Battle of Brunanburh

Battle of Brunanburh
Date 937
Location Uncertain; leading candidates near Bromborough, Merseyside; Brunswark, Annandale; or Tinsley, Yorkshire
Result English victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of England Kingdom of Dublin
Kingdom of Alba
Kingdom of Strathclyde
Commanders and leaders
Athelstan of England
Edmund I of England
Olaf III Guthfrithson
Constantine II of Scotland
Owen I of Strathclyde

The Battle of Brunanburh was an English victory in 937 by the army of Æthelstan, King of England, and his brother Edmund over the combined armies of Olaf III Guthfrithson, the Norse-Gael King of Dublin, Constantine II, King of Scots, and Owen I, King of Strathclyde. Though relatively little known today, it was called "the greatest single battle in Anglo-Saxon history before Hastings."[1] Michael Livingston claimed that Brunanburh marks "the moment when Englishness came of age."[2]

Mention of the battle is made in dozens of sources, in Old English, Latin, Irish, Welsh, Anglo-Norman, and Middle English, and there are many later accounts or responses to the battle, including those by Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Jorge Luis Borges.[3] A contemporary record of the battle is found in the Old English poem Battle of Brunanburh, preserved in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.

Contents

Sources

Livingston identified at least fifty-three medieval sources containing references to the battle, including important accounts from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the writings of Anglo-Norman historian William of Malmesbury, the Annals of Clonmacnoise, and Snorri Sturluson's Egils saga, whose antihero, mercenary berserker and skald Egill Skallagrimsson, served as a trusted warrior for Athelstan.[4]

Background

After Athelstan's defeat of the Vikings at York in 927, his campaigns against the Welsh kings (who were forced to submit to him at Hereford in 927), and his subsequent successful invasion of Alba in 934, the power of Wessex was clearly on the ascent and forming a considerable threat to neighboring kingdoms.[5] Though they had all been enemies in living memory, the threat of Athelstan was enough to bring together an alliance between the king of Dublin Olaf Guthfrithsson, the Scottish King Constantine II, and Owen of Strathclyde. Livingston points out that to come together "they had agreed to set aside whatever political, cultural, historical, and even religious differences they might have had in order to achieve one common purpose: to destroy Athelstan."[6]

After defeating the rival Norse king Amlaíb Cenncairech at Limerick in August 937, Olaf Guthfrithsson crossed the Irish Sea with his army to join the forces of Constantine and Owen, suggesting that the Battle of Brunanburh probably occurred in early October of that year.[7]

Livingston theorizes that the invading allied armies entered England in two waves: Constantine and Owen came from the north, possibly engaging in some early skirmishes with forces loyal to Athelstan as they followed the Roman road across the Lancashire Plains between Carlisle and Manchester, with Olaf's forces joining with him en route.[8] It is possible, Livingston speculates, that the eventual battlesite at Brunanburh was then chosen in an agreement with Athelstan: "there would be one fight, and to the victor went England."[9]

Battle

The medieval records of the battle are too elusive to trace the course of the battle with any surety, but the sources consistently describe it as a massive and bloody engagement even within the context of warfare in the Middle Ages.

The famous poem about the battle in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the deaths of five kings and seven earls among Athelstan's enemies, along with (or among them) Constantine's son:

Five lay still
on that battlefield — young kings
by swords put to sleep — and seven also
of Anlaf’s earls, countless of the army,
of sailors and Scotsmen. There was put to flight
the Northmen’s chief, driven by need
to the ship’s prow with a little band.
He shoved the ship to sea. The king disappeared
on the dark flood. His own life he saved.
So there also the old one came in flight
to his home in the north; Constantine,
that hoary-haired warrior, had no cause to exult
at the meeting of swords: he was shorn of his kin,
deprived of his friends on the field,
bereft in the fray, and his son behind
on the place of slaughter, with wounds ground to pieces,
too young in battle.[10]

Æthelweard's Chronicle notes that the battle was still called "the great war" by people in his day.[11] Henry of Huntingdon describes the aftermath of carrion:

Then the dark raven with horned beak,
and the livid toad, the eagle and kite,
the hound and wolf in mottled hue,
were long refreshed by these delicacies.
In this land no greater war was ever waged,
nor did such a slaughter ever surpass that one.[12]

The Annals of Ulster describes the battle similarly:

A huge war, lamentable and horrible, was cruelly waged between the Saxons and Norsemen. Many thousands of Norsemen beyond number died although King Anlaf escaped with a few men. While a great number of the Saxons also fell on the other side, Athelstan, king of the Saxons, was enriched by the great victory.[13]

The largest list of those killed at the battle comes from the Annals of Clonmacnoise and names several kings and princes.[14]

