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Wihtred of Kent

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King of Kent from 670 – 725

Wihtred
King of Kent
Reignc. 690 – 23 April 725
Bornc. 670
Died23 April 725 (aged 54–55)
IssueÆthelberht II,Eadberht I, andAlric
FatherEcgberht

Wihtred (Latin:Wihtredus) (c. 670 – 23 April 725) was king ofKent from about 690 or 691 until his death. He was a son ofEcgberht I and a brother ofEadric. Wihtred ascended to the throne after a confused period in the 680s, which included a brief conquest of Kent byCædwalla of Wessex, and subsequent dynastic conflicts. His immediate predecessor wasOswine, who was probably descended fromEadbald, though not through the same line as Wihtred. Shortly after the start of his reign, Wihtred issued a code of laws—theLaw of Wihtred—that has been preserved in a manuscript known as theTextus Roffensis. The laws pay a great deal of attention to the rights of the Church (of the time period), including punishment for irregular marriages and for pagan worship. Wihtred's long reign had few incidents recorded in the annals of the day. He was succeeded in 725 by his sons,Æthelberht II,Eadberht I, andAlric.

Kent in the late seventh century

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The kingdoms of Britain in the late seventh-century

The dominant force in late-seventh-century politics south of theRiver Humber wasWulfhere of Mercia, who reigned from the late 650s to 675. The king of Kent for much of this time wasEcgberht, who died in 673. Ecgberht's sons,Eadric and Wihtred, were probably little more than infants, two or three years old, when their father died; Wulfhere was their uncle by virtue of his marriage toEormenhild, Ecgberht's sister.Hlothhere, Ecgberht's brother, became king of Kent, but not until about a year later, in 674, and it may be that Wulfhere opposed the accession of Hlothhere and was the effective ruler of Kent during this year-long interregnum.[1]

Eadric raised an army against his uncle and Hlothhere died of wounds sustained in battle in February 685 or possibly 686.[2] Eadric died the following year, and according toBede, whoseEcclesiastical History of the English People is one of the primary sources for this period, the kingdom fell apart into disorder.[3]Cædwalla of Wessex invaded in 686 and established his brotherMul as king there; Cædwalla may have ruled Kent directly for a period when Mul was killed in 687.[4] When Cædwalla departed for Rome in 688,Oswine, who was probably supported byÆthelred of Mercia, took the throne for a time. Oswine lost power in 690, butSwæfheard (son ofSebbi, the king of Essex), who had been a king in Kent for a year or two, remained.[5] There is clear evidence that both Swæfheard and Oswine were kings at the same time, as each witnessed the other's charters. It seems that Oswine was king of east Kent, which was usually the position of the dominant king, while Swæfheard was king of west Kent.[6]

Accession and reign

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Family tree showing the descendants of Eadbald. Wihtred, through his father Egbert, is of Eorcenberht's line. Oswine's descent was probably through one ofDomne Eafe's siblings, but which one is not known.[5]

Wihtred emerged from this disarray and became king in the early 690s.[5] Bede describes his accession by saying that he was the "rightful" king, and that he "freed the nation from foreign invasion by his devotion and diligence".[3] Oswine was also of the royal family, and arguably had a claim to the throne; hence it has been suggested that Bede's comments here are strongly partisan. Bede's correspondent on Kentish affairs was Albinus, abbot of the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul (subsequently renamedSt. Augustine's) in Canterbury, and these views can almost certainly be ascribed to the Church establishment there.[7][8][9]

Two charters provide evidence of Wihtred's date of accession. One, dated April 697, indicates Wihtred was then in the sixth year of his rule,[10] so his accession can be dated to some time between April 691 and April 692. Another, dated 17 July 694, is in his fourth regnal year, giving a possible range of July 690 to July 691.[11] The overlap in date ranges gives April to July 691 as the likely date of his accession.[12] Another estimate of the date of Wihtred's accession can be made from the duration of his reign, given by Bede as thirty four and a half years. He died on 23 April 725, which would imply an accession date in late 690.[13]

Initially Wihtred ruled alongside Swæfheard.[5] Bede's report of the election ofBeorhtwald asArchbishop of Canterbury in July 692 mentions that Swæfheard and Wihtred were the kings of Kent, but Swæfheard is not heard of after this date. It appears that by 694 Wihtred was the sole ruler of Kent,[5] though it may also be that his sonÆthelberht was a junior king in west Kent during Wihtred's reign.[14] Wihtred is thought to have had three wives. His first was called Cynegyth, but a charter of 696 names Æthelburh as the royal consort and co-donor of an estate: the former spouse must have died or been dismissed after a short time. Near the end of his reign, a new wife, Wærburh, attested with her husband and son, Alric.[15]

