In Wulfhere the
Mercians
found a leader even abler than Penda,
who steadily advanced his frontiers and at the same time thoroughly
Christianised his people.
who steadily advanced his frontiers and at the same time thoroughly
Christianised his people.
Cambridge Medieval History - v2 - Rise of the Saracens and Foundation of the Western Empire
The old man, weary with work and longing to rest in the grave at
his beloved Fulda, was preparing for death: the consecration of Lul as
his coadjutor, and then, by papal leave, to be his successor, was a sign of
the coming end. When Fulda, by an act unusual in the Frankish
Church1, was placed directly under the Pope, it was a sign of the great
apostle's withdrawal. He was going back to the dream of his earlier
years. He would go to Frisia, which had never been far from his
thoughts. But he knew he was going to his death, for he bade the
faithful Lul send along with him his shroud packed in his box of books.
Lul was to carry out to a perfect end the work in Thuringia, which the
Saxons had lately harried, and he was to finish the partly built church
at Fulda. In 753 Boniface left, and for two years he worked among
the water-bound washes of the Zuiderzee: when (5 June 754) he was
at Dockum awaiting converts who were to be confirmed a band of savages
attacked him and his followers: they were all slain: the books he had
with him were found and taken to Fulda, and thither also, after
some time at Utrecht, was carried the body of the saint himself: there
in the house of his founding, near the middle of his vast field of
toil, the great hero lay at rest. He had done much to bind together
a growing world and to direct its ways. His letters, with their eager
interest in the past, with their requests for books, the Scriptures,
commentaries, parts—even particles—of the many works of Bede, with
their Latin verses, traced the outlines of medieval learning, and opened
up channels along which medieval scholarship was long to flow. The
many activities of his busy life must not hide his great services to learning.
Sometimes when "the vineyard he had dug brought forth only wild
grapes,'1 and disappointments from half-heathen converts and wholly
unworthy priests came thick upon him, he turned to study for rest and
1 Boniface asked for this privilege. The papal grant, and the royal confirmation,
are alike doubted, but the questions are different. For the latter see Chap. xvm.
p. 681.
CH. XVI (b).
## p. 542 (#574) ############################################
642 The work of Boniface
peace. Even when he was "an old man buffeted by the waves of the
German sea," and from dimness of eye could not read the small running
hand of the day, he wrote to England for clearly written books. His
connexion with England meant much, and when he died Archbishop
Cuthbert wrote to Lul that an English synod "lovingly placed him
among the splendid and glorious doctors of the faith," and along " with
blessed Gregory and Augustine had taken him for their patron saint"
The greatness of his work was seen even more in its endurance than
in its variety or its extent. He had visions of what he was to do,
and he also saw the lines upon which alone it could be done. The
Frankish Empire, the papal supremacy, monastic foundations, ecclesi-
astical organisation, were perhaps the four greatest features of the
medieval world. Each of these was built up by Boniface into the
work of his life. He must have seen what each of them would be and
would accomplish. But his far-sightedness, his enthusiasm and his wisdom
cannot fully explain all he did and all he was. For that we must go to
his letters: in them we see his power of friendship, his command of
detail, and his breadth of view. In them we see how the great man
grew with the very greatness of his work, until the young Englishman
with the zeal of his nation's new-found faith upon him became the
shaper of the mighty German West.
## p. 543 (#575) ############################################
543
CHAPTER XVII.
ENGLAND (to c. 800) AND ENGLISH INSTITUTIONS.
It is not surprising that the Venerable Bede, being a Northumbrian,
in his Ecclesiastical History completed about 731, just one hundred
years after the conversion of Northumbria to Christianity, should regard
Edwin of Deira, the king who had brought about the change, as almost
the greatest English prince of the seventh century. In his pages Edwin
appears as the fifth English king who had won renown by establishing
an effective imperium over his neighbours, both English and British,
and the same view of him is repeated in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
written two hundred years later, which shews that ninth century tradition
reckoned him as the fifth "Bretwalda," a title which seems to mean
"the wide-ruler" or over-king. The actual achievements of Edwin's
reign, which began in 617 after the defeat of Aethelfrith of Bernicia
by Raedwald of East Anglia at the battle of the Idle, shew that the
title was not unmerited; for he is credited with subjecting the Isle
of Man to his rule, conquering Anglesey from the king of Gwynedd
or North Wales, annexing the Southumbrian district of Lindsey and the
yet British district of Elmet in South Yorkshire, and even asserting
himself along the Thames and waging successful war with the West
Saxons. The only English kingdom, according to Bede, which did not
bow to him, was Kent, the home of his queen who had induced him to
adopt Christianity. His power, however, if striking, was really precarious,
and his baptism in 627 soon brought about political difficulties. Other
kings had recognised his suzerainty so long as he appeared as the
champion of the English against their foes, but his desertion of Wodan
made the more conservative of them restive.
The leader of the discontented was Penda, the chief of the Mercians
in the Trent valley, and of the "Wreocensaete" or dwellers by the
Wrekin, who had settled along the upper Severn and were fast spreading
south into Herefordshire. Penda first made his name in 628 by a suc-
cessful attack on the folk called Hwicce, the branch of the West Saxons
who had fixed their seats on the upper tributaries of the Thames, on the
Worcestershire Avon and along the lower Severn. A victory at Ciren-
cester made these districts tributary to Mercia and doubled Penda's
power, whereupon he came forward as the champion of the old national
## p. 544 (#576) ############################################
644 Penda of Mercia. Battle of Heathfield [633
religion and quickly found himself supported by all those warriors, who
hated the new-fangled restrictions which the Christian missionaries
threatened to impose in the matters of marriage and private vengeance.
The attitude of the heathen chieftains, who probably acted as priests for
their several districts and themselves sacrificed and collected temple
tolls from their liegemen, like the Icelandic Godis of a later time, is not
depicted at all clearly by Bede, who had little interest in heathen
institutions, but we can gain a fair idea of the shape which their
antagonism must have taken if we read the "Christne Saga," which
describes a similar struggle between Christ and Wodan in the northern
island three hundred and fifty years later1.
The first folk actually to rise against Edwin's influence were the East
Angles, who slew their king Eorpwald for accepting baptism; but the
real crisis came in 633, when Penda joined forces with Cadwallon, king
of Gwynedd, Edwin's chief British enemy. The rival armies met on the
borders of Mercia and Deira somewhere near Doncaster in the woodlands
called Heathfield, with the result that Edwin's army was disastrously
routed and the "Bretwalda" himself slain.
This fight in Heathfield made the fortune of Mercia. The Deiran
supremacy not only disappeared but Bernicia and Deira again fell apart
and their leading men apostatised. Cadwallon, eager to regain the
North for the British, occupied York, and this forced Paulinus with
Edwin's queen to flee to Kent. Penda meantime stepped into Edwin's
place as leading king, a fact not emphasised by Bede because of this
prince's hostility to Christianity, and created an enlarged Mercia,
stretching right across England from the Humber and the Wash on the
east to Chester and Hereford on the west.
