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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain by Allen, Grant - CHAPTER XIII.

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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain

CHAPTER XIII.

THE RE­SIS­TANCE TO THE DANES.

In the long pe­ri­od of three and a-​half cen­turies which had elapsed be­tween the Jutish con­quest of Kent and the es­tab­lish­ment of the West Sax­on over-​lord­ship, the pol­itics of Britain had been whol­ly in­su­lar. The is­land had been brought back by Au­gus­tine and his suc­ces­sors in­to ec­cle­si­as­ti­cal, com­mer­cial, and lit­er­ary union with the con­ti­nent: but no for­eign war or in­va­sion had ev­er bro­ken the monotony of mur­der­ing the Welsh and har­ry­ing the sur­round­ing En­glish. The iso­la­tion of Eng­land was com­plete. Ship-​build­ing was al­most an ob­so­lete art: and the small trade which still cen­tred in Lon­don seems to have been main­ly car­ried on in Frisian bot­toms; for the Low Dutch of the con­ti­nent still re­tained the sea­far­ing habits which those of Eng­land had for­got­ten. But a new en­emy was now be­gin­ning to ap­pear in north­ern Eu­rope–the Scan­di­na­vians. The his­to­ry of the great wick­ing move­ment forms the sub­ject of a sep­arate vol­ume in this se­ries: but the man­ner in which the En­glish met it will de­mand a brief treat­ment here. Some out­line of the bare facts, how­ev­er, must first be premised.

As ear­ly as 789, dur­ing the reign of Of­fa in Mer­cia, “three ships of North­men from Hæretha land” came on shore in Wes­sex. “Then the reeve rode against them, and would have driv­en them to the king's town, for he wist not what they were: and there men slew him. Those were the first ships of Dan­ish men that ev­er sought En­glish kin's land.” In 795, “the har­ry­ing of hea­then men wretched­ly de­stroyed God's church at Lind­is­farne isle, through rap­ine and manslaugh­ter.” In the suc­ceed­ing year, “the hea­then har­ried among the Northum­bri­ans, and plun­dered Ecg­ber­ht's monastery at Wear­mouth.” In 832, “hea­then men rav­aged Shep­pey”; and a year lat­er, “King Ecg­ber­ht fought against the crews of thir­ty-​five ships at Char­mouth, and there was muck­le slaugh­ter made, and the Danes held the bat­tle-​field.”[1] In 835, an­oth­er host came to the West Welsh (now al­most re­duced to the penin­su­la of Corn­wall): and the Welsh read­ily joined them against their West Sax­on over-​lord. Ecg­ber­ht met the unit­ed hosts at Hengestes­dun and put them both to flight. It was his last suc­cess. In the suc­ceed­ing year he died, and the king­dom de­scend­ed to his weak son, Æthel­wulf. His sec­ond son, Æthel­stan, was placed over Kent, Es­sex, Sur­rey, and Sus­sex, as un­der-​king.

[1] This en­try in the Chron­icle, how­ev­er, is prob­ably er­ro­neous, as an ex­act­ly sim­ilar one oc­curs un­der Æthel­wulf, sev­en years lat­er.