It was also in 694 that Wihtred made peace with theWest Saxon kingIne. Ine's predecessor, Cædwalla, had invaded Kent and installed his brotherMul as king, but the Kentishmen had subsequently revolted and burned Mul. Wihtred agreed compensation for the killing, but the amount paid to Ine is uncertain. Most manuscripts of theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle record "thirty thousand", and some specify thirty thousand pounds. If the pounds are equal tosceattas, then this amount is the equal of a king'swergild—that is, the legal valuation of a man's life, according to his rank.[16][17] It seems likely that Wihtred ceded some border territory to Ine as part of this settlement.[18]

Laws

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Main article:Law of Wihtred
The first page of the twelfth-century manuscript known as theTextus Roffensis, which contains the oldest surviving copy of Wihtred's law code.

The earliest Anglo-Saxon law code to survive, which may date from 602 or 603, is that ofÆthelberht of Kent, whose reign ended in 616.[19] In the 670s or 680s, a code was issued in the names ofHlothhere andEadric of Kent. The next kings to issue laws were Ine of Wessex and Wihtred.[20]

The dating of Wihtred's and Ine's laws is somewhat uncertain, but there is reason to believe that Wihtred's laws were issued on 6 September 695,[21] while Ine's laws were written in 694 or shortly before.[22] Ine had recently agreed peaceful terms with Wihtred over compensation for the death of Mul, and there are indications that the two rulers collaborated to some degree in producing their laws. In addition to the coincidence of timing, there is one clause that appears in almost identical form in both codes.[23] Another sign of collaboration is that Wihtred's laws usegesith, a West Saxon term for noble, in place of the Kentish termeorlcund. It is possible that Ine and Wihtred issued the law codes as an act of prestige, to re-establish authority after periods of disruption in both kingdoms.[24]

Wihtred's laws were issued at "Berghamstyde"; it is not known for certain where this was, but the best candidate isBearsted, nearMaidstone. The laws are primarily concerned with religious affairs; only the last four of its twenty-eight chapters do not deal with ecclesiastical affairs. The first clause of the code gives the Church freedom from taxation. Subsequent clauses specify penalties for irregular marriages, heathen worship, work on the sabbath, and breaking fasts, among other things; and also define how members of each class of society—such as the king, bishops, priests, ceorls, and esnes—can clear themselves by giving an oath.[25] In addition to the focus of the laws themselves, the introduction makes clear the importance of the Church in the legislative process. Bertwald, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was present at the assembly which devised the decrees, and so wasGefmund, the Bishop of Rochester; and "every order of the Church of that nation spoke in unanimity with the loyal people".[25][26]

The privileges given to the Church are notable: in addition to the freedom from taxation, the oath of a bishop is "incontrovertible", which places it at the same level as the oath of a king, and the Church receives the same level of compensation for violence done to dependents as does the king. This has led one historian to describe the Church's power, less than a century after the original Roman mission landed in Kent, as "all but co-ordinate with the king himself in the Kentish state",[27] and it has also been described as presupposing "a frightening degree of royal power".[28] However, the presence of clauses that provide penalties for any of Wihtred's subjects who "sacrifice to devils" makes it clear that although Christianity was dominant, the older pagan beliefs of the population had by no means died out completely.[25][29]

Clause 21 of the code specifies that a ceorl must find three men of his own class to be his "oath-helpers". An oath-helper would swear an oath on behalf of an accused man, to clear him from the suspicion of the crime. The laws of Ine were more stringent than this, requiring that a high-ranking person must be found to be an oath-helper for everyone, no matter what class they were from. The two laws taken together imply a significant weakening of an earlier state in which a man's kin were legally responsible for him.[30]