The provinces of this enlarged state seem to be set out for us in the
first section of the so-called "Tribal Hidage," a Mercian document com-
piled apparently some fifty years later for Penda's successors for revenue
purposes. This hidage, or schedule of assessments, indicates that "that
which was first called Mercia" comprised in addition to the two Mercian
districts, north and south of the Trent, six dependent "maegths"' or
chieftaincies, namely (1) the land of the Wreocensaete, now Shropshire
with parts of Herefordshire, (2) Westerna, a somewhat vague expression
which apparently refers to the plain of Cheshire and South Lancashire,
(3) the land of the Pecsaete, the dwellers round the Peak and Sheffield,
(4) the land of Elmet, which had its centre at Loides2 (Ledstone near
Pontefract) where the road from London to York crossed the river
1 Vigfiisson aud Vork Powell, Origines Islandicae, i. pp. 309-12, 370-412.
9 Loides has usually been identified with Leeds, but this ignores the fact that
in 1066 Leeds was an unimportant village, divided between seven small manors,
whereas Ledstone with Kippax at the important crossing of the Aire was the seat
of the Earl and the most extensive lay manor of the Elmet district (Domesday,
i. 316a. )
## p. 545 (#577) ############################################
634-640] Pendas Kingdom. Oswald of Bernicia 545
Aire and which reached north to the Wharfe, (5) Lindsey with the land
of Heathfield, and (6) the settlements of the North and South Gyrwe,
comprising the fenlands of Holland and the Isle of Ely, perhaps detached
from East Anglia. Over these "maegths" as well as in the Mercian
homelands the victorious Penda ruled as king; but his influence was
also paramount over the sub-kingdom of the Hwicce in Worcestershire
and Gloucestershire and over the territories occupied by the Middle
Angles (Bede's Angii Mediterranei) in Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire
and Huntingdonshire. These latter he formed into a second sub-kingdom
and entrusted to his son Peada.
The centre of the realm thus constituted was at Tamworth on the
Watling Street, and it is clear that, if its parts could only hold together,
the new state from its central situation was in a far better position for
gaining supremacy over all England than Northumbria had been. The
struggle, however, was by no means over; for it was not long before the
Northumbrian dynasty recovered from its eclipse and made a determined
effort to undo Penda's work.
The new Northumbrian leader was Oswald, one of the sons of
Aethelfrith of Bernicia who had been exiled when Edwin of Deira won
his kingdom. This prince seized the opportunity afforded by Edwin's
death to return to Bernicia, and in 635 signally defeated Cadwallon at
Heavenfield near Hexham on the Roman Wall. Upon this he was able
not only to reunite Deira to Bernicia, but being a zealous Christian to
begin the reconversion of both districts. To effect this he called to his
aid, not the exiled Paulinus, but a band of Irish-Scot missionaries from
the renowned monastery of Iona on the west coast of Scotland where he
had himself learnt Christianity, when in exile. The struggle between
the adherents of Christ and Wodan was thus again renewed, but this time
not under the auspices of Rome; for the Scots were quite independent
of the Papacy and had their own traditions and a peculiar organisation.
The leader of the new mission to Bernicia was Aidan (correctly Aedan),
whom Oswald established, not at York amid Roman surroundings, but
on the island of Lindisfarne in the North Sea, hard by Bamborough,
the Bernician capital. The detailed story of this second attempt to
Christianise Northumbria will be found elsewhere; its effect on the newly
formed Mercian kingdom is what now concerns us; for Oswald, as a
champion of Christ, was bound to attack Penda, even if he had not also
felt it his duty to regain for Northumbria its lost political supremacy.
In this enterprise Oswald was not long without allies. The numerous
petty chiefs, whom Penda had subdued, were naturally not very heartily
on his side. Any overlord, even one who adhered to the old religion,
was distasteful to them, and this made it easy to stir up rebels. Besides,
notwithstanding Penda's opposition, Christianity was making headway
all round him, in East Anglia under Anna who was crowned king in
spite of a victorious Mercian invasion, and in Wessex under Cynegils
C. MED. B. VOL. II. Oil. XVII. 36
## p. 546 (#578) ############################################
546 Battle of Maserfield. Oswald slain by Penda [640-651
who was converted about this time by an Italian missionary, named
Birinus.
These two folk-kings were necessarily Oswald's allies, and if we are
to believe Bede, even accepted him as their overlord. At any rate
Oswald encouraged Cynegils to set up Birinus as bishop of the West
Saxons with his see at Dorchester a few miles below Oxford on the
upper Thames, and was himself present as sponsor when Cynegils was
baptised. By 640 the allied princes were clearly pressing Penda hard;
for Oswald was able to regain Elmet and Lindsey and collect his forces
for an attack on the district of " Westerna" round Chester. But here,
as it proved, the Christian champion over-reached himself. In this
quarter Penda could rely on British help and probably was joined by
Cadwalader of Gwynedd. At any rate in 642 he faced Oswald in the
north-east corner of Shropshire at the foot of the Welsh hills in the
woodlands called Maserfield, and here Oswald was slain and his army
destroyed. Penda had his body mutilated, but tradition says that his
head was subsequently buried at Lindisfarne, while his arms and his
hands were preserved at Bam borough as precious relics of the fight with
heathendom. Later he was canonised as St Oswald. The Welsh too
preserved his memory, calling the site of the battle Croes Oswallt, while
the English called it Oswestry.
The same results followed from the disaster in Maserfield as from
Edwin's disaster in Heathfield. Bernicia and Deira again parted com-
pany, this time for thirteen years, while Penda retained his position as
leading king. Northumbria however did not go back to heathendom,
though Penda ravaged it as far as Bamborough. The Irish missionaries
had obtained too great a hold on the people to be repudiated, and Aidan
did not think of abandoning his flock. In Wessex heathenism had
greater success. Cynegils died in 643, and his son Coenwalch, who had
married Penda's daughter, succeeded and practised heathen rites. But
even here Birinus seems to have maintained a foothold. At any rate
Coenwalch soon quarrelled with Penda, and fleeing for refuge to Anna of
East Anglia was shortly afterwards baptised by Felix, the missionary
bishop of Dunwich. Penda, indeed, as the years went by, must gradu-
ally have realised that in spite of his victories he was fighting against the
inevitable. In 648 Coenwalch, aided by his kinsman Cuthred, returned
to Wessex and openly proclaimed himself a Christian. Peada, too, who
had been set over the Midland Angles, was also found among the converts,
while missionaries from Lindisfarne headed by Cedd, an Englishman,
were invited into Essex by the local chiefs, who had remained heathens
ever since the expulsion of Bishop Mellitus in 617.