Next spring, the flood of wick­ings be­gan to pour in earnest over Eng­land. Thir­ty-​three pi­rat­ical ships sailed up Southamp­ton Wa­ter to pil­lage Southamp­ton, per­haps with an ul­ti­mate eye to the trea­sures of roy­al Winch­ester, the cap­ital and min­ster-​town of the West Sax­on over-​lord him­self. This was a bold at­tempt, but the West Sax­ons met it in full force. The eal­dor­man Wulf­heard gath­ered to­geth­er the levy of fight­ing men, at­tacked the host, and put it to flight with great slaugh­ter. Short­ly af­ter a sec­ond Dan­ish host land­ed near Port­land, doubt­less to plun­der Dorch­ester: and the lo­cal eal­dor­man Æthel­helm, falling up­on them with the levy of Dorset men, was de­feat­ed af­ter a sharp strug­gle, leav­ing the hea­then in pos­ses­sion of the field. It was not in Wes­sex, how­ev­er, that the wick­ings were to make their great suc­cess. The north had long suf­fered from ter­ri­ble an­ar­chy, and was a ready prey for any in­vad­er. Out of four­teen kings who had reigned in Northum­bria dur­ing the eighth cen­tu­ry, no less than sev­en were put to death and six ex­pelled by their re­bel­lious sub­jects. Chris­tian Northum­bria, which in Bæ­da's days had been the most flour­ish­ing part of Britain, was now re­duced to a mere ag­glom­er­ation of pet­ty princes and clans, de­pen­dent on the West Sax­on over-​lord, and ut­ter­ly un­con­nect­ed with one an­oth­er in feel­ing or sym­pa­thy. Al­ready we have seen how the Danes har­ried Northum­bria with­out op­po­si­tion. The same was prob­ably the case with the whole An­glian coast on the east. In 840, the wick­ings fell on the fen coun­try. “The eal­dor­man Here­ber­ht was slain by hea­then men, and many with him among the marsh-​men.” All down the east coast, the pi­rat­ical fleet pro­ceed­ed, burn­ing and slaugh­ter­ing as it went. “In the same year, in Lind­sey, and in East An­glia, and among the Kent men, many men were slain by the host.” A year lat­er, the wick­ings re­turned, grow­ing bold­er as they found out the help­less­ness of the peo­ple. They sailed up the Thames, and rav­aged Rochester and Lon­don, with great slaugh­ter; af­ter which they crossed the chan­nel and fell up­on Cwantaw­ic, or Éta­ples, a com­mer­cial port in the Sax­on land of the Boulon­nais. In 842, a Dan­ish host de­feat­ed Æthel­wulf him­self at Char­mouth in Dorset; and in the suc­ceed­ing sum­mer “the eal­dor­man Ean­ulf, with the Som­er­set levy, and Bish­op Ealh­stan and the eal­dor­man Os­ric, with the Dorset levy, fought at Par­ret­mouth with the host, and made a muck­le slaugh­ter, and won the day.”

The ut­ter weak­ness of the first En­glish re­sis­tance is well shown in these facts. A ter­ri­ble flood of hea­then sav­agery was let loose up­on the coun­try, and the peo­ple were whol­ly un­able to cope with it. There was ab­so­lute­ly no cen­tral or­gan­isa­tion, no army, no com­mis­sari­at, no ships. The hea­then host land­ed sud­den­ly wher­ev­er it found the peo­ple un­pre­pared, and fell up­on the larg­er towns for plun­der. The lo­cal au­thor­ity, the eal­dor­man or the un­der-​king, hasti­ly gath­ered to­geth­er the lo­cal levy in arms, and fell up­on the pi­rates tu­mul­tuous­ly with the men of the shire as best he might. But he had no pro­vi­sions for a long cam­paign: and when the levy had fought once, it melt­ed away im­me­di­ate­ly, ev­ery man go­ing back again of ne­ces­si­ty to his own home. If it won the bat­tle, it went home to drink over its suc­cess: if it lost, it dis­solved, de­mor­al­ized, and left the burghers to fight for their own walls, or to buy off the hea­then with their own mon­ey. But ev­ery shire and ev­ery king­dom fought for it­self alone. If the Dorset men could on­ly drive away the host from Char­mouth and Port­land, they cared lit­tle whether it sailed away to har­ry Sus­sex and Hants. If the Northum­bri­ans could on­ly drive it away from the Hum­ber, they cared lit­tle whether it set sail for the Thames and the So­lent. The North Folk of East An­glia were equal­ly hap­py to send it off to­ward the South Folk. While there was so lit­tle co­he­sion be­tween the parts of the same king­doms, there was no co­he­sion at all be­tween the dif­fer­ent king­doms over which Æthel­wulf ex­er­cised a nom­inal over-​lord­ship. The West Sax­on kings fought for Dorset and for Kent, but there is no trace of their ev­er fight­ing for East An­glia or for Northum­bria. They left their north­ern vas­sals to take care of them­selves. “It was nev­er a war be­tween the Danes and the na­tion­al army,” says Prof. Pear­son, “but be­tween the Danes and a lo­cal mili­tia.” It would have been im­pos­si­ble, in­deed, to re­sist the wick­ings ef­fec­tu­al­ly with­out a strong cen­tral sys­tem, which could move large armies rapid­ly from point to point: and such a sys­tem was quite un­dreamt of in the half-​con­sol­idat­ed Eng­land of the ninth cen­tu­ry. On­ly war with a for­eign in­vad­er could bring it about even in a faint de­gree: and that was ex­act­ly what the Dan­ish in­va­sion did for Wes­sex.

