Rædwald, son of
Tytila, was
King of the East Angles from c 600 AD until his death in c 624 AD. From c 616 he became the most powerful of the English rulers south of the
River Humber, and by military action installed a Northumbrian ruler acquiescent to his authority. He was the first East Anglian ruler to receive Christian teaching and baptism (from the Canterbury mission), and helped to ensure its survival during the apostasy of
Essex and
Kent. He is the most favoured identification for the famous
Sutton Hoo ship-burial. In the late 9th century he is recorded in the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as being a
Bretwalda.
Chronology
The earliest and fullest source for Rædwald is
Bede's
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, which places his reign between the advent of the Augustinian mission to Kent (597) and the marriage and conversion of
Edwin of Northumbria (625-26). A set of annals in late compilations (of uncertain authority) records Rædwald’s death twice, in 599 and 624, so possibly the missing annal for 599 was for Tytila’s death and Rædwald’s accession.
The context of Rædwald’s kingdom
During Rædwald’s young life the ruling houses of other kingdoms were becoming strongly established.
Æthelberht of Kent (ruled c 560-616) was married to Bercta, Christian daughter of the Frankish ruler
Charibert of Paris.
Ceawlin of Wessex, most powerful ruler south of the Humber, repulsed Æthelberht’s inroads from Kent until c 584, when after fighting the
British in
Oxfordshire his power waned and Æthelberht obtained a similar authority. In
Mercia the shadowy figure of
Creoda, descendant of Icel, established his family’s importance.
North of the
River Humber the two kingdoms of
Deira (centred on
York) and the more northerly
Bernicia (centred on
Bamburgh) had rival dynasties.
Ælla of Deira ruled until his death in 588, leaving a daughter Acha and son
Edwin and another sibling. The Bernician dynasty (allied by kinship to
Wessex) was gaining ascendancy, and Edwin grew up in exile in the court of
Cadfan ap Iago of
Gwynedd. In various wars the Bernician
Æthelfrith consolidated the
Northumbrian state, and in c 604 brought Deira under his own dominion.
Rædwald’s family
Rædwald’s descent from
Wuffa, the eponymous founder of the
Wuffinga dynasty, is stated by Bede.
[1] He was born c560-580 and was (probably elder) brother of
Eni. Possibly during the 590s he married a woman of pagan custom and high moral principle whose name is unknown. By her he sired at least two sons, Rægenhere (? the elder) and
Eorpwald. He also had an older son or stepson named
Sigeberht.
The name ‘Sigeberht’ is unlike any other Wuffing name, but typical of the East Saxon dynasty.
Sledda of Essex (ruled c 587-604) married Ricula, sister of Æthelbert of Kent. Æthelberht supported the succession of his nephew
Saebert, their son, in Essex, and both kings became Christian soon afterwards. It is suggested that Rædwald’s wife had previously been married to a member of that family and that Sigeberht was (as
William of Malmesbury reports) Rædwald’s stepson. Sigeberht (who grew up in a pagan household) earned the enmity of Rædwald, who drove him into exile in
Gaul possibly to protect his own bloodline.
Rædwald’s early reign
If that deduction is correct, Rædwald’s marriage brought him directly into the sphere of Kent and Essex but with independent authority. The outstanding fact of his early reign was the recent arrival of
Augustine of Canterbury and his mission from Rome, sent by
Gregory the Great, and (during the early 600s) the conversion of Æthelberht and Saeberht, and the establishment of bishoprics in Kent and Essex.
Rædwald also received the Christian
sacraments in Kent, presumably at the invitation of Æthelberht who may have been his baptismal sponsor. The date of this initiation is not exactly known, but since it is claimed that Saint Augustine himself (d. c 605) dedicated a church near
Ely, it may have followed Saebert’s conversion fairly swiftly. In this way Rædwald became aligned with Æthelberht’s system of authority. Bede states that even during Æthelbert’s lifetime Rædwald was building up the leadership of the southern English for his own nation of East Angles.
In East Anglia Rædwald’s conversion was not universally acceptable to his household, nor to his wife. She and her pagan teachers probably persuaded him to default in part from his commitment to it. In his temple, therefore, there were two altars, one dedicated to Christ, and one for dedications to the deities favoured by his forefathers.
