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Ethelwerd 853

Saxon Chronicle

1 And the same year king 1 In the same year, king 1
Æthelwulf sent his son
Elfred to Rome. Leo was
then pope of Rome, and he
consecrated him king, and
took him for his son at con-
firmation. *

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Ethelwulf sent his son
Elfred, above-named, to
Rome, with an honourable
escort both of nobles and
commoners. Pope Leo [THE
FOURTH] at that time presided
over the apostolic see, who
ordained and anointed for
king the aforesaid child Æl-
fred, and confirmed him,
receiving him as his son of

adoption.

2 The same year also, earl
Ealhere, with the men of
Kent, and Huda with the
men of Surrey, fought bravely
and resolutely against an
army of the pagans, in the
island, which is called in the
Saxon tongue, Tenet, [THA-

NET], but Ruim in British.
3 And at first the Christians
had the victory, but when
the battle was protracted to a
great length, many fell on
both sides, and also were
drowned in the water; and
both the earls were there
slain.

is dated April 22. 2. Another copy of
the same charter follows, p. 52, in
which the names of Ethelred and
Alfred do not appear. Both copies
bear the subscription of the
celebrated Swithun bishop of
Winchester, and Alstan bishop of

In the year of our Lord's
incarnation 855, which was
the seventh after the birth of
the aforesaid king, the great
army of the pagans passed
the whole winter in the afore-

said isle of Sheppey.
In the same year the afore-
said venerable king Ethel-
wulf released the tenth part
of all his kingdom from all
royal service and tribute, and
with a pen never to be for-
gotten, offered it up to God
the One and the Three in
One, in the cross of Christ,
for the redemption of his
own soul and of his prede-

cessors.

In the same year king Atheluulf sent his son Ælfred to Rome in the days of our lord pope Leo, who consecrated him king and named him his son in baptism, as we are accustomed to nam little children, when we receive them from the bishop's hand.

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In the same year king Athulf gave the tenth of all his possessions to be the Lord's portion, and So appointed it to be in all the government of his kingdom.

INGULF places the grant of tithes in 855, after the return of Ethelwolf

from Rome: but, if he started for Rome in 855, and stayed there 12

months, it is certain that he returned in 856, and consequently, if the grant was made in 855, it must have been made before he started. Ethelwolf married Judith on the 1st of October 856. [BOUQUET, vii, 72]

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2 The same year also, earl Ealhere, with the men of Kent, and Huda with the men of Surrey, fought bravely and resolutely against an army of the pagans, in the island, which is called in the Saxon tongue, Tenet, [THANET], but Ruim in the British. And at first the Christians had the victory, but when the battle was protracted to a great length, many fell on both sides, and also were drowned in the water; and both the earls were there slain.

854. Died Eanbert bishop of Lindisfarne, and Eardulf succeeded.

855

The great

In the same year king Adelwlf sent to Rome, to pope Leo, his son Alured, whom Leo afterwards blessed as king, and received as his

son.

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pagans

Simeon

whereby, on the completion offthe nuptials, he appointed her the dignity of the name of queen.

1 In the same year king Ethelwlf sent over to Rome his son Elfred accompanied by a great band of noble soldiers. At which time the blessed pope Leo presided over the apostolic see who ordained and anointed for king the aforesaid child, and receiving him for his adopted son, confirmed him and sent him back to his country and to his father with the blessing of St Peter the apostle.

2

At that time earl Alchere and Wada, with the men of Kent and Surrey, fought severely against the army of the pagans in the island which is called TENED in the Saxon tongue, but in the British RUIM. At first the Christians had the victory; but, when the battle was protracted to a great length, many fell on both sides, and many were drowned in the river and slain, a number not to be described. Both the aforesaid leaders there fell for the deliverance of their people.

In the year of our Lord's incarnation 854, archbishop Wlfere received the pall, and Eardulf undertook the bisho

pric of Lindisfarne.

In the year of our Lord's incarnation 855, and the

army of the pagans passed tarried the whole winter in seventh from the birth of the

the whole winter in the afore

said isle of Sheppey.

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Sheppey.

1 Ethelwolf, in the 19th year of his reign, tithed all his land for the service of the churches, on account of his love of God and for the redemption of himself.

3

aforesaid king, the army of the pagans wintered the whole winter in the island of Sheppey.

At which time king Ethelwlf tithed all the dominions of his kingdom for the redemption of his soul and that of his ancestors.

ANNALS. AN. 855. Eadmund, the most glorious king of the EastAngles, begins to reign on the 8th before the calends of January, i. e. on our Lord's birth-day, in the 14th year of his age.

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Ethelwerd 855

And in the same year he set out to Rome with great dignity, and stopped there 12 months.

CHARTERS IN 855. 1. ETHELWOLF, Nov. 5. mentions that Beorred king of Mercia, and Edmund king of the Fastangles, were present and subscribed. II, 56. 2. ETHELWOLF; subscribed also by " Æthelberht rex,' " "Elfred filius regis," and others. II, 58. 3. BURGRED of Mercia; signed also by "Ethelswith regina," "Mucel dux," and 4. others. II, 58. BURGRED, subscribed also by "Ethelswith regina," and others. II, 60. 5. EALHWINE bishop of Worcester. II, 61.

(8) A. 856.

1

And then returned homewards. And then Charles king of the Franks gave him his daughter to wife; and after that he came to his people, and they were glad of it.