The year 851 marks an im­por­tant epoch in the En­glish re­sis­tance. The an­nu­al horde of wick­ings had now be­come as reg­ular in its re­cur­rence as sum­mer it­self; and even the in­ert West Sax­on kings be­gan to feel that per­ma­nent mea­sures must be tak­en against them. They had built ships, and tried to tack­le the in­vaders in the on­ly way in which so par­tial­ly civilised a race could tack­le such tac­tics as those of the Danes–up­on the sea. A host of wick­ings came round to Sand­wich in Kent. The un­der-​king Æthel­stan fell up­on them with his new navy, and took nine of their ships, putting the rest to flight with great slaugh­ter. But in the same year an­oth­er great host of 250 sail, by far the largest fleet of which we have yet heard, came to the mouth of the Thames, and there land­ed, a step which marks a fresh de­par­ture in the wick­ing tac­tics. They took Can­ter­bury by as­sault, and then marched on to Lon­don. There they stormed the busy mer­chant town, and put to flight Be­orhtwulf, the un­der-​king of the Mer­cians, with his lo­cal levy. Thence they pro­ceed­ed south­ward in­to Sur­rey, doubt­less on their way to Winch­ester. King Æthel­wulf met them at Ock­ley, with the West-​Sax­on levy, “and there made the great­est slaugh­ter among the hea­then host that we have yet heard, and gained the day.” In spite of these two great suc­cess­es, how­ev­er, both of which show an in­creas­ing states­man­ship on the part of the West Sax­ons, this year was mem­orable in an­oth­er way, for “the hea­then men for the first time sat over win­ter in Thanet.” The loose preda­to­ry ex­cur­sions were be­gin­ning to take the com­plex­ion of reg­ular con­quest and per­ma­nent set­tle­ment.

Yet so lit­tle did the En­glish still re­alise the ter­ri­ble dan­ger of the hea­then in­va­sion, that next year Æthel­wulf was fight­ing the Welsh of Wales; and two years af­ter he went on a pil­grim­age to Rome, “with great pomp, and dwelt there twelve months, and then fared home­ward.” In that same year, “hea­then men sat over win­ter in Shep­pey.”

Af­ter Æthel­wulf's death the En­glish re­sis­tance grew fainter and fainter. In 860, un­der his sec­ond son, Æthel­ber­ht, a Dan­ish host took Winch­ester it­self by storm. Five years lat­er, a hea­then army set­tled in Thanet, and the men of Kent agreed to buy peace of them–the first sign of that evil habit of buy­ing off the Dane, which grew grad­ual­ly in­to a fixed cus­tom. But the host stole away dur­ing the truce for col­lect­ing the mon­ey, and har­ried all Kent un­awares.

Mean­while, we hear lit­tle of the North. The al­most ut­ter de­struc­tion of its records dur­ing the hea­then dom­ina­tion re­stricts us for in­for­ma­tion to the West Sax­on chron­icles; and they have lit­tle to tell us about any but their own af­fairs. In 866, how­ev­er, we learn that there came a great hea­then host to East An­glia–an or­gan­ised ex­pe­di­tion un­der two chief­tains–“and took win­ter quar­ters there, and were horsed; and the East An­glians made peace with them.” Next year, this per­ma­nent host sailed north­ward to Hum­ber, and at­tacked York. The Northum­bri­ans, as usu­al, were at strife among them­selves, two ri­val kings fight­ing for the suprema­cy. The burghers of York ad­mit­ted the hea­then host with­in the walls. Then the ri­val kings fell up­on the town, broke the slen­der for­ti­fi­ca­tions, and rushed in­to the city. The Danes at­tacked them both, and de­feat­ed them with great slaugh­ter. Northum­bria passed at once in­to the pow­er of the hea­then. Their chiefs, In­gvar and Ub­ba, erect­ed Deira in­to a new Dan­ish king­dom, leav­ing Ber­ni­cia to an En­glish pup­pet; and Northum­bria ceas­es to ex­ist for the present as a fac­tor in An­glo-​Sax­on his­to­ry. We must hand it over for six­ty years to the Scan­di­na­vian di­vi­sion of this se­ries.

In 868, In­gvar and Ub­ba ad­vanced again in­to Mer­cia and be­set Not­ting­ham. Then the un­der-​king Burhred called in the aid of his over-​lord, Æthelred of Wes­sex, who came to his as­sis­tance with a levy. “But there was no hard fight there, and the Mer­cians made peace with the host.” In 870, the hea­then over­ran East An­glia, and de­stroyed the great monastery of Pe­ter­bor­ough, prob­ably the rich­est re­li­gious house in all Eng­land. Ead­mund, the un­der-​king, came against them with the levy, but they slew him; and the peo­ple held him for a mar­tyr, whose shrine at Bury St. Ed­munds grew in af­ter days in­to the holi­est spot in East An­glia. The Danes har­ried the whole coun­try, burnt the monas­ter­ies, and an­nexed Nor­folk and Suf­folk as a sec­ond Dan­ish king­dom. East An­glia, too, dis­ap­pears for a while from our En­glish an­nals.

