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Battle of Assandun

 
Military History Companion: battle of Ashingdon

Ashingdon, battle of (1016). From 1003, the Danish King Sweyn Forkbeard began a conquest of England at the expense of the English King Æðelred II Unræd (Ethelred ‘the Unready’). Sweyn's son, Knut (or Canute), continued his father's conquest, while Æðelred's son, Edmund Ironside, took over the English army on the death of his father in 1014. Edmund won a series of battles over Knut, and drove him from a siege of London in 1016, forcing the Danes into Essex. On 18 October 1016, the two armies met near Southend-on-Sea between the Crouch and Roach rivers. Owing to the treachery of Ædric and his force of Hereford men, who switched allegiance to the Danes during the battle, Edmund was heavily defeated, and many Saxon nobles were killed. Edmund died the following month, whereupon Knut was proclaimed king.

— Peter Caddick-Adams

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British History: battle of Ashingdon
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Ashingdon, battle of, 1016. This was the final battle in the struggle between Edmund Ironside and Cnut and took place near the river Crouch in Essex. The defection of Eadric, ealdorman of Mercia, who led the Magonsaete of Herefordshire from the field, contributed to a crushing Danish victory, with ‘all the flower of the English nation’ cut down. The two leaders met subsequently at Deerhurst in Gloucestershire to divide the kingdom but Edmund's death weeks afterwards gave the whole realm into Cnut's hands.

Wikipedia: Battle of Assandun
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Battle of Ashingdon
Assandun-sign.jpg
Date 1016
Location Ashdon or Ashingdon
Result Decisive Danish victory
Belligerents
Denmark England
Commanders
Canute the Great
Thorkell the High
Eiríkr Hákonarson
Edmund Ironside
Eadric Streona

The Battle of Ashingdon was fought on 18 October 1016, at Assandun. There is dispute over whether Assandun may actually be today's Ashdon, or the long supposed Ashingdon, in southeast Essex, England. It was a victory for the Danes, led by Canute the Great, who triumphed over the English army led by King Edmund II ('Ironside'). The battle was the conclusion to the Danish reconquest of England.

Canute had besieged London with major support from the English nobility against the Saxon hierarchy; particularly the Southampton nobles. The siege was in response to Edmund's reconquest of recently Danish-occupied Wessex, as well as conducting various indecisive offensives against Canute's army. London had withstood the siege and Edmund repulsed the Danes, but needed troops following a successful attack against the Danes in Mercia.

Leaving London, Edmund risked travelling into the countryside, dominated by enemies and at risk of being attacked by Danish soldiers. Canute's intelligence became aware of Edmund's movements, and while marching through Essex, Edmund's army was intercepted by Canute. The surprise interception overwhelmed the English, causing some of them to desert, and the Danes poured on the English, killing much of the nobility. Some sources claim that the Danes were losing ground, and that Eadric Streona had previously made a deal with Canute to desert the other English forces.

Following his defeat King Edmund II was forced to sign a treaty with Canute in which all of England except for Wessex would be controlled by Canute, and when one of the kings should die, the other king would take all of England; his sons being the heir to the throne. After Edmund's death on 30 November, Canute ruled the whole kingdom.

A few years later saw the construction of St. Andrews memorial church in 1020 on the hill of the presumed site of the Battle in Ashingdon, which still stands to this day. The church was founded after Canute's succession to the throne in 1020.

Primary sources

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle has a brief account of the battle.

When the king learned that the enemy army had gone inland, for the fifth time he collected all the English nation, and pursued them and overtook them in Essex at the hill which is called Ashingdon, and they stoutly joined battle there. Then Ealdorman Eadric did as he had often done before, he was the first to start the fight with the Magonsæte [i.e. of Herefordshire], and thus betrayed his liege lord and all the people of England. There Cnut had the victory and won for himself all the English people. There was Bishop Eadnoth killed, and Abbot Wulfsige, and Ealdorman Ælfric, and Godwine, the ealdorman of Lindsey, and Ulfcetel of East Anglia, and Æthelweard, son of Ealdorman Æthelwine, and all the nobility of England was there destroyed.[1]

The battle is also mentioned briefly in Knýtlinga saga which quotes a verse of skaldic poetry by Óttarr svarti, one of Canute's court poets.

King Knut fought the third battle, a major one, against the sons of Æthelred at a place called Ashington, north of the Danes' Woods. In the words of Ottar:
At Ashington, you worked well
in the shield-war, warrior-king;
brown was the, flesh of bodies
served to the blood-bird:
in the slaughter, you won,
sire, with your sword
enough of a name there,
north of the Danes' Woods.[2]

The most detailed account of the battle is in Encomium Emmae.


 
 
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battle of Assandun (historical event, war, England)
Edmund Ironside (English king)
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Military History Companion. The Oxford Companion to Military History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Battle of Assandun" Read more