The exile of Edwin
Æthelfrith, the builder of the Northumbrian kingdom, had married Acha daughter of Ælla of Deira, and pursued her exiled brother Edwin seeking to destroy him, so that the Bernician rulership of all Northumbria should be unchallenged. Edwin had found hospitality in Mercia in the household of its ruler
Cearl, married his daughter and produced two sons. Edwin’s nephew Hereric, an exile in the British kingdom of
Elmet, was treacherously slain there. Edwin wandered secretly as a fugitive through various kingdoms, and at last sought the protection of Rædwald in East Anglia.
Rædwald received him willingly and promised to protect him, and Edwin lived on familiar terms with the king and among his royal companions. When news of this reached Æthelfrith he sent messengers offering much money to Rædwald for Edwin’s death, but to no avail. He sent a second and a third time, offering greater gifts of silver, and promising war if they were not accepted. This was a direct confrontation of territorial influence.
[2] Rædwald was weakened and promised either to kill Edwin or hand him over to ambassadors.
The deliberation of war
Edwin was offered the chance to escape, but refused. He was then visited by a stranger who was aware of Rædwald’s deliberations. A source written at
Whitby states that this was
Paulinus, a member of the Canterbury mission. He offered Edwin the hope of Rædwald’s support, and held out the prospect that Edwin might someday attain greater royal power than any before him among the English.
These offers would have been empty if Rædwald was not contemplating war, and had not foreseen the future power of Northumbria. Rædwald’s pagan queen admonished him that a king ought not to betray his trust, more precious than any ornament, for the sake of money, nor sell his imperilled friend for gold. Paulinus had Edwin’s assurance that he would accept his religious teaching if he survived and came into such power. Once the ambassadors had gone, Rædwald resolved on war.
[3]
The Battle of the River Idle (616)
Rædwald rapidly assembled a large army and marched north to confront Æthelfrith before he had time to gather all his forces. Rædwald’s influence in
Lindsey is indicated by the fact that he met Æthelfrith just across the
River Trent, its western boundary, on the east bank of the River Idle between
Gainsborough and
Bawtry. Æthelfrith was killed, and Rædwald’s son Rægenhere also died in the battle. Edwin thereupon succeeded Æthelfrith as ruler in Northumbria, and Æthelfrith's sons went into exile among the Picts and Scots.
A separate account of the battle given by
Henry of Huntingdon states that Rædwald’s army was (like a legion) in three formations, led by Rædwald, Rægenhere and Edwin. With more experienced fighters, Æthelfrith attacked in loose formation. At the sight of Rægenhere (
quasi praeda inventa – perhaps thinking he was Edwin) they cut their way through to him and slew him. Rædwald then furiously breached his lines and killed Æthelfrith amid a great slaughter of the Northumbrians.
Rædwald’s imperium
At about the time of this battle or soon after, Æthelberht of Kent died and was succeeded by his son
Eadbald, not yet a Christian.
Saebert of Essex had also died and his three sons shared their kingdom under pagan rule, driving out Bishop
Mellitus. The Canterbury mission had already almost entirely removed to Gaul for safety before Eadbald was brought back into the fold. In this period therefore Rædwald’s was the only royal Christian altar in England. By the time of Rædwald’s death the mission in Kent was fully re-established.
Through his action Rædwald’s authority became sufficiently universal for Bede to recognise him as the successor to the
imperium of Ceawlin and Æthelberht. He also calls him
Rex Anglorum (King of the Angles). By Edwin’s debt of allegiance to him, Rædwald became the first to hold direct influence in Northumbria, and he probably supported Edwin's subjection of Bernicia.
[4] His authority in Kent is specified, for Bede notes that this was not afterwards obtained by Edwin. As foreseen before the battle, Edwin gained imperium after Rædwald’s death, fulfilled his promise to become Christian, and married the sister of Eadbald of Kent.
Gipeswic
During the first quarter of the 7th century the quayside settlement at Gipeswic (
Ipswich) began to assume importance as an estuarine trading centre receiving imports of pottery (and presumably other goods) from the
Rhineland areas of
Merovingian Gaul. It is likely that the development of this site took place under royal supervision. Although it took another hundred years for Gipeswic to develop as a town, its beginnings probably reflect the personal importance of Rædwald during the age of his supremacy.
With the exception of one furnished grave probably of a Rhineland visitor, the excavated grave-goods and rituals of its cemetery (including burials under small barrows) are not particularly wealthy or elaborate, and lack the strong characterization of the neighbouring late 6th century cemetery at a higher crossing of the river (Hadleigh Road).