After which he returned to
his own country, bringing
with him Judith, daughter
of Charles, the king of the
Franks.

On his way back to his own country, Charles king of the Franks gave to him in marriage his daughter, whom he received and brought into his own country.

In the meantime, however, whilst king Ethelwulf was residing beyond the sea, a base deed was done, repugnant to the morals of all Christians, in the western part of Selwood. For king Æthelbald and Ealhstan, bishop of the church of Sherborne, with Eanwulf, earl of the district of Somerton,+ are said to have made a conspiracy together, that king Ethelwulf, on his return from Rome, should never again be received into his kingdom. This crime, unheard-of in all previous ages, is ascribed by many to the bishop and earl alone, as resulting from their counsels. Many also ascribe it solely to the insolence of the king, because that king was pertinacious in this matter, and in many other perversities, as we have heard related by certain persons; as also was

+ Earl of Somersetshire, of which Somerton was once the chief town.

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The

most holy Edmund, beloved by God, sprung from the lineage of the old Saxons, and a true worshipper of the Christian faith, affable to all by his sweet mode of speech, and deeply imbued with the grace of humility, liberal to the needy, and a most merciful father to orphans and widows, obtained the government of the province of East-Anglia.

2 In the meantime, however, whilst king Etheluulf was residing beyond the sea, a base deed was done, repugnant to the morals of all Christians, in the western part of Selwood. For king Æthelbald and Falhstan, bishop of the church of Sherborne, with Eanwulf, earl of the district of Somerton, are said to have made a conspiracy together, that king Ætheluulf, on his return from Rome, should never again be

3 And return-
ing thence, he took to wife
the daughter of Charles the
Bald king of France, and
brought her with him into
this country.

received into his kingdom. This crime, unheard-of in all previous ages, is ascribed by many to the bishop and earl alone, as resulting from their counsels. Many also ascribed it solely to the insolence of the king, because that king was pertinacious in this matter, and in many other perversities, as we have heard related by certain persons; as also was

When he [ETHELWOLF] Was returning to his ountry,

ANNALS. AN. 856. In the 18th year of the reign of Adhelwlf king of the West-Saxons, HUMBERCHT bishop of the East Angles anointed with oil, and consecrated for king, the most glorious Eadmund with great joy and the greatest honour, in the royal vill which is called Burna, because the royal seat was then there, in the 15th year of his age, the sixth day of the week, 24th moon, being the day of our Lord's birth.

he became

hateful to his son Ethelbald, and Ealhstan bishop of Sherborne, and many others.

CHARTERS IN 856. None are

extant.

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proved by the result of that which follows. For, as he was returning from Rome, his son aforesaid, with all his counsellors, or, as I ought to say, his conspirators, attempted to perpetrate the crime of repulsing the king from his own kingdom; but neither did God permit the deed, nor would the nobles of Saxony consent to it. For to pervent this irremediable evil to Saxony, of a son warring against his father, or rather of the whole nation carrying on civil war, either on the side of the one or the other, the extraordinary mildness of the father, seconded by the consent of all the nobles, divided between the two the kingdom which had hitherto been undivided; the eastern parts were given to the father, and the western to the son; contrariwise: for where the father ought by just right to reign, there his unjust and obstinate son did reign; for the western part of Saxony is always preferable to the eastern. When Ethelwulf, therefore, was coming from Rome, that nation, as was fitting, so delighted in the arrival of the old man, that, if he permitted them, they would have expelled his rebellious son Æthelbald, with all his counsellors, out of the kingdom. But he, as we have said, acting with great clemency and prudent counsel, so wished things to be done, that the kingdom might not come into danger; and he placed Judith, daughter of king Charles, whom he had received from her father, by his own side on the regal throne, without any controversy or enmity from his nobles, even to the end of his life, contrary to the perverse custom of that nation. For the nation of the West-Saxons do not allow a queen to sit beside the king, nor to be called a queen, but only the king's wife; which stigma the elders of that land say arose from a certain obstinate and malevolent queen of the same nation, who did all things so contrary to her lord, and to all the people, that she not only earned for herself exclusion from the royal seat, but also entailed the same stigma upon those who came after her; for, in consequence of the wickedness of that queen, all the nobles of that land swore together, that they would never let any king reign over them, who should attempt to place a queen on the throne by his side.

And because, as I think, it is not known to many whence this perverse and detestable custom arose in Saxony, contrary to the custom of all the Theotiscan † nations, it seems to me right to explain a little more fully what I have heard from my lord Alfred, king of the Anglo-Saxons, as he also had heard it from many men of truth, who in great part recorded that fact.

There was in Mercia, in recent times, a certain valiant king, who was feared by all the kings and neighbouring states around. His name was Offa, and it was he who had the great rampart made from sea to sea between Britain and Mercia. His daughter, named Eadburgh, was married to Berhtric, king of the West-Saxons; who immediately, having the king's affections, and the control of almost all the kingdom, began to live tyrannically like her father, and to execrate every man whom Beorhtric loved, and to do all things hateful to God and man, and to accuse all she could before the king, and so to deprive them insidiously of their life or power; and if she could not obtain the king's consent, she used to take them off by poison: as is ascertained to have been the case with a certain young man beloved by the king, whom she poisoned, finding that the king would not listen to any accusation against him. It is said, moreover,

Ethelwerd 856

* i. e. ENGLAND.

"I Tedeschi "-Teutonic.

i. c. WALES.

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