The chief magistrate of a district in Anglo-Saxon England.
[Old English. See alderman.]
Dictionary:
eal·dor·man (ôl'dər-mən) ![]() |
| British History: ealdorman |
Ealdorman in early usage could indicate a patriarch, prince, or ruler. In the laws of King Ine, c.700, the ealdorman appears as a functionary, in charge of a scir (shire). In another context such men would probably appear as subreguli (under-kings). From the early 11th cent. the Scandinavian term ‘earl’ is used for such potentates. But the general sense of ‘ealdorman’ gave the term lasting life, in particular in towns.
| Archaeology Dictionary: ealdorman |
Elder or patriarch, used in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms to refer to a viceroy of the king, official, noble, or sometimes ecclesiastic. Replaced by jarl (‘earl’) during the Danish occupation and gradually relegated to the title of an official in local government.
| Wikipedia: Ealdorman |
An ealdorman (from Old English ealdorman, lit. "elder man") is the term used for a high-ranking royal official and prior magistrate of an Anglo-Saxon shire or group of shires from about the ninth century to the time of King Cnut. The term ealdorman was rendered in Latin as dux in early West Saxon charters, and as præfectus (which confusingly, is also the equivalent of gerefa, modern reeve, from which sheriff or shire reeve). In the Life of King Alfred by the Welsh bishop Asser, the Latin equivalent is comes.[1] As the chief magistrate of a shire or group of shires (county) in Anglo-Saxon England, he commanded the army of the shire(s) and districts under his control on behalf of the king.
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They were appointees of the king and were originally mostly from the ancient and powerful families, but later were often chosen from among the king's comites (plural of comes, lit. "companion") and many, especially in the early Danish period, were new to high office. The office was not hereditary, but there are several examples of tenth-century ealdormen whose sons became ealdormen (if not always of the same district), such as Æthelstan Half-King and Æthelweard the Chronicler.
Towards the end of the tenth century, the term ealdorman gradually disappeared as it gave way to eorl, probably under the influence of the Danish term jarl, which evolved into modern English earl. The analogous term is sometimes count, from the French comte, derived from the Latin comes. The ealdormen can be thought of as the early English earls, for their ealdormanries (singular ealdormanry, same meaning as earldom) eventually became the great earldoms of Anglo-Danish and Anglo-Norman England.
An ealdormancy was an Anglo-Saxon governing body over several shires, made up of more than one ealdorman.
Although earls may be regarded as the successors of ealdormen, the word ealdorman itself did not disappear and survives in modern times as alderman. This term, however, developed distinct meanings which have little to do with ealdormen.
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| ealderman | |
| Aethelweard (in archaeology) | |
| Alderman (family name) |
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