The prime mover in all this was Oswy, Oswald's younger brother,
who after Maserfield had become king of Bernicia and who in 651 tried
to regain Deira as well, by putting to death Oswin, a chieftain who was
ruling that district with the support of Penda. In this he did not succeed,
## p. 547 (#579) ############################################
654-655] Battle of the Winwaed. Penda slain by Oswy 547
but it heralded a new struggle in which heathendom had once more to
fight for its existence. Penda as usual met the danger with vigour. In
654 he made a savage attack on East Anglia and slew Anna, and the
year following collected all his strength to march against Oswy. At first
Oswy offered tribute, but Penda refused all terms. His levies, we are
told, were organised under thirty different chiefs and included contin-
gents from Wales, East Anglia and Deira. Oswy's forces in comparison
were far inferior, but they had the better spirit, some of Penda's allies
being half-hearted and some actually treacherous. The collision took
place at the ford of the Winwaed, apparently a stream half-way between
Doncaster and Ledstone. Here in the district of the Elmetsaete
Penda's life-long good fortune deserted him. The Deirans would not
fight for him, one of the Welsh contingents took to flight, and in the
end Penda himself fell together with the king whom he had recently set
up in East Anglia and many of his other vassals.
Oswy's somewhat unexpected victory not only gave him great prestige,
but was decisive for the religious destiny of the English. Sussex and
much of Wessex and Mercia were still heathen, and Cedd's mission to the
men of Essex and Middle Anglia had still much work to do; but from
this time onwards active heathen resistance was at an end, for Peada the
heir to Mercia already stood for Christianity, and had married Oswy's
daughter. It must not be thought that Penda's career had been in
vain. He had failed, it is true, to maintain the old religion; but the
Mercian State which he had evolved out of a congeries of tiny tribes,
was destined to prove permanent, and in spite of Oswy's momentary
triumph soon shewed itself able to resist all efforts to bring about its
dismemberment. It remained in fact the leading factor in English
politics for the next hundred and fifty years.
It may be well at this point to glance at the chief changes from the
social and political point of view, which each English tribe underwent
as soon as its leaders discarded heathenism. The most far-reaching
change of all, next to the introduction of a higher moral standard, is
clearly the rise in each kingdom of a small class who could read and
write and who had some knowledge of Mediterranean civilisation. The
English of all ranks, as pagans, must have lived almost without writing.
They were indeed acquainted with the Runic alphabet, and used it for
mottoes on weapons and coins, for recording names on gravestones, and
now and again for secret messages; but this method of writing was
altogether useless for the ordinary needs of civilisation. Here and there,
too, there may have been court bards, who may have been capable of
reading messages for the kings in the Roman alphabet, but the ordinary
chief knew nothing of writing and put nothing on record. Everything
that needed to be remembered had to be put in the form of rhythmic
verses suitable for chanting to the harp, and all the laws and customs
of the tribes were handed down orally by this method. All this now
ch. xvii. 35—2
## p. 548 (#580) ############################################
548 Changes introduced with Christianity
began to change. Wherever the missionaries came, they brought the
Roman alphabet with them and were ready to write down and record,
at first of course in Latin, but after a few years in the vernacular also,
not only accounts of deeds of importance but every-day bargains and
contracts. The new learning might be meagre, and the class of writers
a small one, but a new epoch had begun. A book ceased to mean a
tablet of beechwood and became a book of parchment, and hereafter
there was a new leaven ceaselessly at work making for social progress.
Hardly less important politically was the new division set up between
clergy and laity, a distinction which dominates all later periods, and
which introduced a dualism into the framework of government and
society which is now difficult to apprehend in all its subtle bearings.
The new class of clergy, the godcund estate as opposed to the zeoruld-
cund or laity, did not merely step into the places of the priests of
heathen days. As already suggested the heathen priests for the most
part had not been a class apart, but, like the later Godis of Iceland,
were probably leading landowners who acted the part of chieftains,
judges and priests combined, and enjoyed the right of conducting
the sacrifices on national feast-days as an hereditary office appendant
to their estates. The edifices, too, which served as temples, if they
were like the Icelandic hovs, had not been buildings solely devoted to
religious uses, but were attached to the big halls of the chieftains used
equally for social purposes, so that a sacrifice and a banquet were easily
merged together.
The new order of clergy, on the other hand, from the outset did
everything they could to mark off their position from that of the
heathen priests, asserting themselves to be a caste apart, superior to
the lay classes and fenced about by special sanctions definitely recognised
by the law. And this in itself led to further developments, causing the
bishops to be ever urging on the kings the necessity of recording in
writing what the rights were which the clergy were to enjoy, and by
what fines and punishments their teaching was to be made effective and
their privileges guarded. It thus came about not only that the laws
were materially supplemented but that the amendments were put into
writing, a step forward in the path of civilisation of the utmost
importance. It is true that only one amending code, that for Kent,
issued by King Aethelberht, is now extant which dates from the
first advent of the missionaries, but there can be no reasonable doubt
that similar codes must also have been written down at any rate for
Northumbria and East Anglia, as without them the position of the
clergy, with no tradition to appeal to, could not have been made secure
or their views on morality enforced.
In considering these changes in the laws, it would be unjust to
suppose that the work of the bishops was mainly directed to securing
the status of their own order. It would be truer to maintain that their
-
## p. 549 (#581) ############################################
The Clergy in favour of fewer Kingdoms 549
aims were revolutionary in every direction. Here, however, only two
farther points can be touched on.
The first is the solvent effect produced by their teaching on the
doctrine, so fundamental to all uncivilised men, of the solidarity of the
group of blood relations. Among the English, as among all primitive
races, the individual in all his relations in life was in the eyes of the law
not so much an independent unit as one of a group of kinsmen. This
group the English called a maegth (though they also used this
expression for a tribe), and those who used Latin a parentela or
cognatio. Any attack made on a free man counted as an attack on
the maegth to which he belonged and might be resented and avenged
by the whole body of magas or kinsmen. Conversely, if a free man
did any wrong to another he and his kin had to fear the vengeance of
all the members of the injured man's maegth. Hence there arose
everywhere a constant succession of bloodfeuds (jaehde), and acts of
violence had the most far-reaching consequences lasting sometimes for
generations, as one branch of the maegth after another took up the
feud. Obviously this doctrine was most disastrous to peace and progress
and exactly the reverse of all Christian teaching with its insistence on
mutual forbearance and on the responsibility of each individual for his
own acts. The advent of the new faith accordingly set in train a
movement which, bit by bit, if slowly, broke down the idea of the
mutually responsible group of kinsmen, or at any rate so altered it
as to limit its operations to useful police purposes only.
Secondly, with the change of faith, came the introduction of the
English kings to new ideals of what a state should be and of the part
a king should play. To missionaries coming from Italy or Gaul, the
minute districts ruled by the so-called "kings " can hardly have seemed
true states at all. To men familiar with the Merovingian lands, with
Austrasia, Neustria or Burgundy, or even with the Lombard duchies in
Italy, a state meant an extensive territory, often many hundreds of miles
in length and breadth, in which the king claimed autocratic powers and
legislated and imposed taxes at will. From the first then, the clergy
thought England ought to be treated as a whole, and looked forward to
a coalescence of the tribes. Any folk-king strong enough to subject
his fellows, any Bretwalda or over-king had their sympathy; for from
such kings alone could they expect adequate protection and endowments.
