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Kingdom of Lindsey

 
British History: kingdom of Lindsey

Lindsey was one of the smaller kingdoms of early Anglo-Saxon England and its existence must always have been rather precarious. Bordered in the north by the Humber and the east by the North Sea, it followed the Trent in the west, taking in the Isle of Axholme, and the Witham in the south, including Lincoln itself. A list of the kings of Lindsey has survived, though Stenton called it ‘the obscurest of English dynasties’. It starts, conventionally, with Woden and ends with Aldfrith, probably in the 8th cent. An area of heavy Scandinavian settlement, it became one of the ridings of the later county of Lincolnshire and was itself divided up into ridings. These divisions lasted and Lindsey was given its own county council in 1888, the county town being Lincoln.

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Wikipedia: Kingdom of Lindsey
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Southern and eastern Britain in the early 7th century. Lindsey is shown as the Lindisfaras.

Lindsey or Linnuis is the name of the Anglo-Saxon kingdom that lay between the Humber and the Wash, forming its inland boundaries from the course of the Witham and Trent rivers (with the inclusion of an area inside of a marshy region south of the Humber known as the Isle of Axholme), and the Foss Dyke between them. It is believed that Lincoln was the capital of this kingdom, though place-name evidence indicates that the Anglian settlement developed from the Humber coast. Compare Winta and Winteringham.

Its name means the 'island of Lincoln'. This derives from the fact that it was surrounded by water and very wet land and had Lincoln towards its south-west corner. In the period of Anglian settlement in Britain beginning in about 450, the Kingdom of Lindsey was one of the petty Anglo-Saxon kingdoms which formed the English Heptarchy. Although it has its own list of kings, at an early date it came under external influence. It was from time to time effectively part of Deira, the Northumbrian kingdom and particularly later, of Mercia. Lindsey's independence was gone well before the arrival of the Danish Settlers.

The kingdom's heyday seems to have come before the historical period. By the time of the first historical records of Lindsey, it had become a subjugated polity, under the alternating control of Northumbria and Mercia. It is possible that the setback arose in the years around 500, from the opposition of the British leader known as Arthur, the second, third and fourth of whose twelve battles were fought in 'Linnuis' and whose twelfth victory held back Anglo-Saxon expansion for fifty years. See the Historia Britonum. However it may be, all trace of its individuality vanished before the Viking assault in the late ninth century. Its territories evolved into the historical English county of Lincolnshire, the northern part of which is called Lindsey.

Dr. Kevin Leahy's 2008 book The Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Lindsey is a recent overview of the archaeology of this kingdom.

Kings of Lindsey

A collection of genealogies, created in the last years of king Offa's reign, gives the names of the ruling lineage of Lindsey. The early names will relate either to life in Angeln or to a boastful genealogy arising from gods such as Woden.

  • Geot - Compare the Geats who are frequently mentioned in Beowulf's story.
  • Godulf
  • Finn
  • Frioðulf
  • Frealaf
  • Woden - Compare Woden, the god.

From Winta on, the names will refer to the early leaders in Lindsey.

  • Winta - Compare Winteringham (the homestead of Winta's people).
  • Cretta
  • Cuelgils
  • Caedbaed
  • Bubba
  • Beda
  • Biscop
  • Eanferð
  • Eatta
  • Aldfrið

None of the individuals can be securely dated: Frank Stenton refers to an Anglo-Saxon charter (BCS 262) which mentions Ealdfrith (Aldfrið), and dates its writing to some time between the years 787 and 796. Unfortunately it is now believed that the name on the witness list should read "Ecgfrið Rex" and refers to Offa's son, anointed King of the Mercians in 787, nine years before his succession in 796 and would have been correctly styled rex. Stenton had also suggested that the name 'Biscop' on the genealogy came from the title 'bishop' and must post-date Paulinus' mission to Lindsey of 628CE. However, as Sarah Foot pointed out, Biscop is a perfectly good name and we have no need to look for an external origin. The other genealogies in the Anglian Collection close with historic personages whose dates are known, Edwin of Deira (616-33), Ethelred of Mercia (675 - 704) and Ethelbert II of Kent (725-62) but this wide range offers little help in dating Aldfrið.[1]

References

  1. ^ The Anglo Saxon Kingdom of Lindsey, Dr. Kevin Leahy, p. 98-99

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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 "Kingdom of Lindsey" Read more