Æðelwulf, King of Wessex

Male 795 - Aft 858  (~ 63 years)


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  • Name Æðelwulf , King of Wessex  [1
    Suffix King of Wessex 
    Born Between 795 and 810  North Rhine-Westphalia, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3
    Gender Male 
    Name Ethelwolf King Of England  [2, 4
    Died Aft 13 Jan 857/58  Stambridge, Essex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2
    Buried Winchester, Hampshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Notes 
    • He was the son of Ecgbeorht, King of Wessex and Redburga. He married, firstly, Osburga, daughter of Oslac of Hampshire, circa 830.

      He gained the title of Subregulus of Kent, Essex, Sussex and Surrey between 825 and 828. He succeeded to the title of King Æðelwulf of Wessex on 4 February 839. He was crowned King of Wessex in 839 at Kingston-upon-Thames, London, England. He abdicated as King of Wessex between 855 and 856.

      Ethelwulf was the son of King Egbert and had previously ruled Kent and adjoining minor kingdoms. He continued wars against the Danes and had a victory at the mouth of the Parret in Somerset in 845 and again in 851 when he beat a force of 350 ships' companies who attacked Canterbury. Ethelwulf helped the Mercians against the Welsh and then married the Mercian king's daughter. He was a religious man and in 855 undertook a pilgrimage to Rome, leaving the country in charge of Ethelbald his eldest son. On his return, to avoid civil war, he allowed Ethelbald to retain Wessex while he ruled Kent and other parts of south eastern England.

      Æthelwulf, also spelled Aethelwulf or Ethelwulf; Old English: Æþelwulf, meaning 'Noble Wolf', was King of Wessex from 839 until his death in 858. He is the only son who can indisputably be accredited to King Egbert of Wessex. He conquered the kingdom of Kent on behalf of his father in 825, and was sometime later made King of Kent as a sub-king to Egbert. He succeeded his father as King of Wessex on Egbert's death in 839, at which time his kingdom stretched from the county of Kent in the east to Devon in the west. At the same time his eldest son or younger brother Æthelstan became sub-king of Kent as a subordinate ruler.

      Historians give conflicting assessments of Æthelwulf. According to Richard Humble, Æthelwulf had a worrying style of Kingship. He had come to the throne of Wessex by inheritance. He proved to be intensely religious, cursed with little political sense, and with too many able and ambitious sons. To Frank Stenton, "Æthelwulf seems to have been a religious and unambitious man, for whom engagement in war and politics was an unwelcome consequence of rank." However, Janet Nelson thought that his reign has been under-appreciated in modern scholarship, and that he laid the foundations for Alfred's success, finding new as well as traditional answers, and coping more effectively with Scandinavian attacks than most contemporary rulers. In Simon Keynes's view, "it was he, more than any other, who secured the political fortune of his people in the ninth century, and who opened up channels of communication which led through the Frankish realms and across the Alps to Rome."

      Martial career

      The most notable and commonly used primary source is the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which refers to Æthelwulf's presence at some important battles. In 840 AD, he fought at Carhampton against thirty-five ship companies of Danes, whose raids had increased considerably. His most notable victory came in 851 at "Acleah", possibly Ockley in Surrey or Oakley in Berkshire. Here, Æthelwulf and his son Æthelbald fought against the heathen, and according to the chronicle it was "the greatest slaughter of heathen host ever made." Around 853 AD, Æthelwulf and his son-in-law, Burgred, King of Mercia, defeated Cyngen ap Cadell of Wales and made the Welsh subject to him. The chronicle depicts more battles throughout the years, mostly against invading pirates and Danes. This was an era in European history when nations were being invaded by many different groups; there were Saracens in the south, Magyars in the east, Moors in the west, and Vikings in the north. Before Æthelwulf's death, raiders had wintered over on the Isle of Sheppey, and pillaged at will in East Anglia. Over the course of the next twenty years the struggles of his sons were to be "ceaseless, heroic, and largely futile."

      Family life

      One of the first of Æthelwulf's acts as king was to split the kingdom. He gave the eastern half, including Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex, to his eldest son Æthelstan (not to be confused with the later Athelstan the Glorious). Æthelwulf kept the ancient, western side of Wessex (Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset and Devon) for himself.

      Æthelwulf and his first wife, Osburh, had five sons and a daughter. After Æthelstan came Æthelbald, Æthelbert, Æthelred, and Alfred. Each of his sons, with the exception of Æthelstan, succeeded to the throne. Alfred, the youngest, has been praised as one of the greatest kings to ever reign in Britain. Æthelwulf's only daughter, Æthelswith, was married as a child to King Burgred of Mercia.

