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Deira

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromKingdom of Deira)
Kingdom in the north of early Anglo-Saxon Britain
For other uses, seeDeira (disambiguation).

Kingdom of Deira
c. 450–654
CapitalYork
Common languagesNorthumbrian Old English,Common Brittonic
Religion
Anglo-Saxon paganism,Christianity
GovernmentMonarchy
Historical eraEarly Medieval
• Established
c. 450
• Shared crown withBernicia
604
• merged with Bernicia
654
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Sub-Roman Britain
Parisi (tribe)
Northumbria

Deira (/ˈdrə,ˈdɛərə/DY-rə,DAIR;[1]Old Welsh/Cumbric:Deywr orDeifr;Old English:Dere orDera rice)[2] was an area ofPost-Roman Britain, and a laterAnglian kingdom.[3]

Etymology

[edit]

The name of the kingdom is ofBrythonic origin, and is derived from theProto-Celtic*daru, meaning 'oak' (derw in modern Welsh), in which case it would mean 'the people of theDerwent', a derivation also found in theLatin name forMalton,Derventio.[4] It iscognate with the modernIrish worddoire (pronounced[ˈd̪ˠɛɾʲə]); the names of the Irish cities ofDerry andKildare stem from this word.[5][6]

History

[edit]

Brythonic Deira

[edit]

Following theRoman withdrawal from Britain a number of successor kingdoms rose in northern England, reflecting pre-Roman tribal territories. The area betweenthe Humber andRiver Tees known asDeywr orDeifr corresponds to the tribal lands of theParisi, bordered to the west and north by the Brythonic kingdoms ofElmet (Elfed) andBernicia (Bryneich) respectively, and to the east by theNorth Sea.

Early Deira may have centred onPetuaria (modernBrough) and archaeological evidence shows that the town was refortified. Petuaria was a great tribal centre for the Parisi, but declined in importance from the mid-fourth century (possibly as the harbour silted up). After this period,Derventio (modernMalton) may have functioned as the region's capital.[7]

It is not known if Deira was ever an independent Brythonic kingdom, and no British king has been identified with the area from the surviving genealogies, poems or chronicles. However the area was subject to the same fractious inheritance traditions and changing power dynamic (following the Roman withdrawal) that allowedElmet and Bernicia to become independent hereditary kingdoms in the early fifth century. InWelsh literature, Deira is part of theHen Ogledd (The Old North) region, which was divided into many related kingdoms after the death ofCoel Hen (Coel the Old).[8][9]

Anglian Deira

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The kingdom, which was previously ruled by a British dynasty, was probably created in the third quarter of the fifth century when Anglian warriors invaded theDerwent Valley.[10] Anglian Deira's territory also extended from theHumber to theTees, and from the sea to the western edge of theVale of York. It later merged with the kingdom ofBernicia, its northern neighbour, to form the kingdom ofNorthumbria.

According toSimeon of Durham (writing early in the 12th century), Deira extended from theHumber to theTyne, but the land was waste north of theTees. The Brythonic kingdom centred onEboracum ("boar-place"), which may have also been calledEbrauc. After the city was taken by King Edwin of the Angles, it becameEoforwic, the capital of the new Anglian kingdom.[11]

Archaeology suggests that the Anglian royal house was in place by the middle of the fifth century, but the first certainly recorded king isÆlla in the late sixth century.[12] After his death, Deira was subject to kingÆthelfrith of Bernicia, who united the two kingdoms into Northumbria. Æthelfrith ruled until the accession of Ælla's sonEdwin, in 616 or 617, who also ruled both kingdoms until 633.[13]

Osric, the nephew of Edwin, ruled Deira after Edwin, but his sonOswine was put to death byOswiu in 651. For a few years subsequently, Deira was governed byÆthelwald son ofOswald of Bernicia.[14]

Bede wrote of Deira in hisHistoria Ecclesiastica (completed in 731).[15]

Anglian kings of Deira

[edit]
See also:List of monarchs of Northumbria
ReignIncumbentNotes
559/560 to 589Ælla
(Aelli)
ÆLLA YFFINGDEIRA CYNING
ÆLLA REXDEIRA
589/599 to 604Æthelric
(Aedilric)
ÆÞELRIC IDINGBERNICIA 7 DEIRA CYNING
ÆÞELRIC REXBERNICIA ET DEIRA
Bernicia Dynasty
593/604? to 616ÆthelfrithÆÞELFERÞ ÆÞELRICINGDEIRA CYNING
ÆÞELFERÞ REXDEIRA
Killed in battle
Deira Dynasty
616 to 12/14 October 632EdwinEDVVIN ÆLLINGBERNICIA 7 DEIRA CYNING
EDVVIN REXBERNICIA ET DEIRA
Killed in battle byCadwallon of Gwynedd andPenda of Mercia
late 633 to summer 634OsricOSRIC ÆLFRICINGDEIRA CYNING
OSRIC REXDEIRA
Bernicia Dynasty
633 to 5 August 642OswaldOSVVALDBERNICIA 7 DEIRA CYNING
OSVVALD REXBERNICIA ET DEIRA
Killed byPenda,King of Mercia; Saint Oswald
642 to 644OswiuOSVVIO ÆÞELFRIÞINGBERNICIA 7 DEIRA CYNING
OSVVIO REXBERNICIA ET DEIRA
Deira Dynasty
644 to 651OswineOSVVINE OSRICINGDEIRA CYNING
OSVVINE REXDEIRA
Murdered
Bernicia Dynasty
summer 651 tolate 654 or 655ÆthelwoldÆÞELVVALD OSVVALDINGDEIRA CYNING
ÆÞELVVALD REXDEIRA
654 to 15 August 670OswiuOSVVIO ÆÞELFERÞINGNORÞANHYMBRA CYNING
OSVVIO REXNORÞANHYMBRA
Restored
656 to 664AlchfrithALCHFRIÞDEIRA CYNING
ALCHFRIÞ REXDEIRA
664 to 670EcgfrithECGFRIÞDEIRA CYNING
ECGFRIÞ REXDEIRA
670 to 679ÆlfwineÆLFVVINEDEIRA CYNING
ÆLFVVINE REXDEIRA

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^A Complete Pronouncing Gazetteer, Or, Geographical Dictionary of the World, 1880
  2. ^Bosworth, Joseph; Toller, T. Northcote (1980) [1898].An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary. Oxford University Press. p. 203.ISBN 0-19-863101-4.
  3. ^McCarthy, Mike (2014)."An Early Historic Celtic Kingdom near the Solway".The History Files. Retrieved18 May 2014.
  4. ^Higham, p. 81
  5. ^Library IrelandArchived 8 February 2012 at theWayback Machine – Sketches of Olden Days in Northern Ireland
  6. ^Mills 2003, p. 430.
  7. ^B. Sitch & A. Williams (1992).Roman Humberside. Humberside County Council Archaeology Unit.
  8. ^Morris, p. 54.
  9. ^Koch 2006, pp. 584–585.
  10. ^Higham, p. 98
  11. ^Malam 2011, p. 24.
  12. ^Higham, pp. 77-78
  13. ^Garmonsway, G. N. (1954).The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. London: Dent. pp. 26–27.ISBN 0460106244.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  14. ^D. P. Kirby,The Earliest English Kings (1991, 2000), page 78.
  15. ^Bede 1910, Book III.

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Geake, Helen & Kenny, Jonathan (eds.) (2000).Early Deira: Archaeological studies of the East Riding in the fourth to ninth centuries AD. Oxford: Oxbow.ISBN 1-900188-90-2
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