Ethelfleda
LADY OF THE MERCIANS
(AND HER MISSING DAUGHTER)
By kind courtesy of Christine Smith

Ethelfleda was born around 864, the eldest child of King Alfred of
Wessex and his Queen Ealhswith. She may
have been educated at the convent school at Wilton or at Winchester, both royal
residences, and while excelling in academic studies, she had early on a leaning
towards a soldiering life. Eahlswith
her mother, was a Mercian royal, and Ethelfleda was encouraged to keep the
culture and heritage of both lands throughout her education. She brought up
among some of the most interesting and influential people for her father, being
a scholarly king, brought to his court some of the greatest academics of the
day. The king wrote and translated documents, and had a collection of art and
literature from centuries back.
During those times, girls (at
least those of royalty and nobility) as well as boys received an education, and
she obviously joined in all the sporting pursuits and military training the
boys went through, archery, swordplay, fast and furious riding and
horse-jumping, and becoming skilled in these gave her the impetus to achieve
more than most women, and to become a leader of men.
The young girl was raised amid
some of the most spectacular countryside along the borders of Wales, and as her
lineage included both British and Anglo-Saxon royalty, she established liaisons
with all the people from these different lands most of whom remained loyal to
her throughout her life.
Ealhswith, her mother, was the
daughter of Ethelred Mucel, Alderman of the Hwicce, a territory that mainly
covered Herefordshire, by his wife Edburgh, a daughter of Cenwulf, King of
Mercia (796-821) who was descended from King Penda`s brother Cenwealh.
The whole long saga of this warrior princess would have made a
successful film or television series, but then we wouldn`t really want outside
film-makers putting their own interpretation on a character such as Ethelfleda,
who was among a few women unique in English history.
Her relationship with her brother
Edward does not appear, at least from later on in their lives, to have been all
that close. They were comrades,
certainly, born into times of strife with the norse invaders landing on these
shores, and the victories they achieved together could not have occurred
without a mutual respect and understanding.
Edward, born around 868, does
appear to have been made under-king of Mercia by his father, and Tamworth was
undoubtedly the royal residence to which Edward took his concubine Egwynna,
perhaps to keep her away from the tumult of the Wessex court. His two elder
children were born there, probably his daughter first, who remained unnamed in
the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, and then his eldest son Aethelstan.
In the vast kindred of royalty at
that time, and during Alfred`s reign when he was trying to unite England under
his kingship, there were inevitably struggles for political power. The Mercians had always been a territory
apart, on the Welsh border, liaising with and often fighting against both
Britons and Anglo-Saxons. Their kings
were a mixture of both. They had been
a kingdom since the 7th cent and one of their bitterest enemies
throughout the 8th cent had been Wessex. There was only a tentative peace between them by the time Alfred
come to the throne and married a Mercian royal. To have their leaders reduced in power and to be made as they
saw it, vassals of a larger state, was unacceptable to many. Equally unwelcome
were the continuing encroachments of the norsemen, and while the troops of
Mercia rallied around Edward as he conquered the insurrecting Danes of the east
Midlands and East Anglia, they were also wary of him, knowing that once he
succeeded to Wessex he would annexe Mercia.
The people of this area of the midlands especially, looked to an
uncertain future of being taken over either by Wessex or by the Danes. One fact was certain, they would lose their
identity as one of the longest-established and at one time most powerful
kingdom in the country.
Ethelfleda was given in marriage
in about 884 to Ethelred, a successor of Ceolred II, King of Mercia, and described by some at the time, as a prince of
Mercia. The Anglo-Saxon historians
maintain that very little has come down to us about Ethelred and yet its fairly
obvious by the prefix of his name “Ethel”
(“Aethel”) that he belonged to the Mercian royal family. Also because of the respect shown him by the
king and the giving of Alfred`s daughter in marriage to him. The Wessex sources referred to most of these
royals of the former kingdoms however, as “Eorldermen” (Aldermen) and this is
how Ethelred has been introduced onto the royal scene, as Alderman of Mercia.
Ethelfleda was not of course just “given”; such a formidable princess would
have had her own opinions on whom to marry and she married late for women at
that time, being about 20 years old.