A folk-king, say of West Kent, whose kingdom was so tiny that a day's
ride in any direction would bring him to another kingdom, could not
afford to give them landed estates; but a " Bretwalda" like Edwin or
Penda could, especially as he had the estates of his under-kings to draw
on. Inevitably then, if unconsciously, the clergy stood for fewer and
larger kingdoms and instilled into the minds of victorious kings ideas
which may be called "imperial,11 encouraging those who gained an
imperium both to legislate for and to tax their people after the
## p. 550 (#582) ############################################
550 The Introduction of the Hidage System
fashion of the Caesars, and at the same time teaching them the methods
by which permanent unity might be fostered.
Perhaps the most important political help they could give in this
direction was in working out orderly systems for the assessment and
collection of tributes. In the Roman Empire before its fall the
machinery of taxation had been highly elaborated, and it had been
found that the best way to raise a land tax was by assessing it on an
artificial partition of the territory to be taxed into a number of equally
assessed subdivisions. Each of these districts formed a unit of taxation
and each furnished an equal proportion of any tax, though at the same
time they might vary largely in area, according as their soil varied in
fertility and their population in density. On the Continent, systems of
this kind had never been entirely forgotten, at any rate not by the clergy;
and so it is not surprising to find that almost immediately after the advent
of the missionaries something of this kind, if only in a very rough and
ready form, begins to be traceable in England in the shape of the so-
called "hide," which is the term applied to equally taxed units of land.
Our main evidence for this, if scanty, is sufficient, and consists in
those passages in Bede's history, relating to events that took place in
the middle of the seventh century, in which he has occasion to compare
different districts one with another. As he wrote in Latin he does not
indeed use the vernacular term higid, later Latinised into hida, but a
circumlocution, speaking of the terra unius familiae; but this term is
always found in Englisb translations of his works translated by higid,
and so there is no doubt that the two were equivalent. In these passages
districts are set before us as reckoned at so many hides; and these hides
cannot be units of actual area, as the districts are always spoken of as
containing a round number of units, and further the number of units
given to them does not vary as their actual size. Most of the hidages
given by Bede also have the further peculiarity of being based on a unit
of 120, but this ceases to be remarkable, in an artificial assessment
scheme, when we remember that the English did not reckon by units
of 100,1000 and 10,000, but like all the Germans by the more practical,
because more readily divisible, units of 120, 1200, and 12,000, using
what is called a " long hundred" of six score rather than the "Roman
hundred" of five score. We are told, for instance, by Bede that the
Mercian homeland, in the valley of the Trent, was reckoned at 12,000
hides, Anglesey at 960, the Isle of Man at about 300, Thanet at
600 and the Isle of Wight at 1200. Similarly after the battle of
the Winwaed, Oswy makes a thank-offering and devotes 120 hides to
the Church, and this appears to have been made up of a dozen scattered
estates, each reckoned at 10 hides. This evidence is further backed up
by the document already alluded to, the so-called Tribal Hidage which
sets before us many more districts and assigns to each a round number
of hides. For this list, when analysed, is found, if allowance be made
## p. 551 (#583) ############################################
655-658] Temporary Triumph of Osivy 551
for a slight corruption of the text, to be built up of groups of districts,
each group being assessed at a multiple of 12,000 hides. Further, both
in Bede and in the Tribal Hidage and also in the "Song of Beowulf,"
an English epic that dates from the seventh century, we hear of other
districts assessed at 7000 hides; examples are Sussex, Essex, Wreocensaete
and Lindsey. At first this seems to clash with the 12,000 unit, but we get
from Bede an explanation when he tells how North Mercia was reckoned
at 7000 hides and South Mercia at 5000, thus shewing how a 12,000
hide unit might be divided into approximately, but not exactly, equal
moieties. All this evidence too clearly shews that these assessments
were arrived at, not from the bottom by beginning with the assessment
of villages, but from the top by assigning units of 12,000 hides to large
districts and petty kingdoms and subsequently apportioning the hides
to the various component sub-districts. The introduction of this
elaborate system, though it owed something to prior military organisa-
tion, must, one would infer, have been largely the work of the clergy,
as it could only have been planned by men of education with views as
to uniformity and some acquaintance with continental tradition. The
clergy, too, probably benefited by it quite as much as the kings; for
they too wanted to raise tolls and church-scots, and had everything to
gain by being able to distribute the burden on a definite plan.
It only remains to be said that the main features of this system,
when once introduced, remained in force throughout the Anglo-Saxon
period, and continued for four hundred years to be the basis on which
military and fiscal obligations were distributed, though the actual
assessments of particular districts were from time to time modified to
suit changed conditions. The unit of 1200 hides for example was still
an important feature of English organisation at the date of the Norman
Conquest. Only a few years before 1066, Worcestershire was reckoned
at 1200 hides, Northamptonshire at 3000, Wiltshire at 4800 and so on.
It is clear, however, that the hidage unit in many districts was in
time considerably enlarged. The Isle of Wight, for instance, was
reckoned at 200 units in 1066, as against 1200 in the time of Bede;
East Anglia at 6000 units as against the 30,000 hides given in the Tribal
Hidage, and we even know the approximate date when William the Con-
queror finally reduced the assessment of Northamptonshire to 1200 hides.
We must now return to the events of 655. The immediate result of
Penda's death was the temporary collapse of Mercia. Oswy found no
one to oppose him and quickly annexed all Mercia north of the Trent as
well as Deira and Lindsey. How far he overran Cheshire or penetrated
into the valley of the Severn we do not know; but Bede says that the
Mercians submitted to the partition of their province and that Oswy
took up the task of converting the country round Penda's capital,
appointing Diuma as first bishop of the Mercians. As for Peada,
Penda's heir and Oswy's son-in-law, he is represented as being content
## p. 552 (#584) ############################################
562 Wulfhere rebels against Oswy [ess
with adding the 5000 hides of South Mercia, that is to say Leicestershire,
Kesteven and Rutland, to his kingdom of Middle Anglia and as spending
his time in making plans for a monastery at Medeshamstede, a site on
the edge of the fens overlooking the country of the Gyrwe, well known
afterwards as Peterborough.
Meantime in Northumbria the two most important events were the
founding of the nunnery of Streaneshalch, afterwards renamed by the
Danes Whitby, and the promotion of Oswy's son Alchfrid to be under-
king of Deira. With affairs thus settled in the south Oswy next turned
his eyes northwards, and according to Bede subdued the greater part of
the Picts beyond the Forth. Bede represents him in fact as the greatest
of the Northumbrian kings with an imperium over all the southern
provinces of England as well as over Mercia and the Picts and Scots.
This may have been the case in 657; but if so, the quickly won
supremacy was short lived, and in the south did not survive beyond the
assassination of Peada in 658 and the accession of a more vigorous
prince to the headship of Mercia.