Rædwald and Sutton Hoo
The identification of the
Sutton Hoo Mound 1 ship-burial with Rædwald cannot be proved. However the magnificence of the ritual and possessions, the far-reaching connections which they demonstrate, and the inclusion of objects denoting the personal authority of the individual buried there, definitely point to a person of very exceptional status. Rædwald is the most likely candidate, though others have been suggested.
[5]
The date-horizon shows that this person lived in the time of Rædwald. The gold and garnet body-equipment was produced for a patron employing a goldsmith the equal or better than any in Europe, and was designed to project an image of imperial power. The Mediterranean silverware in the grave is a unique assemblage for its period in Europe, and the inclusion of bowls and spoons which have been interpreted as baptismal gifts does not conflict with the story of Rædwald’s conversion.
The ship-burial ritual itself, and the strong connections of the armour with the
Vendel-age productions of eastern
Sweden, suggest genealogical associations of the kind described in the poem
Beowulf. Within thirty years of the date of the burial, it is certain that the neighbourhood of Sutton Hoo (in particular, Rendlesham
[6] was a focus of patronage of Rædwald’s family heirs.
The interpretation of Rædwald’s kingdom and authority through the burial and artefacts requires a personal identification which cannot absolutely be made. Even so, the assemblage illustrates beyond doubt the spectacular riches, contacts and personal culture of the foremost East Anglian patron of his age. No comparable testimony survives in any other English context of this period.
References
1.
^ Bede, H.E. ii.15.
2.
^ Kirby 1991, 52, 61.
3.
^ Bede, H. E. ii.12.
4.
^ Kirby 1991, 61–62.
5.
^ Campbell 2000.
6.
^ Bede, H.E. iii.22.
Further reading
- The Venerable Bede, Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum, ed. B. Colgrave and R.A.B. Mynors (Oxford 1969).
- R.L.S. Bruce-Mitford, Aspects of Anglo-Saxon Archæology: Sutton Hoo and other discoveries (London 1974).
- R.L.S. Bruce-Mitford, The Sutton Hoo Ship-Burial (Vol I) (London 1975).
- J. Campbell, The Impact of the Sutton Hoo Discovery, in The Anglo-Saxon State (Hambledon & London, London, 2000). ISBN 1-85285-176-7
- D. Dumville, 1976, The Anglian Collection of royal genealogies and regnal lists, Anglo-Saxon England 5, 23-50.
- N.J. Higham, Rædwald, in M. Lapidge et al (eds), The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England (Blackwell, London 1999). ISBN 0-631-22492-0
- D.P. Kirby, The Earliest English Kings (london 1991).
- S. Newton, The origins of Beowulf and the Pre-Viking Kingdom of East Anglia (Cambridge 1993).
- S. Newton, The Reckoning of King Rædwald (Brightlingsea 2003).
- S. Plunkett, Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times (Tempus 2005).
- F.M. Stenton, 1959, The East Anglian Kings in the seventh century, in P. Clemoes (ed.), The Anglo-Saxons: Studies presented to Bruce Dickens (London 1959).
- B. Yorke, Kings and kingdoms of early Anglo-Saxon England (London 1990).
Tytila (died c. 593) was the King of East Anglia from about 578 until his death, and the father of Raedwald of East Anglia.
His name is the Anglo-Saxon form of the Gothic Totila.
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This is a chronological list of the monarchs of East Anglia, formally known as The Kingdom of the East Angles, one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy.
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Humber is a large tidal waterway on the East Coast of Northern England.
The Humber is an estuary formed at Trent Falls, Faxfleet, by the confluence of the tidal River Ouse and the tidal River Trent.
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The Kingdom of Essex (Est Seaxna "East Saxons", one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the so-called Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy) was founded around 500 AD and covered the territory currently occupied by the counties of Essex, Hertfordshire and Middlesex.
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The Kingdom of Kent was a kingdom of Jutes in southeast England and was one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the so-called Anglo-Saxon heptarchy.
Romano-British Ceint
..... Click the link for more information. Sutton Hoo, (grid reference TM288487 ) near Woodbridge, Suffolk, England, is the site of two Anglo-Saxon cemeteries of the 6th and early 7th centuries, one of which contained an undisturbed ship burial including a wealth of artifacts of outstanding art-historical and archaeological
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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals in Old English narrating the history of the Anglo-Saxons. The annals were created late in the 9th century, probably in Wessex, during the reign of Alfred the Great.