Its obvious that as marriages
were kept within the royal kindred, Ethelred must have been a cousin of
Ethelfleda, perhaps the grandson of Ethelred Mucel and Edburgh through their
son Ethelwulf, who was Ealhswith`s brother, though there are many more with the
prefix “Ethel” in the royal family, not specifically mentioned in the
king-lists. It would explain the closeness of the families, who had been
inter-marrying for some time, and might also explain the obvious rivalry
between Edward and his sister and brother-in-law. Edward, after he had later succeeded to Wessex, fought another
cousin Ethelwold, at the Battle of Holme, 903, in which Ethelwold died. This could be the Holme on the Ermine Street
south of Peterborough in the fens where Edward was reclaiming land from the
Danes.
Ethelred and Ethelfleda became
extremely popular with the people, and were regarded as King and Queen of
Mercia. Many sources including those of
the Irish mentioned them with these titles.
They were able to issue charters in their own right, and governed Mercia
seemingly alone. Ethelfleda and her
brother grew to be rivals over the years, for events later on appear to be
proof of that. Edward however, allowed his sister and brother-in-law to rule
unhindered, and probably in any case could not during his father`s lifetime do
much else. All the royals recognised
that inter-family strife could only result in the downfall of all the
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms and they had come too far, at too great a cost, to allow
misguided principles to bring down all that they had achieved.
The three went on their
campaigns, often together, as many to carry out diplomatic assignments as to do
battle. The Danes of the north however
did not trust Edward as they trusted the Earl and Countess of Mercia and this
further inflamed relationships in the royal family.
After her father`s death in 899
Ethelfleda was anxious to bring up her nephew and his sister at Tamworth, safe
from the intrigues of the Wessex court.
Her brother, she knew, would undoubtedly marry a Wessex noblewoman and
she feared for the safety of Aethelstan if more sons were born. In the event her worries proved real. Aethelstan was left out of the succession,
and attempts were made on his life that fortunately proved unsuccessful. His aunt, as long as she was able to, worked
towards her nephew gaining his rightful crown, and no doubt because of the way
in which she had raised the young prince, he was one day accepted by the thanes
of Wessex as their king.
Ethelfleda, who maintained
childbearing was not for her in her warrior role, eventually gave birth to a daughter
Elfwynne. The girl was born sometime before 903, but exactly when is not known.
It was in Wessex in the time of
Alfred that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles were first compiled, but there were many
important events not recorded, including those changes carried out by
Ethelfleda, whom the people called “The Lady of the Mercians”.
The Danes were rapidly colonising
the north-west, especially around the natural sea-ports of the Wirral. They agreed to a supervised colonisation, but
in many places, they wanted more. They
rose in revolt and attacked Chester, and Ethelfleda, sometimes on her own as
Ethelred started to suffer from a chronic illness, planned a series of burhs
(defences) at strategic points starting with the fortification of Chester,
Mercia`s northernmost town. Eventually
she threw a defence around the whole of Mercia, and while some Welsh kings were
letting the Danes in through their territories, others stood beside her on this
issue. The Danes had been driven off
in areas of Cumberland, Northumberland and Scotland, but still kept
coming. The raids on eastern England
despite the controls by the combined forces of Mercia and Wessex, continued. Some norsemen had come to settle and work
beside the people already here, and many norse settlements remain to this day,
showing a continuous habitation. Others
settled, but planned to rise up in revolt at a suitable time and try and take
more territory. Mainly they invaded
without warning in organised bands and plundered the rich abbeys and
monasteries of the Christianised lands.
For centuries the English lived in fear of the ferocious invaders, and
despite some modern historians saying they weren’t as bad as they were made out
to be, the evidence is that nothing seemed to assuage the dreadful terror the
norsemen inflicted on innocent settlers.
Several invasions of the monastic settlements on the Scottish and
Northumbrian coasts had been bravely fought off, but those leaders were also
looking for a long-lasting solution to this ever-present threat. The land of
the Strathclyde Britons, (south-west Scotland) particularly suffered, and
Ethelfleda allied with these rulers and those of other parts of Scotland,
Cumbria and Northumbria.