The new ruler was Wulfhere, Peada's younger brother and like him
a Christian. Elected by some Mercian notables, he came to the throne
determined to reconstitute and, if possible, to extend Penda's kingdom.
Bede describes the rebellion in a single sentence, merely stating that
Oswy's officials were expelled from Mercia; but really the revolt was an
event of first-rate importance. For Oswy's overlordship of the Midlands
came utterly to an end. So long as he lived, he continued to struggle to
regain it, but never with much success; and from this time onwards it
grows every year clearer that Northumbrians chance of dominating all
England has passed away.
In Wulfhere the Mercians found a leader even abler than Penda,
who steadily advanced his frontiers and at the same time thoroughly
Christianised his people. On the whole he shunned northern enterprises,
his aim being to get control of south-eastern England and even of
Sussex, and to hem in Wessex into the south-west. In the latter kingdom
considerable progress had followed on Coenwalch's return from exile.
Three events deserve mention. These are the assignment about 648 of
parts of Berkshire and Wiltshire, reckoned at 3000 hides, to Cuthred,
the prince who had helped to restore Coenwalch, a transaction which
shews that the assessment system had been applied south of the Thames,
the foundation of a second bishopric for Wessex at Winchester, and a
successful campaign carried on against the Britons of West Wales. The
latter opened with an attack on Somerset, and in 652 a battle occurred
near Bath at Bradford-on-Avon; but it was not till 658 that Coenwalch
was definitely successful, when a victory at Penn in the forest of Selwood
enabled the men of Wiltshire to overrun most of Dorset and to advance
the Wessex frontier in Somerset to the banks of the Parrett. Again we
only have very meagre accounts of an important event, but it is evident
## p. 553 (#585) ############################################
661-675] The Ascendancy of Mercia 553
that the settlement of so much new territory must have drawn heavily
on the West Saxon population and made them less able than heretofore
to withstand Mercian aggression in the Thames valley.
Here then was Wulfhere's opportunity to seize the Chiltern districts.
Nor did he lose it. In 661 he advanced out of Middle Anglia, and after
capturing Bensington and Dorchester, till then the chief centres of the
West Saxons, threw himself across the Thames and laid waste the
3000 hides, known as Ashdown, which Coenwalch had assigned to Cuthred.
It would seem that Cuthred was killed; at any rate the West Saxons
were completely beaten, and the " Chilternsaete" or dwellers in Oxford-
shire and Buckinghamshire, had to accept Wulfhere as their overlord.
Their district, reckoned in the Tribal Hidage at 4000 hides, from this
time forward may be regarded as Mercian, while the Thames becomes
the northern frontier of Wessex and Winchester the chief seat of the
West Saxon kings.
A further result of this campaign was seen in the submission of
Essex, at this time ruled by a double line of kings, and perhaps divided
into two provinces, Essex proper reckoned at 7000 hides and Hendrica
to the west of it reckoned at 3500. This was a very substantial gain:
for it gave Wulfhere London, even at that day the most important
port in England. As might be expected, the Thames did not long
set a limit to Wulfhere's ambitions. Using London as a base, he
next overran Suthrige, the modern Surrey, and shortly afterwards
Sussex. In Surrey after this we hear of Mercian aldermen; but
Sussex retained its kings, as Wulfhere found them useful as a counter-
poise to the kings at Winchester. Finally we find Wulfhere attacking
the Jutes along the valley of the Meon in south-east Hampshire and
the Isle of Wight. This brought his arms almost up to Winchester.
There is no record however that he attacked the West Saxon capital,
but only that he detached the "Meonwaras" and the men of Wight
from Wessex and annexed their districts to Sussex. The dates of these
events are not exactly known, but clearly they constituted Mercia a
power as great as any hitherto established in England. If the title
"Bretwalda" means wide ruler, Wulfhere clearly deserves it as much as
Oswald or Oswy, and perhaps more so; for he maintained his supremacy
for fourteen years (661-675) and was also quite as zealous as they were
to forward the new religion. Examples of his zeal are numerous, as for
instance the suppression of heathen temples in Essex in 665, the final
foundation of Medeshamstede, and the baptism of Aethelwalch king of
Sussex, Wulfhere himself standing as sponsor; or again the encourage-
ment which he gave to his brother Merewald to found a religious centre
for the Hecanas or West Angles which led to the establishment of
monasteries at Leominster in Herefordshire and Wenlock in Shropshire.
While Wulfhere was establishing the ascendancy of Mercia an internal
struggle of the greatest importance had arisen in Northumbria between
## p. 554 (#586) ############################################
554 Wilfrid and the Synod of Whitby [664
those who looked for Christian guidance to Iona and those who looked
to Rome. Though the work of evangelising the country had been
entirely carried on by the Scots, at first under Aidan of Lindisfame, and
after his death under Finan, there were none the less many clerics in the
land who, having travelled abroad, were not content to see the Church
cut off from continental sympathy by the peculiarities of the Irish system
and the claim of Iona to independence. The leader of this movement
was Wilfrid, a young Deiran of noble birth, who after studying at
Lindisfame had journeyed to Rome and finished his education at Lyons.
Returning to England in 658, he had become abbot of Stamford in
Kesteven, but had retired to Deira when Wulfhere revolted. There
from the outset he steadily advocated union with Rome, and winning
King Alchfrid's sympathy got himself about 661 appointed abbot of
Ripon, a newly founded monastery, in place of Eata, a Lindisfame
monk, who maintained the Iona traditions, especially as to the date of
Easter. About the same time Finan died at Lindisfame, and Colman
was sent from Iona to succeed him. In Bernicia the Roman party had
another powerful advocate in the person of Oswy's queen, a Kentish
princess. She eagerly pushed Wilfrid's cause at court until at last Oswy
and his son determined that a synod should be held at Streaneshalch to
discuss the matter. This assembly, later known as the Synod of Whitby1,
met early in 664. It consisted of both clergy and laymen, the leaders
on either side being Wilfrid and Colman. The test question was as to
the proper day for observing Easter. The Scots kept the feast on one
day, the Roman churchmen on another. The arguments were lengthy,
but the final decision was in favour of Wilfrid; whereupon Colman with
the bulk of the Columban clergy decided to leave Lindisfame and return
to Iona. So ended the Irish-Scot mission which for twenty-nine years
had been the leading force in civilising northern and central England.
The victory of Wilfrid's party was of great importance in three ways.
Firstly it restored the unity of the English Church, bringing all its
branches under one leadership, and so made its influence in favour of
political unity stronger. Secondly it quickened the spread of civilisation
by placing the remoter English provinces under teachers who drew their
ideas from lands where the traditions of the Roman Empire were still
alive, and where an altogether larger life was lived than among the wilds
of the Scottish islands. Lastly it introduced into England a new
conception of what a bishop or abbot should be, superseding the homely
self-effacing northern missionaries, who despised landed wealth, by more
worldly prince-prelates who were by no means satisfied to be only
preachers but demanded noble churches and a stately ritual for their
flocks and extensive endowments for themselves with a leading share in
the direction of secular affairs. It was this aspect of the Burgundian
and Frankish Churches that had particularly appealed to Wilfrid, and
1 See p. 631.
## p. 555 (#587) ############################################
669-690] Theodore of Tarsus 555
he meant to bring the English Church into line with them, if he could.
