    8. Edwards, "Ecgberht"

    References
    Bierbrier, M.L., "Genealogical Flights of Fancy. Old Assumptions, New Sources", Foundations: Journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2:379–87.

    Edwards, Heather (2004). "Ecgberht [Egbert] (d. 839), king of the West Saxons". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8581. Retrieved 14 May 2014.

    Garmonsway, G.N. ed., The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd.

    Grierson, Philip; Blackburn, Mark (2006). Medieval European Coinage, With A Catalogue of the Coins in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge: 1: The Early Middle Ages (5th–10th Centuries). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-03177-X.

    Kelley, David H., "The House of Aethelred", in Brooks, Lindsay L., ed., Studies in Genealogy and Family History in Tribute to Charles Evans. Salt Lake City: The Association for the Promotion of Scholarship in Genealogy, Occasional Publication, No. 2, pp. 63–93.

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ealhmund_of_Kent&oldid=731523535"
    Categories: Kentish monarchs 780s deaths 8th-century English monarchs
    This page was last edited on 25 July 2016, at 22:14.
    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

    Children:
    1. 2. of Wessex, King Egbert was born in 781 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); died in 839 in Kingdom of Wessex (England); was buried in 839 in Winchester, Hampshire, England.