Last­ly, the Danes turned against Mer­cia and Wes­sex. In 871, a host un­der Bagsecg and Half­dene came to Read­ing, which be­longed to the lat­ter ter­ri­to­ry, when the lo­cal eal­dor­man en­gaged them and won a slight vic­to­ry. Short­ly af­ter­ward the West Sax­on king Æthelred, with his broth­er Æl­fred, came up, and en­gaged them a sec­ond time with worse suc­cess. Three oth­er bloody bat­tles fol­lowed, in all of which the Danes were beat­en with heavy loss; but the West Sax­ons al­so suf­fered severe­ly. For three years the host moved up and down through Mer­cia and Wes­sex; and the Mer­cians stood by, aid­ing nei­ther side, but “mak­ing peace with the host” from time to time. At last, how­ev­er, in 874, the hea­thens fi­nal­ly an­nexed the greater part of Mer­cia it­self. “The host fared from Lind­sey to Rep­ton, and there sat for the win­ter, and drove King Burhred over sea, two and twen­ty years af­ter he came to the king­dom; and they sub­dued all the land. And Burhred went to Rome, and there set­tled; and his body lies in St. Mary's Church, in the school of the En­glish kin. And in the same year they gave the king­dom of Mer­cia in ward to Ce­ol­wulf, an un­wise thegn; and he swore oaths to them, and gave hostages that it should be ready for them on what­so day they willed; and that he would be ready with his own body, and with all who would fol­low him, for the be­hoof of the host.” Thus Mer­cia, too, fades for a short while out of our his­to­ry, and Wes­sex alone of all the En­glish king­doms re­mains.

This brief but in­evitable record of wars and bat­tles is nec­es­sar­ily te­dious, yet it can­not be omit­ted with­out slur­ring over some high­ly im­por­tant and in­ter­est­ing facts. It is im­pos­si­ble not to be struck with the ex­traor­di­nar­ily rapid way in which a body of fierce hea­then in­vaders over­ran two great Chris­tian and com­par­ative­ly civilised states. We can­not but con­trast the in­ert­ness of Northum­bria and the luke­warm­ness of Mer­cia with the stub­born re­sis­tance fi­nal­ly made by Æl­fred in Wes­sex. The con­trast may be part­ly due, it is true, to the ab­sence of na­tive Northum­bri­an and Mer­cian ac­counts. We might, per­haps, find, had we fuller de­tails, that the men of Ber­ni­cia and Deira made a hard­er fight for their lands and their church­es than the West Sax­on an­nals would lead us to sup­pose. Still, af­ter mak­ing all al­lowance for the mea­greness of our au­thor­ities, there re­mains the in­du­bitable fact that a hea­then king­dom was es­tab­lished in the pure En­glish land of Bæ­da and Cuth­ber­ht, while the Chris­tian faith and the Sax­on na­tion­al­ity held their own for ev­er in penin­su­lar and half-​Celtic Wes­sex.

The dif­fer­ence is doubt­less due in part to mere­ly sur­face caus­es. East An­glia had long lost her au­ton­omy, and, while some­times ruled by Mer­cia, was some­times bro­ken up un­der sev­er­al eal­dor­men. For her and for Northum­bria the con­quest was but a change from a West Sax­on to a Dan­ish mas­ter. The house of Ecg­ber­ht had bro­ken down the na­tion­al and trib­al or­gan­isa­tion, and was in­ca­pable of sub­sti­tut­ing a cen­tral or­gan­isa­tion in its place. With no roads and no com­mu­ni­ca­tions such a cen­tral­is­ing scheme is re­al­ly im­prac­ti­ca­ble. The dis­in­te­grat­ed En­glish king­doms made lit­tle show of fight­ing for their Sax­on over-​lord. They could ac­cept a Dane for mas­ter al­most as read­ily as they could ac­cept a Sax­on.