The opportunity of making a beginning in his own person soon offered
itself, owing to the death of Tuda, the bishop who had been placed over
Lindisfarne after Column's withdrawal. To fill the vacancy the North-
umbrian princes not unnaturally turned to Wilfrid, and he was quite
willing to accept their offer but on the condition that the site of his see
should be transferred to York, partly to shew that he was more truly
the successor of Paulinus than of Aidan, and partly in imitation of the
urban Frankish bishoprics. He further stipulated that he must be
consecrated abroad, as he regarded the English bishops as irregularly
appointed. He accordingly went to Frankland, and the ceremony took
place with great magnificence at Compiegne in presence of twelve
Gallican bishops. After this Wilfrid is represented as moving about
with a prince's body-guard of one hundred and twenty retainers; but so
much state was hardly justified, for he found, on returning to England,
that Oswy had quarrelled with his son, that Alchfrid had been driven
from Deira and that as a result Oswy was determined not to have his
son's friend as bishop of the Northumbrians. Oswy in fact had already
appointed another man to Wilfrid's see, in the person of Ceadda, abbot
of Lastingham, later known as St Chad. The motive of so anti-Roman
a step is not quite clear, but its importance is obvious. It made Wilfrid
a bitter opponent of the Northumbrian house and drove him to look
towards Mercia. He still remained abbot of Ripon but in 667 we find
him performing episcopal functions in Mercia for Wulfhere.
The following year a yet more important step in binding England to
civilisation and Roman culture took place when Pope Vitalian helped
in filling up the archbishopric of Canterbury and selected for the post,
not an energetic Englishman like Wilfrid, but a scholar and bom
organiser, who was well acquainted at once with Rome and Italy, and
with the Greek world of the Byzantine Empire, then without question
the most civilised part of Christendom. This remarkable man, called
Theodore of Tarsus, from his birthplace in Cilicia, was already sixty-six
when he landed in England in 669, and men must have thought that age
alone would soon damp his zeal. If so, they were mistaken; for never
was an archbishop so strenuous in every sphere, whether as administrator,
legislator, counsellor or peacemaker, so that for twenty-one years he
kept himself foremost in every English movement, and by his ceaseless
activity made the English understand what could be gained from unifi-
cation and orderly government.
The work which Theodore set himself to do was the thorough organ-
isation of the English Churches upon a centralised system in subjection
to Canterbury. Since Augustine's day no archbishop had played any
real part outside Kent, and Canterbury had enjoyed only an honorary
precedence. Theodore on the contrary regarded all England as his
province, and at once set out to visit all its petty kings and make
## p. 556 (#588) ############################################
556 The subdivision of Dioceses. Death of Oswy [671-675
himself acquainted with their peoples and their needs. In each diocese
he required an acknowledgment of his authority; in York for example
he re-established Wilfrid; and everywhere he inculcated the need of
uniform machinery and ritual.
Condemning the merely missionary types of church organisa-
tion as insufficient, he early decided that there ought to be a
greater number of bishops and clergy, a greater number of dio-
ceses and churches, and a substantial landed endowment, if possible,
for each minister of the church, whether priest, monk or prelate, to free
them from the insecurity of dependence on lay charity. The central
feature of this programme was the subdivision of unwieldy dioceses and
the foundation of more mother churches, a somewhat hazardous adven-
ture, as the existing bishops were naturally jealous of any diminution
of their importance. The first step was to get the existing churches
into touch with each other, and make them acknowledge the importance
of uniformity and good discipline. For this purpose Theodore sum-
moned a synod of bishops to meet at Hertford in 673, a memorable
event; for though only four of his six suffragans attended, the meeting
may be regarded as the first attempt in England at a national, as distinct
from a tribal, assembly.
The chief work of the synod, as reported by Bede, was the adoption
of certain canons for the guidance of the bishops, and this was followed
up in 674 by the actual putting into force in East Anglia of the policy
of smaller sees, the bishopric founded by Felix being partitioned and two
new sees created, one at Dunwich for Suffolk and the other at Elmham
for Norfolk.
A good beginning was thus made without opposition; but in his
further progress Theodore soon found himself entangled in the political
rivalries of Mercia and Northumbria and in quarrels connected with
Wilfrid. Theodore had reconciled Oswy and Wilfrid, but in 671 Oswy
died and Northumbria passed to his son Ecgfrith,an ill-fated prince, who
quickly quarrelled with Wilfrid and about 675 reopened the feud with
Mercia by again seizing Lindsey. Both events were made use of by
Theodore, for they furnished him with opportunities for intervening.
To subdivide the see of York had been quite impracticable so long as
Wilfrid had political support; but now Ecgfrith himself came forward
and offered to ignore Wilfrid and further the archbishop's reforms.
Theodore at once announced that though he was willing to let Wilfrid
continue bishop of a reduced see of York, he wished for four moderate-
sized bishoprics in Ecgfrith's dominions, proposing as their seats, in
Bernicia Lindisfarne and Hexham, in Deira York, and in Lindsev
Sidnacaester. Wilfrid obstinately resisted this proposal, declaring that
Theodore had no power to divide his see and that he would appeal
to Rome if any division was forced upon him. Theodore treated the
threat as contumacious, declared Wilfrid deposed, and appointed the
## p. 557 (#589) ############################################
675-680] Death of Wulfhere. Aethelred of Mercia 557
new bishops. Wilfrid replied by sailing for Frisia. In 679 he reached
Rome and laid his case before Pope Agatho, being the first English
bishop to appeal against his metropolitan to the papal tribunal.
Ecgfrith's attack on Lindsey, delivered about 675, at first was success-
ful, for it coincided with the death of Wulfhere and the accession of
Aethelred, his younger brother, to the throne of Mercia. This prince
however soon proved himself even more capable than his brother. His
first exploit was to overrun Kent and burn Rochester, and by 679 he
was quite ready to attack Ecgfrith. No account exists of the campaign,
beyond the fact that Aethelred won a decisive victory on the banks of
the Trent and would have invaded Deira, had not Theodore suddenly
interposed as a mediator, and effected a peace by which Lindsey and
perhaps Southern Yorkshire once more passed to Mercia. This was a
blow to Northumbrian prestige of such a deadly nature that for the
next thirty-five years (679-714) no Northumbrian king dared to attack
Mercia, and it was quickly followed by the acceptance of Aethelred's
overlordship by Kent which gave him an even greater position than had
been enjoyed by Wulfhere.
The part played by Theodore in these developments reveals his far-
sightedness. It would have been natural if he had seen his interest in
preserving the independence of Kent. His policy was just the reverse.