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Bretwalda is an Anglo-Saxon term, the first record of which comes from the late ninth century Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. It is applied in that chronicle to some of the rulers of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms from the fifth century onwards who had achieved overlordship over some or all
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Bede (IPA: /ˈbiːd/) (also Saint Bede, the Venerable Bede, or (from Latin) Beda (IPA: [/beda/])), (c.
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Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (in English: Ecclesiastical History of the English People) is a work in Latin by the Venerable Bede on the history of the Church in England, and of England generally; its main focus is on the conflict between Roman and
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St Edwin of Northumbria
King of Deira and Bernicia
Imaginary depiction of Edwin from John Speed's 1611 "Saxon Heptarchy".
Reign 616 - 12 October 633
Born 585
Deira, England
Died 12 October 633
Hatfield Chase, England
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Æthelberht
King of Kent
Statue of Æthelberht. Interior of Rochester Cathedral
Reign c. 590 – 616
Died 616
Issue Eadbald
Father Eormenric
Sainthood
Venerated in
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Charibert I (c. 517–November or December 567) was the Merovingian King of Paris, the second-eldest son of Chlothar I and Ingund. His elder brother was Gunthar, who died sometime before their father's death.
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Ceawlin
King of Wessex
Ceawlin's name in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Reign 560–592
Died 593
Issue Cuthwine
Father Cynric Ceawlin (also spelled "Ceaulin" or "Caelin") (died c.
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British people, or Britons,[8] are a nation[9][10][11][12][13] or inhabitants of Great Britain[14][15]
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Oxfordshire (abbreviated Oxon, from the Latinised form Oxonia) is a county in the South East of England, bordering on Northamptonshire, Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Wiltshire, Gloucestershire, and Warwickshire.
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Mercia (IPA: /ˈmɝsiə/) was one of the kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. It was centred on the valley of the River Trent and its tributaries in the region now known as the English Midlands.
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Creoda (or Crida) (c. 5401 - 593) was the first monarch of Mercia (c. 585 - 593).
Creoda is recorded as having been the son of Cynewald, the grandson of Cnebba, and the great-grandson of Icel; consequently, members of the Mercian royal line were known as
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Humber is a large tidal waterway on the East Coast of Northern England.
The Humber is an estuary formed at Trent Falls, Faxfleet, by the confluence of the tidal River Ouse and the tidal River Trent.
..... Click the link for more information.
Deira (which later absorbed the Brythonic kingdom of Ebrauc) was a kingdom in Northern England during the 6th century AD. It extended from the Humber to the Tees, and from the sea to the western edge of the Vale of York.
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City of York
The Guildhall, York
Arms of City of York Council
York shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
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Bernicia was an Anglo-Saxon kingdom established by Anglian settlers of the 6th century in what is now the South-East of Scotland, and the North-East of England.
The Anglian territory of Bernicia was approximately equivalent to the modern counties of Northumberland, Durham,
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Bamburgh
Bamburgh (United Kingdom)
Bamburgh shown within the United KingdomPopulation 788 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference
..... Click the link for more information. Ælla (Ella, Ille) (d. 588), is the first known king of Deira. One of his sons was Edwin of Northumbria and his daughter Acha married Æthelfrith of Bernicia.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
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St Edwin of Northumbria
King of Deira and Bernicia
Imaginary depiction of Edwin from John Speed's 1611 "Saxon Heptarchy".
Reign 616 - 12 October 633
Born 585
Deira, England
Died 12 October 633
Hatfield Chase, England
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Wessex was one of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms that preceded the Kingdom of England. It was named after the West Saxons and was situated in the south and southwest of England. It existed as a kingdom from the 6th century until the emergence of the English state in the 9th century, and
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Cadfan ap Iago (c. 580–625; reigned from c. 615) (Latin: Catamanus; English: Gideon) was a King of Gwynedd. The son of King Iago, he assumed the crown of Gwynedd probably around 615, shortly after the Battle of Caerllion (today's Chester), during which the forces of Powys
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Gwynedd may also refer to Upper Gwynedd Township, Pennsylvania.
Gwynedd (IPA:
['ɡwɪ.nɛð]) is a principal area in north-west Wales, named after the old Kingdom of Gwynedd.
..... Click the link for more information. Æthelfrith (died c. 616) was King of Bernicia from c. 593 until c. 616; he was also, beginning c. 604, the first Bernician king to also rule Deira, to the south of Bernicia.
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Northumbria (sometimes spelled Northhumbria) is primarily the name of both a medieval petty kingdom of Angles in what is now north east England and southern Scotland and of the earldom which succeeded it when England became a united Anglo-Saxon kingdom.
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