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Eadred of England

 

Edred (d. 955), king of England (946-55). The third of Edward the Elder's sons to succeed to the West Saxon kingship, Edred was confronted during the greater part of his reign by an independent Scandinavian kingdom of York. Only in the last year of his life did Edred rule over a united kingdom of England. He was a devout Christian and a close friend of Abbot Dunstan of Glastonbury.

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King of the English from ad 946. He extended his control over the Danelaw and was responsible for the expulsion of Erik Bloodaxe, last Danish king of York. He was the son of Edward the Elder. Died c.ad 955.

 
Edred or Eadred (both: ĕd'rĕd), d. 955, king of the English (946-55), son of Edward the Elder. He succeeded his brother Edmund and was faced with invasions of Danish Northumbria by Norsemen from Ireland and by Eric Bloodaxe of Norway. Edred finally reestablished control over Northumbria in 954, thus bringing to an end the last independent Scandinavian kingdom in England. Edred, being sickly, left affairs to his friend Saint Dunstan, who allowed the Danes of England to live under their own laws.
Wikipedia: Eadred of England
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Eadred
King of the English
Reign 26 May 946 – 23 November 955
Predecessor Edmund I
Successor Eadwig
Father Edward the Elder
Mother Eadgifu
Born 923
Wessex, England
Died 23 November 955
Frome, Somerset
Burial Old Minster, Winchester. Bones now in Winchester Cathedral

Eadred (also Edred, Aedred, etc.) was the King of England from 946 until his death in 955. He was a son of Edward the Elder by his third marriage, to Eadgifu, daughter of Sigehelm, ealdorman of Kent.

He succeeded his elder brother King Edmund I, who was stabbed to death at Pucklechurch (Gloucestershire), on St Augustine’s Day, 26 May 946. The same year, on 16 August, Eadred was consecrated by Archbishop Oda of Canterbury at Kingston upon Thames (Surrey, now Greater London), where he appears to have received the submission of Welsh rulers and northern earls.[1]

Contents

Trouble in Northumbria

Under the entry for the year 946, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Eadred “reduced all the land of Northumbria to his control; and the Scots granted him oaths that they would do all that he wanted.”[2] Nevertheless, Eadred soon faced a number of political challenges to the West-Saxon hegemony in the north. Unfortunately, there are some notorious difficulties with the chronology of the events described in the historical sources, but it is clear that there were two Scandinavian princes who set themselves up as kings of Northumbria.

Olaf Sihtricson, otherwise known as Amlaíb Cuarán (‘Sandal’), had been king of York (Jórvik) in the early 940’s, when he became Edmund’s godson and client king, but he was later driven out. He then succeeded his cousin as King of Dublin, but after a heavy defeat in battle in 947, was once again forced to try his luck elsewhere.[3] Shortly after this, Olaf was back in business, having regained the kingdom of York.[4] What Eadred thought of the matter or how much sympathy he bore for his brother’s godson, remains anyone’s guess, but it seems that he at least tolerated Olaf’s presence. In any event, Olaf was ousted from the kingship a second time by the Northumbrians, this time in favour of Eric son of Harald, according to MS E of the Chronicle.[5]

This other player in the game was Eric ‘Bloodaxe’, previously king of Norway (r. 930-4). After a number of successful operations elsewhere, he came to Northumbria and appears at some point to have set himself up as king. King Eadred responded harshly to the northern defectors by launching a destructive raid on Northumbria, which notably included burning the Ripon minster founded by St Wilfrid. Although his forces had to sustain heavy losses in the Battle of Castleford (as he returned home), Eadred managed to check his rival by promising the latter’s supporters even greater havoc if they did not desert the foreign prince. The Northumbrians did indeed appease the English king in this way and paid compensation.[6]

The Historia Regum suggests that the threat of an independent Northumbrian king had come to an end in 952, when earls finally took over the helm.[7]

Health conditions and death

Towards the end of his life, Eadred suffered from a digestive malady which would prove fatal. 'Author B', the biographer and former apprentice of St Dunstan, described with vivid memory how the king sucked out the juices of his food, chewed on what was left and spat it out.[8] Eadred died on 23 November (St. Clement's Day), 955, at Frome (Somerset), and was buried in the Old Minster at Winchester.[9] As he died a bachelor and thus had no children, he was succeeded by Edmund's son Eadwig.

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ Sawyer no. 520; John of Worcester, Chronicon ex Chronicis, 946
  2. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MSS D and E, translated by Michael J. Swanton, The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. 2nd ed. London, 2000.
  3. ^ Annals of Ulster 945 and 947: CELT
  4. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MS E, 949
  5. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MS E, 952
  6. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MS D, 948, but the Historia Regum gives 950
  7. ^ Historia Regum 952
  8. ^ "Eratque, proh dolor, rex Eadraedus dilectus Dunstani per omne tempus imperii sui nimium languens, ita ut refectionis tempore sorpto succo ciborum reliquam partem parumper dentibus obtritam ab ore rejecisse, et sic saepe convivantibus secum militibus foetentem nausiam exspuendo fecisset." Vita S. Dunstani § 20: p. 31
  9. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle MSS A, D and E, 955, MSS B and C, 956.

Primary sources

  • Anglo-Saxon Chronicles. Edition available online.
  • Chronicle of Æthelweard, ed. and tr. Alistair Campbell, The Chronicle of Æthelweard. London, 1961.
  • Historia Regum, ed. T. Arnold, Symeonis Monachi Opera Omnia. 2 vols: 2. London, 1885.
  • John of Worcester, Chronicon ex Chronicis, ed. Benjamin Thorpe, Florentii Wigorniensis monachi chronicon ex chronicis. 2 vols: vol 1. London, 1848-9.
  • Like his grandfather King Alfred, Eadred left a written record of his will: Sawyer no. 1515 (AD 951 x 955). Text available from Anglo-Saxons.net
  • Anglo-Saxon Charters, Sawyer nos. 515–580 (including S 552a, 522a, 517a-b), 1211-2, 1511.
  • Vita S. Dunstani ('Life of St. Dunstan'), ed. W. Stubbs, Memorials of St Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury. Rolls Series. London, 1874. 3-52. Available as PDF from Google Books (or from the Internet Archive here or here) and from Gallica.
  • Vita S. Æthelwoldi ('Life of St. Æthelwold'), ed. and tr. Michael Lapidge and Michael Winterbottom, Wulfstan of Winchester. The Life of St Æthelwold. OMT. Oxford, 1991.

Secondary sources

  • Gough, Harold. "Eadred's Charter of AD 949 and the Extent of the Monastic Estate of Reculver, Kent." St Dunstan: His Life, Times and Cult, ed. Nigel Ramsay and Margaret Sparks. Woodbridge and Rochester, NY: Boydell, 1992. 89-10.
  • Sawyer, P. “The last Scandinavian rulers of York.” Northern History 31 (1995): 39-44.
  • Stenton, Frank Merry. Anglo-Saxon England. 3d ed. Oxford, 1971. 360-3.

External links

Preceded by
Edmund
King of the English
946–955
Succeeded by
Eadwig

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