Death and succession

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On his death, Wihtred left Kent to his three sons:Æthelberht II,Eadberht I, andAlric.[13] The chronology of the reigns following Wihtred is unclear, although there is evidence of both an Æthelbert and at least one Eadbert in the following years.[31] After Wihtred's death, and the departure of Ine of Wessex for Rome the following year,Æthelbald of Mercia became the dominant power in the south of England.[32]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 115.
  2. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 118.
  3. ^abBede,Ecclesiastical History, IV. 26, p. 255.
  4. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, pp. 120–121.
  5. ^abcdeKirby,Earliest English Kings, pp. 122–123.
  6. ^Yorke,Kings and Kingdoms, p. 32.
  7. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 53.
  8. ^Stenton,Anglo-Saxon England, p. 182.
  9. ^Yorke,Kings and Kingdoms, p. 25.
  10. ^"Anglo-Saxons.net: S 18". Sean Miller. Retrieved14 October 2007.
  11. ^"Anglo-Saxons.net: S 15". Sean Miller. Retrieved14 October 2007.
  12. ^Note that Kirby uses S18 in his argument for Wihtred's accession date, whereas Whitelock uses S15. See Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 123; and Whitelock,English Historical Documents, p. 361.
  13. ^abBede,Ecclesiastical History, V. 23, pp. 322–325.
  14. ^Yorke,Kings and Kingdoms, p. 33.
  15. ^Kelly,Wihtred. The charter of 716, which recorded aSynod at Bapchild in Kent, is regarded as spurious, but is thought to have used genuine witness lists.
  16. ^Swanton,Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 40–41, note 3.
  17. ^Lapidge, Michael (ed.), "Wergild", inThe Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England, p. 469.
  18. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 124.
  19. ^Whitelock,English Historical Documents, p. 357.
  20. ^Whitelock,English Historical Documents, pp. 327–337.
  21. ^Whitelock,English Historical Documents, p. 361.
  22. ^Stenton,Anglo-Saxon England, p. 72.
  23. ^The law is chapter 20 in Ine's code, and chapter 28 in Wihtred's. Ine's version reads "If a man from a distance or a foreigner goes through the wood off the track, and does not shout nor blow a horn, he is to be assumed to be a thief, to be either killed or redeemed." Wihtred's version is "If a man from a distance or a foreigner goes off the track, and he neither shouts nor blows a horn, he is to be assumed to be a thief, to be either killed or redeemed." See Whitelock,English Historical Documents, pp. 364, 366.
  24. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 125.
  25. ^abcWhitelock,English Historical Documents, pp. 362–364.
  26. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 2.
  27. ^Stenton,Anglo-Saxon England, p. 62
  28. ^Wormald, Patrick, "The Age of Bede and Aethelbald", in Campbell,The Anglo-Saxons, p. 99
  29. ^Stenton,Anglo-Saxon England, p. 128
  30. ^Stenton,Anglo-Saxon England, pp. 316–317.
  31. ^Yorke,Kings and Kingdoms, pp. 30–31.
  32. ^Kirby,Earliest English Kings, p. 131.

References

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Primary sources

Secondary sources

External links

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Regnal titles
Preceded byKing of Kent
c. 690 – 23 April 725
With:Swæfheard (to c. 694)
Succeeded by
  • 1 Existence uncertain (SeeEadbald)
  • 2 Also monarch of Mercia
  • 3 Also monarch of East Anglia and Mercia
  • 4 Also monarch of Wessex, Essex, Sussex and Mercia
  • 5 Also monarch of Wessex
Territories/dates[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15]NorthumbriaMerciaWessexSussexKentEssexEast Anglia
450–600Sub-Roman Britain
Kingdom of Bernicia
EsaEoppaIdaGlappaAddaÆthelricTheodricFrithuwaldHussa
Kingdom of Deira
ÆllaÆthelric
Kingdom of Mercia
IcelCnebbaCynewaldCreodaPybbaCearlPendaEowaPeada
Kingdom of theGewisse
CerdicCynricCeawlinCeolCeolwulfCynegilsCwichelmCenwalh
Kingdom of the South Saxons
ÆlleCissaÆthelwealh
Kingdom of the Kentish
HengestHorsaOiscOctaEormenricÆðelberht IEadbaldEorcenberhtEormenredEcgberht IHlothhere
Kingdom of the East Saxons
ÆscwineSleddSæberhtSexredSæwardSigeberht the LittleSigeberht the GoodSwithhelmSighereSæbbiSigeheardSwæfredOffaSaelredSwæfberhtSwithredSigericSigered
Kingdom of the East Angles
WehhaWuffaTytilaRædwaldEorpwaldRicberhtSigeberhtEcgricAnnaÆthelhereÆthelwoldEaldwulfÆlfwaldBeonnaAlberhtÆthelred IÆthelberht II
600–616Æthelfrith
616–632Edwin
632–634EanfrithOsric
633–644OswaldOswiu
645–648OswiuOswinePenda
648–651CenwalhSeaxburhCenfus of WessexÆscwineCentwine
Kingdom of the West Saxons
CædwallaIneÆthelheardCuthredSigeberhtCynewulfBeorhtricEcgberht
651–654Œthelwald
655–658Kingdom of Northumbria
OswiuEcgfrithAldfrithEadwulf IOsred ICoenredOsricCeolwulfEadberhtOswulfÆthelwald MollAlhredÆthelred IÆlfwald IOsred IIÆthelred IOsbaldEardwulfÆlfwald IIEardwulfEanredÆthelred IIRædwulfÆthelred IIOsberhtÆllaOsberht
Oswiu
658–685WulfhereÆthelred ICœnredCeolredCeolwaldÆthelbaldBeornredOffaEcgfrithCoenwulfKenelmCeolwulf IBeornwulfLudecaWiglaf
685–686Eadric
686–771EcgwaldBerthunAndhunNothhelmWattBryniOsricÆthelstanÆthelbertMulSwæfheardSwæfberhtOswineWihtredAlricEadbert IÆðelbert IIEardwulfEadberht IISigeredEanmundHeabertEcgbert IIEalhmund
771–785Offa
785–794Offa
794–796Offa
796–800Eadberht III PrænCuthredEadwald
800–807CoenwulfCeolwulf IBeornwulf
807–823CoenwulfCeolwulf IBeornwulf
823–825Ecgberht
825–826Ecgberht
826–829ÆthelstanÆthelweardEdmundOswaldÆthelred IIGuthrumEohricÆthelwoldGuthrum II
829–830EcgberhtSigeric II
830–837WiglafWigmundWigstanÆlfflædBeorhtwulfBurgredCeolwulf IIÆthelredÆthelflædÆlfwynn
837–839EcgberhtÆthelwulfÆthelbaldÆthelberhtÆthelred IAlfred the Great
867–872Northern Northumbria
Ecgberht I
Southern Northumbria
Military conquest by theGreat Heathen Army
872–875Ricsige
875–886EcgberhtEadwulf IIHalfdan RagnarssonGuthredSiefredusCnutÆthelwoldEowils and Halfdan
886–910Kingdom of England
Alfred the GreatEdward the Elder
910–918Eadwulf IIEaldred I
918–927Ealdred IAdulf mcEtulfeRagnall ua ÍmairSitric CáechGofraid ua ÍmairEdward the ElderÆthelstan
927–934Æthelstan
934–939Æthelstan
939–944Olaf GuthfrithsonAmlaíb CuaránSitric IIRagnall GuthfrithsonEdmund I
944–946Edmund I
947–954Osulf IEric BloodaxeAmlaíb CuaránEric BloodaxeEadred
955–1013EadwigEdgarEdward the MartyrÆthelred the Unready
1013–1014House of Knýtlinga
Sweyn Forkbeard
1014–1016House of Wessex
Æthelred the UnreadyEdmund Ironside
1016–1042House of Knýtlinga
CnutHarold HarefootHarthacnut
1042–1066House of Wessex