He saw that Mercia was the strongest English kingdom, and well able to
help in a centralising movement, and so he threw his influence on to.
Aethelred's side. Hence arose a close connexion between Canterbury
and Tam worth, which was to last for over a century.
The first result of this alliance was the erection of three additional
Mercian dioceses, the first for the South Mercians and Middle Angles at
Leicester, the second for the Hwicce at Worcester, and the third for the
southern branch of the Wreocensaete, the Hecana or Magesaete, at
Hereford. Even so the mother see at Lichfield remained unwieldy, as it
extended over South Lancashire, Cheshire and Shropshire as well as over
the lands of the North Mercians in Staffordshire, Derbyshire and
Nottinghamshire. Mercia thus obtained five dioceses, for Dorchester was
also a Mercian see. The three new sees seem to have been created not
simultaneously, but clearly at dates not far off 680, a year made
memorable by a second great synod summoned by Theodore to meet
at Heathfield to signify the English Church's orthodoxy on the Mono-
thelete question.
Having achieved the reorganisation of northern and central England
Theodore might well congratulate himself. Wessex remained undealt
with, but he now had fourteen suffragans in place of seven and each had
a fairly manageable diocese. The problems which still faced him were
the provision of permanent endowments on a sufficient scale and of parish
priests and churches. As to the latter, time alone could solve the diffi-
culty and no complete parochial system came into existence for several
## p. 558 (#590) ############################################
658 Endowment of the Church. The Landbook [679
centuries. Parishes were only slowly evolved as the richer landowners
built churches for their estates and most villages had for a long time to
be content with the occasional visits of travelling priests. The most
that could be done at once was to provide little groups of clerics, living
a semi-collegiate life, in monastic cells scattered here and, there in each
diocese, and let these serve the neighbouring districts. Traces of this
system of petty monasteries can probably still be seen in such village
names as Kidderminster, Alderminster, Upminster, Southminster and so
on, a system very similar to that of the Welsh clas but one that
ultimately passed away as more churches were built.
With regard to permanent endowments nothing very definite can be
said, except that they largely increased under Theodore's auspices, and
that it appears to be in his time that the practice of conferring estates
on the churches by means of written grants first arose. Bede tells of
grants of land in some cases before 670 but of none of any large amount,
the largest being Oswy's gift of 120 hides for 12 monastic cells after the
battle of the Winwaed, while he definitely says that the Scottish prelates
actually refused land in many instances. Wilfrid however had intro-
duced the desire for magnificence, and Theodore encouraged it. More
and more we hear of larger gifts, as for instance a gift to Benedict
Biscop of 70 hides to found Wearmouth, and a gift to Wilfrid of 87 hides
to found Selsey, shortly followed by one of 300 hides in the Isle of
Wight. With more frequent gifts came also the need for better means
of recording them and rendering them irrevocable; and so arose the use
of written conveyances, "Landbooks1,as the Saxons called them. These
were clearly introduced by the clergy from abroad, being based on
Frankish models with formulas drawn from Roman precedents, but no
genuine examples can be produced for England before Theodore's time.
The earliest specimen in fact that has survived to the present day seems
to be a landbook, dated 679, preserved by the monks of Christ Church,
Canterbury, by which Lothaire, king of Kent, granted Westanae, that is
the western half of Thanet, later known as Monkton, to the abbot of
Reculver. Only two or three other examples claim to be of Theodore's
time, but few of these are above the suspicion of forgery, and it is clear
that it was only after his death that the use of such instruments gradually
grew into favour. Even in the case of so old a church as Rochester, its
landbooks only begin with a deed dated 735, and altogether there are
not more than forty genuine landbooks extant which bear dates earlier
than 750.
The later years of Theodore's activity were also a critical period for
Wilfrid. As we have seen, he reached Rome in 679, but he did not gain
much by his appeal, important as it was as a precedent. Pope Agatho,
it is true, issued bulls in his favour, but when he returned to England
he was accused of buying them and Ecgfrith put him in prison. Regaining
his freedom after nine months, he decided to become a missionary and
## p. 559 (#591) ############################################
681-702] Battle of Nechtansmere. Death of Theodore 559
betook himself to Aethelwalch of Sussex, whose people were still heathen.
Here he laboured with great success for five years (681-686), baptising
the chief men and founding a monastery at Selsey. In connexion with
this foundation Bede adds the interesting note that there were 250 male
and female slaves on the estates which Aethelwalch gave for its endow-
ment, and that Wilfrid gave them their freedom, a significant indication
at any rate that a considerable percentage of the English lower orders
were excluded from the ranks of the freemen in the seventh century.
Meanwhile a path was opening for Wilfrid's return to Northumbria.
On the one hand he became reconciled with Theodore, on the other the
Northumbrian king was dead. After his defeat by Mercia Ecgfrith had
turned his attention northwards and had been busy fighting the Picts
and Scots. In 681 he set up a bishopric at Abercorn on the Forth, to
minister to the lands he claimed to have subdued, and in 684 he sent a
fleet to attack Ireland. In 685 his raids were even pressed beyond the
Tay in pursuit of Bruide the Pictish king; but here he met with
disaster, being slain with many of his nobles at Nechtansmere near Forfar.
From this date onwards Northumbria distinctly loses its vitality and
gradually falls into a chronic state of civil war. Ecgfrith's successor was
Aldfrid, a prince who had spent much of his time in a monastery and
who was no fighter. He was willing to be reconciled to Wilfrid but
would not restore him to his old position. He only offered him the
reduced see of York, and the abbacy of Ripon. With this Wilfrid had
to be perforce content, but not whole-heartedly, and he was soon
engaged in a new quarrel with Aldfrid over a proposal to create a separate
bishopric at Ripon. This question was just becoming acute when
Archbishop Theodore died at the great age of eighty-eight in 690.
The absence of his moderating influence soon made itself felt and within
two years Wilfrid was again in exile, taking refuge with Aethelred who
gave him the monastery of Oundle in Middle Anglia and later made him
bishop of Leicester. The appointment of a new archbishop of Canterbury
in 692 in the person of Berctwald, the abbot of Reculver to whom
Lothaire had granted Westanae, did nothing to stop the feud, and
Wilfrid remained in Mercia for eleven years (691-702). The most
interesting notice we have of him at this epoch implies his attendance
in 695 at the translation of the body of St Aethelthryth, the virgin
foundress of Ely, formerly Ecgfrith's queen, who in her life had played
a considerable part in bringing about his original quarrel in North-
umbria.
In reviewing Theodore's achievements, it will be noticed that the
only important English kingdom not touched by his activity was
Wessex; but here also great changes took place in his later days.
These were brought about by the rise to power of Ceadwalla, a young
pagan princeling who is first heard of in 684 making an attack on
Aethelwalch of Sussex. For some time before this Wessex had been
CH. XVII.