But be­sides these sur­face caus­es, there was a deep­er and more fun­da­men­tal cause un­der­ly­ing the dif­fer­ence. The Scan­di­na­vians were near­er to the pure En­glish in blood and speech than they were to the Sax­ons. In their old home the two races had lived close to­geth­er,–in Sleswick, Jut­land, and Sca­nia,–while the Sax­ons had dwelt fur­ther south, near the Frank­ish bor­der, by the low­lands of the Elbe. To the En­glish of Northum­bria, the Sax­ons of Wes­sex were al­most for­eign­ers. Even at the present day, when the ex­is­tence of a recog­nised lit­er­ary di­alect has done so much to oblit­er­ate provin­cial va­ri­eties of speech in Eng­land, a Dorset­shire peas­ant, speak­ing in a slight­ly al­tered form the clas­si­cal West Sax­on of Æl­fred, has great dif­fi­cul­ty in un­der­stand­ing a York­shire peas­ant, speak­ing in a slight­ly al­tered form the clas­si­cal Northum­bri­an of Bæ­da. But in the ninth cen­tu­ry the dif­fer­ences be­tween the two di­alects were prob­ably far greater. On the oth­er hand, though Dan­ish and An­glian have wide­ly sep­arat­ed at the present day, and were wide­ly dis­tinct even in the days of Cnut, it is prob­able that at this ear­li­er pe­ri­od they were still, to some ex­tent, mu­tu­al­ly com­pre­hen­si­ble. Thus, the hea­then Scan­di­na­vian may have seemed to the Northum­bri­an and the East An­glian al­most like a fel­low-​coun­try­man, while the West Sax­on seemed in part like an en­emy and an in­trud­er. At any rate, the sim­ilar­ity of blood and lan­guage en­abled the two races rapid­ly to co­alesce; and when the cloud ris­es again from the North half a cen­tu­ry lat­er, the dis­tinc­tion of Dane and En­glish­man has al­most ceased in the con­quered provinces. It is wor­thy of note in this con­nec­tion that the part of Mer­cia af­ter­wards giv­en over by Æl­fred to Guthrum, was the An­glian half, while the part re­tained by Wes­sex was most­ly the Sax­on half–the land con­quered by Pen­da from the West Sax­ons two hun­dred years be­fore.

Nor must we sup­pose that this first wave of Scan­di­na­vian con­quest in any way swamped or de­stroyed the un­der­ly­ing En­glish pop­ula­tion of the North. The con­querors came mere­ly as a “host,” or army of oc­cu­pa­tion, not as a body of ru­ral colonists. They left the con­quered En­glish in pos­ses­sion of their homes, though they seized up­on the manors for them­selves, and kept the high­er dig­ni­ties of the van­quished provinces in their own hands. Be­ing rapid­ly con­vert­ed to Chris­tian­ity, they amal­ga­mat­ed read­ily with the na­tive peo­ple. Few wom­en came over with them, and in­ter­mar­riage with the En­glish soon broke down the wall of sep­ara­tion. The arch­bish­opric of York con­tin­ued its suc­ces­sion un­in­ter­rupt­ed­ly through­out the Dan­ish oc­cu­pa­tion. The Bish­ops of Elmham lived through the stormy pe­ri­od; those of Le­ices­ter trans­ferred their see to Dorch­ester-​on-​the-​Thames; those of Lich­field ap­par­ent­ly kept up an un­bro­ken se­ries. We may gath­er that be­neath the sur­face the North re­mained just as steadi­ly En­glish un­der the Dan­ish princes as the whole coun­try af­ter­wards re­mained steadi­ly En­glish un­der the Nor­man kings.

There was, how­ev­er, one sec­tion of the true En­glish race which kept it­self large­ly free from the Scan­di­na­vian host. North of the Tyne the Danes ap­par­ent­ly spread but sparse­ly; En­glish eal­dor­men con­tin­ued to rule at Bam­bor­ough over the land be­tween Forth and Tyne. Hence Northum­ber­land and the Loth­ians re­mained more pure­ly En­glish than any oth­er part of Britain. The peo­ple of the South are Sax­ons: the peo­ple of the West are half Celts; the peo­ple of the North and the Mid­lands are large­ly in­ter­mixed with Danes; but the peo­ple of the Scot­tish low­lands, from Forth to Tweed, are al­most pure­ly En­glish; and the di­alect which we al­ways de­scribe as Scotch is the strongest, the ters­est, and the most na­tive mod­ern form of the orig­inal An­glo-​Sax­on tongue. If we wish to find the truest ex­ist­ing rep­re­sen­ta­tive of the gen­uine pure-​blood­ed En­glish race, we must look for him, not in Mer­cia or in Wes­sex, but amongst the stur­dy and hard-​head­ed farm­ers of Tweed­side and Lam­mer­moor.