Edward the Confessor
1066House of Godwin

Harold Godwinson
1066–1135House of Normandy

William IWilliam IIHenry I
1135–1154House of Blois

Stephen
1154–1399House of Plantagenet

Henry IIRichard IJohnHenry IIIEdward IEdward IIEdward IIIRichard II
1399–1461
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Edward IVEdward VRichard III
1485–1603Tudor period
  1. ^Rulers with names in italics are considered fictional
  2. ^Mackenzie, E; Ross, M (1834).An Historical, Topographical, and Descriptive View of the County Palatine of Durham. Vol. I. Newcastle upon Tyne: Mackenzie and Dent. p. xi. Retrieved28 February 2012.
  3. ^Downham, Clare (2007),Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland: The Dynasty of Ívarr to A.D. 1014, Edinburgh: Dunedin,ISBN 978-1-903765-89-0,OCLC 163618313
  4. ^Woolf, Alex (2007),From Pictland to Alba, 789–1070, The New Edinburgh History of Scotland, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,ISBN 978-0-7486-1234-5,OCLC 123113911
  5. ^Zaluckyj, Sarah & Feryok, Marge.Mercia: The Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Central England (2001)ISBN 1-873827-62-8
  6. ^Barbara Yorke (1995),Wessex in the early Middle Ages, A & C Black,ISBN 071851856X; pp79-83; table p.81
  7. ^Kelly, S. E. (2004)."Kings of the South Saxons (act. 477–772)".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52344. Retrieved3 February 2017. (Subscription,Wikipedia Library access orUK public library membership required.)
  8. ^Keynes, Simon (2014). "Appendix I: Rulers of the English, c.450–1066". InLapidge, Michael (ed.).The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.ISBN 978-0-470-65632-7.
  9. ^Kirby, D. P.The Earliest English Kings. London and New York: Routledge.ISBN 978-0-4152-4211-0.
  10. ^Lapidge, M.; et al., eds. (1999)."Kings of the East Angles".The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England. London: Blackwell.ISBN 978-0-6312-2492-1.
  11. ^Searle, W. G. 1899.Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings and Nobles.
  12. ^Yorke, B. 1990.Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England.
  13. ^Carpenter, Clive.Kings, Rulers and Statesmen. Guinness Superlatives, Ltd.
  14. ^Ross, Martha.Rulers and Governments of the World, Vol. 1.Earliest Times to 1491.
  15. ^Ashley, Michael (1998).British Monarchs: the Complete Genealogy, Gazetteer, and Biographical Encyclopedia of the Kings & Queens of Britain. London: Robinson.ISBN 978-1-8548-7504-4.
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