'
## p. 560 (#592) ############################################
560 Wessex under Ceadwalla and Ine [685-710
ruled by a number of petty chieftains, no one branch of the house of
Cerdic being able to control the rest, a weakness perhaps due to the
loss of the Chilterns to Mercia and to the difficulty of assimilating the
recently acquired Keltic provinces of Dorset and Somerset. Ceadwalla
had been outlawed in these conflicts and seems to have been in the pay
of the Kentish princes when he attacked Aethelwalch. Having slain
the Sussex king, he next year turned against Centwine, the leading
claimant to the kingship in Wessex, drove him into a monastery and
got himself elected king. He followed up these successes by an attack
on the Jutes in the Isle of Wight and round Southampton Water—
districts which Bede describes as still ruled by their own king and still
heathen. Ceadwalla quickly conquered them, and even tried to ex-
terminate the Jutes and replace them by West Saxons. His savagery
had evidently not been forgotten fifty years later. It is clear, however,
that he himself was thinking of becoming a Christian; for as soon as he
had the island in his power, he handed over a quarter of it to Bishop
Wilfrid, and permitted the advent of Christian missionaries, thus
bringing about the fall of the last stronghold of paganism in England.
Having thus secured his position in Wessex, Ceadwalla again
attacked Sussex and overran it from end to end, and then pushed on
into Kent, designing to set up his brother Mul as an under-king over
part of that kingdom. For the moment the design succeeded, and it
may well be that, as a result, Surrey was detached from Kent. Mul,
however, was not favoured by fortune and shortly met a tragic death by
burning. Ceadwalla at once made reprisals; but in the midst of his
harryings he was seized with contrition for his deeds and determined to
become a Christian definitely, and to abandon his throne and go as a
pilgrim to seek baptism from the Pope. He accordingly left England
in 688 and, reaching Rome, was baptised by Pope Sergius. He was
still only thirty, but died almost immediately afterwards. No reign in
Anglo-Saxon history is more bloodthirsty than Ceadwalla's, but his
meteoric career had the merit of putting new vigour into the West
Saxons, who from this time onwards stand out as far more determined
opponents of Mercia than hitherto. Sussex, too, from this date tends
to become a vassal of Wessex rather than of Mercia, and so the first
move is made towards the distant goal of the ultimate supremacy of the
house of Cerdic in England. Ceadwalla was succeeded by Ine, a man of
considerable force, who ruled Wessex for thirty-eight years (688-726).
The greater part of his reign was devoted to extending his territories.
In the east he set up his kinsman Nunna as under-king of Sussex; in
the west he encroached year by year on West Wales. Details are
lacking, but we may ascribe the conquest of West Somerset to the
middle of his reign, Geraint the British king of Damnonia being driven
from Taunton. In 710 a fight is mentioned in which Nunna also took
part, and, though no results are recorded, an advance into the valley of
## p. 561 (#593) ############################################
690-725] Kent under Wihtraed. Ine's Laws 561
the Exe may perhaps be presumed, as we find the West Saxons at
Crediton near Exeter early in the next reign. Ine's thoughts, however,
were not solely bent on war, and the Church found him an active patron
and eager to further the principles of Theodore. Among his friends
were many notable ecclesiastics, such as Aldhelm, abbot of Malmesbury,
the most learned classical scholar in England, Earconwald, bishop of
London, the founder of Chertsey Abbey in Surrey and so in some sort
Ine's bishop, and Headde, bishop of Winchester. With the approval
of men such as these, he pressed forward the endowment of the clergy
both by generous grants of land and by formally enacting that the dues
called "church-scots" should be compulsory and levied every Martinmas.
The extant landbooks, however, which the monks of Glastonbury and
Abingdon ascribed to him in later days, can hardly be regarded as
genuine.
As his frontiers advanced westwards, the question naturally arose,
"Ought the West Saxon see to be divided? " Nothing was done till
Headde died in 705. The ideas of Theodore were then taken up and
the overgrown diocese split into two. The seat of the new western
see, sometimes called Selwoodshire because it comprised Wessex west of
Selwood Forest, was fixed at Sherborne and Aldhelm of Malmesbury was
consecrated its first bishop, while the reduced see of Winchester was
given to Daniel. Some few years later the same principle was applied
to Sussex, and Daniel permitted a new bishopric for the South Saxons
to be set up at Selsey.
While Wessex was thus developing under Ine, Kent, though subject to
Mercia, was not inactive. In Theodore's later years the kingdom had been
divided between Lothaire and Eadric, joint rulers, who are remembered
for some amending laws supplementing Aethelberht's code. A period of
anarchy however followed on Ceadwalla's inroads in 685. This was
terminated by the accession of Wihtraed, a particularly devout prince
who ruled as Ine's contemporary from 690 to 725 and who is claimed
as the first English king to grant general charters of immunity to the
churches of his kingdom, thereby freeing their lands from secular and
royal dues. Whether Wihtraed's so-called "Privilege" is really a
genuine document will probably never be ascertained; but he also
issued a code of laws mainly directed to making the status of the
clergy clear and definite, which are markedly in favour of the Church.
The example set by Kent was not lost on Ine. Early in his reign
he also issued a collection of written laws. As we have them now, they
form an appendix to the dooms issued two hundred years later by
Alfred, and it is not quite clear how far they have been abbreviated
and subjected to revision. None the less they give most valuable
evidence for the seventh century, for they seem to present a contrast
to the Kentish dooms on many points, and also deal with a larger
number of topics. The most interesting sections are perhaps those
C. MED. H. VOI. II. CH. XVII. 96
## p. 562 (#594) ############################################
562 Death of Wilfrid. Ine abdicates [702-726
dealing with the conquered Welsh in Somerset and Dorset. Though it
is usual to speak of these laws as codes, it must always be remembered
that they are in reality no more than brief amending clauses, dealing
only with certain sides of the law, more particularly with the penalties
for important crimes, and with the status of the clergy. Family law
and the law of property are only scantily touched on, and public institu-
tions, even if alluded to, are never explained, but taken for granted.
Moreover, the codes when all put together are extremely brief. Aethel-
berht's laws, for example, are confined to ninety clauses, and Wihtraed's
to twenty-eight, while no laws of this date at all have come down to us
from Mercia or Northumbria. It is clear then that any picture of
society, which can be deduced from them, must be most imperfect, and
that much is left to inference. They have, however, a superiority over
similar codes produced by the conquering Germans on the Continent in
that they are written in English and so give the native terms for the
things of which they speak, whereas the continental codes being in
Latin only give approximate equivalents which are often merely mysti-
fying and misleading.
We must now turn back to the affairs of the North. Wilfrid, while
in Mercia, had never abandoned his claim to be bishop of undivided
Northumbria. In 702 a fresh attempt was made to deal with it, a
synod being held at Austerfield on the Idle under the presidency of
Archbishop Berctwald. As before, neither Wilfrid nor Aldfrid would
give way; the upshot was that, in spite of his age, Wilfrid once more
set out for Rome to lay his cause in person before the Pope.