Only the efforts of successions
of English kings had kept them under control, but Ethelfleda planned to do
something more permanent and used her political skills to achieve this. She
planned to invite settlement from the north into the east Midlands and eastern
England, into the fenland and the coastal regions, in an effort to keep the
Danish settlers under control.
The marriage between Ethelred of Mercia and Osthryth, niece of King Oswald, in the 7th cent had instigated the building of churches in memory of Osthryth`s uncle, before she was murdered by unruly Mercian thanes. Her husband after a 30-year reign, as a warrior and a scholar, retired to Bardney Abbey. It was Ethelred and Ethelfleda who, two centuries later, took the relics of King Oswald from Bardney to Gloucester to the new church they had dedicated to him.
For all the wars had depleted
certain areas, the Anglo-Saxon era was one of constant renewal. They had brought a superior plough here;
they managed woodland, coppicing and pollarding trees; they carried on much of the brilliantly-illuminated
art and literature of the early Celtic Christian Britons before them, and they
brought new breeds of livestock from the continent.
New settlements were made in
eastern England, and the population was swelled by people from the north, who
had obviously come from a terrain much different to that in their own lands,
and who brought new fishing and farming skills to this flat area of fenland.
Perhaps because life was so harsh, and it was a constant struggle with the land
and the sea, people had little time for strife and in spite of their
differences had to unite to survive. Whatever
the reason, Ethelfleda`s plan worked.
All the people of Mercia felt
safe for the first time in a long while, and they attributed their state of
peace to her and remembered her in their worship and in their daily lives. They
called her “the Lady of the Mercians”.
Throughout her long military
career, Ethelfleda was also building and endowing churches. With her husband
she fortified the episcopal city of Worcester whose revenues they shared with
Bishop Waerferth. They made Gloucester
their chief residence, and under their rule it developed as a main
administrative centre on the borders of Mercia and Wessex, and instead of at
the palace of Kingsholme, the Mercian Council (the “Witan”) met at Gloucester
in 896. Recent archaeology has revealed
the richness of the church of St. Oswald
they founded.
It seemed a sudden and drastic
action for Ethelfleda to set about a concerted effort at conquest of the Danish
settlements, but this she did in 910.
Despite her conciliatory efforts the Danes of York and Dublin had been
pushing their boundaries out with brute force for too long. More norsemen from
Scandinavia and from Iceland sailed around the coast, plundering the isolated
settlements and being given safe harbour in the Danish towns. Local efforts to contain their attacks on were
inadequate. Again, Ethelfleda planned
something big. And lasting.
The onslaught on the Danish
settlements began in 910 and Ethelfleda, together with Ethelred, ailing but
still soldiering on, and Edward, routed the Danish army at Tettenhall near
Wolverhampton. They closed in two
flanks around the town, and caught the Danes in-between. Ethelfleda had Welsh troops from her allies
in her ranks and they proved skilful in counter-attack in hilly country. On one occasion she chased the Danish
leaders to Gwent where the king gave them aid.
Ethelfleda took his wife and some nobles hostage until he handed them
over. Hastening back to Leicester, a Danish stronghold, she found to her
anguish that four of her thanes had been slain within its walls, though not
with the approval of all the Danish leaders.
The Countess ringed the town with her force, and by her formidable manner and strength of purpose, caused the
Danish leaders to at last accept her as their overlord.
While Edward concentrated on East
Anglia and the south-east midlands, his troops being joined by many others from
garrisons along the way, Ethelfleda led her army into the north midlands,
through the hilly passes to the borders of the kingdom of York. Many came to join her ranks on the way,
and there was no shortage of manpower to build the many burhs she then started
to construct.
Ethelred had been with her to supervise
some of these, but he died in about 911 and Ethelfleda was left suddenly
alone. They had been through many
dangers together, in fact their lives had been bound up in the defence of their
land. People mourned for their lost
king, and Ethelfleda escorted his cortege to Gloucester, where in his tomb
there was a place left for her.