      Pilgrimage to Rome, marriage, conspiracy of Æthelbald, death

      Religion was always an important part of Æthelwulf's life. As early as the first year of his reign he planned a pilgrimage to Rome. Due to the ongoing and increasing raids he felt the need to appeal to the Christian God for help against an enemy "so agile, and numerous, and profane."

      In 853, Æthelwulf sent his son Alfred, a child of about four years, to Rome. In 855, about a year after his wife Osburga's death, Æthelwulf followed Alfred to Rome. In Rome, he was generous with his wealth. He distributed gold to the clergy of St. Peter's and offered them chalices of the purest gold and silver-gilt candelabra of Saxon work. During the return journey in 856 he married Judith, a Frankish princess and a great-granddaughter of Charlemagne. She was about twelve years old, the daughter of Charles the Bald, King of the West Franks.

      Upon their return to England in 856 Æthelwulf met with an acute crisis. His eldest surviving son Æthelbald (Athelstan had since died) had devised a conspiracy with the Ealdorman of Somerset and the Bishop of Sherborne to oppose Æthelwulf's resumption of the kingship on his return. While Æthelwulf was able to muster enough support to fight a civil war or to banish Æthelbald and his fellow conspirators, he instead chose to yield western Wessex to his son, while he himself retained central and eastern Wessex. The absence of coins in Æthelbald's name suggests that West Saxon coinage was in Æthelwulf's name until his death. He ruled there until his death on 13 January 858.

      That the king should have consented to treat with his rebellious son, to refer the compromise to a meeting of Saxon nobles, to moderate the pugnacity of his own supporters, and to resign the rule over the more important half of his dominions - all this testifies to the fact that Æthelwulf’s Christian spirit did not exhaust itself in the giving of lavish charities to the Church, but availed to reconcile him to the sacrifice of prestige and power in the cause of national peace.

      Æthelwulf's restoration included a special concession on behalf of Saxon queens. The West Saxons previously did not allow the queen to sit next to the king. In fact they were referred to not as a queen, but merely as the "wife of the king." This restriction was lifted for Queen Judith, probably because she was a high-ranking European princess.

      He was buried first at Steyning and later re-interred in the Old Minster in Winchester. His bones now rest in one of several "mortuary chests" in Winchester Cathedral.
    Person ID I2114  Bosdet Genealogy
    Last Modified 16 May 2013 

    Father Ecgbeorht, King of Wessex,   b. Between 769 and 780,   d. 04 Feb 838/39  (Age ~ 70 years) 
    Relationship Natural 
    Mother Redburga 
    Relationship Natural 
    Family ID F75  Group Sheet

    Family 1 Osburh,   d. Between 846 and 855 
    Married Abt 830  [1, 2
    Children 
     1. Æðelbeorht, King of Wessex,   b. Abt 836,   d. Between 865 and 866  (Age ~ 29 years)
     2. Judith,   d. Abt 910
     3. Æðelswyð,   d. Between 888 and 889, Paris, ÃŽle-de-France, France Find all individuals with events at this location
     4. Æthelbald, King of Wessex,   b. Abt 834,   d. 20 Dec 860  (Age ~ 26 years)
     5. Æthelstan, Sub-King in Kent Essex Sussex and Surrey,   b. Abt 839,   d. Abt 850  (Age ~ 11 years)
     6. Alfred The Great, King Of England,   b. Between 846 and 849, Wantage, Oxfordshire, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Between 25 and 28 Oct 899
     7. Æthelred, King of Wessex I,   b. Abt 840,   d. 23 Apr 871  (Age ~ 31 years)
    Family ID F619  Group Sheet

    Family 2 Judith of Flanders,   b. Between 843 and 844,   d. Abt 870  (Age ~ 27 years) 
    Married 01 Oct 856  Verberie sur Oise, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Family ID F620  Group Sheet

  • Sources 
    1. [S180] Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy, Alison Weir, (Name: The Bodley Head; Location: London, U.K.; Date: 1999;).

    2. [S169] The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Paget, Gerald, (Name: Charles Skilton Ltd; Location: London; Date: 1977;).

    3. [S174] Wikipedia.

    4. [S162] Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America before 1700, 7th Edition, Weis, Frederick Lewis, Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr, David Faris, (Name: Genealogical Publishing Co; Location: Baltimore; Date: 1992;).