The huge defensive strongholds, mainly earth-mounds with wooden
palisades on top, and an encircling ditch, had been used since remotest
times. The Countess however, brought a
new meaning to the word “defence” with forts at strategic places manned by
troops, providing a regular watch over Mercia`s borders.
When looking at a map we can
recognise many of the places of fortification, though some remain
unidentified. Chester, Bridgenorth,
Worcester, Gloucester, Hereford, Stafford, Tamworth, Warwick, Eddisbury,
Chirbury and Runcorn. Also at Sceargate described as being on the
Severn, and Bremesbyrig, which some say was Bromsgrove on a Roman road, but
which I think could possibly have been Bromyard, a few miles south-west, near
to which is the village of Bremenbury.
The name “Brom” could indicate “broom”, the plant, or as there are
several places over a few miles beginning with “Brom” or “Brem”, could come from “Breme” an Anglo-Saxon
chieftain. “Yard” comes from
“Ghuerd” (as in “Yardley” or
“Ghuerdly”, Birmingham) and can mean an enclosed place. There was also a burh at Weadburgh, which could possibly be
Wednesbury or Wednesfield near Wolverhampton, which were norse settlements. The
pattern of burhs shows how the Countess defended Mercia from the inroads of the
Danes through the ports of the west, and also the central area of government in
Mercia.
Probably wounded in her many
battles, obviously exhausted and suffering from the effects of many years spent
in military camps in distant , cold and windswept places, Ethelfleda died at
Tamworth, in 918. She may have heard before she died that a
faction of the Danish leaders of York had accepted her as their overlord. Formidable, but strong, warrior-like but just and fair, she won the
admiration and respect of all her people.
Her brother Edward paid his own respects to her, and the people of both
the old kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia, both English and Dane, mourned their
princess, their Queen. Ethelfleda`s
last resting-place was beside her husband Ethelred in their tomb in Gloucester
church.
Elfwynne should have become Lady of the Mercians after her mother
died, but her uncle Edward the Elder usurped her rule and took her to Wessex,
some say to a convent. The Mercians who
had just fought the Danes, now fought the king, for their independence, and for
their rightful ruler. This was the final
stage of Mercia`s annexation to Wessex. It would no longer be a kingdom of it
own. There was some story that Elfwynne
wed a Danish prince, but after that, say the history academics, Elfwynne fades
into obscurity.
Who then is the Elfwynne who emerges in the fens of Cambridgeshire
during the reign of King Aethelstan, son of Edward the Elder? She was wed to
Aethelstan Half-King, so called because he controlled practically half a
kingdom, that had been entrusted to him by Ethelred and Ethelfleda. King Aethelstan, brought up at Tamworth by
his aunt Ethelfleda, also respected this scholarly, religious man, who was a
brilliant administrator and peace-keeper between English and Dane. This perhaps
gives credence to the story that Elfwynne became the wife of a Danish
prince. He wasn’t a Dane, but had lived
among the peoples of the east midlands long enough to become trusted by both
English and Dane.
The king`s half-brother who
succeeded him was Edmund the Elder who had a son Edgar, later to become Edgar
the Peaceful, first acknowledged King of the English.
Edgar was like many royal children,
fostered out throughout his childhood, and his foster parents were Aethelstan
Half-King and his wife Elfwynne. The
atheling would have been carefully placed with people his parents trusted, and
only very rarely would this have been outside the royal family.
Elfwynne was obviously
Ethelfleda`s daughter, for her own daughter was named Ethelfleda Eneda, and she
was wed when young to her cousin Edgar.
The “little white duck” was however left alone with a baby, Edward, when
her 16-year-old husband, the newly-proclaimed king, ran away with the youthful Wulfrith, obviously another cousin,
from convent school at Wilton. Their
daughter was born a year later, but Wulfrith returned to the convent,
eventually becoming Abbess. Their
daughter was St. Editha of Wilton.
Many years ago after writing to Gloucester library they could find very
scant information on Ethelfleda Lady of the Mercians. Some historians still maintain she was not buried at Gloucester. New archaeology however is slowly
unravelling the rich heritage of the past, and we may yet find the tomb of the
Lady of the Mercians.