Battle site

The location of the battle appears in various forms in the sources: Brunanburh (in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle or the chronicle of John of Worcester, or in accounts derived from them), Brunandune (Aethelweard), Brunnanwerc or Bruneford or Weondune (Symeon of Durham and accounts derived from him), Brunefeld or Bruneford (William of Malmesbury and accounts derived from him), Duinbrunde (Scottish traditions), Brun (Welsh traditions), plaines of othlynn (Annals of Clonmacnoise), and Vinheithr (Egil's Saga), among others.[15]

The name of Bromborough, a settlement in the Wirral, may be derived from Old English Brunanburh (meaning 'Brun's fort'). While the location will likely never be known with 100% certainty, additional evidence has been claimed associating Brunanburh with Bromborough, taken from evidence of history, folklore studies, and literature.[16] According to Michael Livingston, the case for a location in the Wirral has strong support among current historians.[17] Additional onomastic arguments have been used to connect Dingesmere (a location associated with the battle in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) with Thingwall on Merseyside in order to strengthen the Brunanburh-Bromborough link.[18] Because the earliest sources in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle locate the battle as taking place "ymbe Brunanburh" ("around Brunanburh"), numerous locations on the Wirral near Bromborough have been put forward as the actual site of the ballte, including a golf course in Bebington, Wirral.[19]

Though many scholars today appear to have accepted a "near Bromborough" location, dozens of sites for the battle have been suggested in the past. Paul Hill has identified over thirty possibilities, some of which still defended by local interest groups (see discussion of Shelfield Hill, below) or minority critics.[20]

These alternatives include:

These are not the only sites suggested, but they are those the most commonly put forth.

Aftermath

The battle's importance lies in Athelstan defeating the combined Norse-Celtic force facing him confirmed England as a fully unified kingdom. However, he was militarily weakened and the battle effectively forced all the kingdoms of the British Isles to consolidate in the positions they occupy today.[25]

The Battle of Brunanburh still has a great deal of influence in Malmesbury, Wiltshire, 200 miles (320 km) south of any probable site. The townsfolk of Malmesbury fought for King Athelstan, and he granted them five hides (600 acres (2.4 km2)) of land[26] and gave them all freemen status. This status and the organisation formed then exists today, as the Warden and Freemen of Malmesbury, and Athelstan is remembered in their ceremonies.[27] When Athelstan died, his body was transported from Gloucester to Malmesbury for burial.

The Old English poem

Footnotes

  1. ^ Alfred Smyth, Scandinavian York and Dublin (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1987), 2.62.
  2. ^ Michael Livingston, 'The Roads to Brunanburh', in The Battle of Brunanburh: A Casebook, ed. Livingston (University of Exeter Press, 2011), p. 1.
  3. ^ For discussion of these and many other retellings, see Joanne Parker, 'Brunanburh and the Victorian Imagination', in The Battle of Brunanburh: A Casebook, ed. Livingston (2011), pp. 385-407.
  4. ^ Livingston (2011), 'Preface', pp. xi-xii.
  5. ^ BBC Battle of Brunanburh
  6. ^ Livingston (2011), p. 11.
  7. ^ Livingston (2011), p. 14.
  8. ^ Livingston (2011), pp. 15-16
  9. ^ Livingston (2011), p. 18.
  10. ^ 'The Battle of Brunanburh (Version A)', trans. Livingston, in Livingston (2011), pp. 41, 43
  11. ^ Æthelweard, Chronicle, trans. Scott Thompson Smith, quoted in Livingston (2011), p. 49.
  12. ^ Henry of Huntingdon, History of the English, trans. Scott Thompson Smith, quoted in Livingston (2011), p. 63
  13. ^ Annals of Ulster, trans. Scott Thompson Smith, in The Battle of Brunanburh: A Casebook, ed. Livingston (2011), p. 145.
  14. ^ Livingston (2011), pp. 20-23.
  15. ^ A summary of these spellings is provided in Paul Cavill, 'The Place-Name Debate', in Livingston (2011), pp. 329-30
  16. ^ See, for instance, Stephen Harding, 'Wirral: Folklore and Locations', and Richard Coates, 'The Sociolinguistic Context for Brunanburh', in Livingston (2011), pp. 351-64 and 365-84
  17. ^ Livingston (2011), p. 19.
  18. ^ Cavill, in Livingston (2011), pp. 327-49
  19. ^ Birthplace of Englishness 'found'. BBC News Online (URL accessed 27 August 2006).
  20. ^ Paul Hill, The Age of Athelstan: Britain's Forgotten History (Stroud: Tempus, 2004), pp. 141-42.
  21. ^ Michael Wood, In Search of England (London: Viking, 1999) pp. 203-21.
  22. ^ Anglo-Saxon warfare
  23. ^ Lawrence Snell. The Suppression of the Religious Foundations of Devon and Cornwall (1966).
  24. ^ http://www.lhsociety.org/LivesayName.html Livesay Historical Society
  25. ^ Livingston (2011), pp. 24-26
  26. ^ Paul Hill, The Age of Athelstan, p. 33.
  27. ^ http://www.athelstanmuseum.org.uk/warden_freemen.html

Sources

Primary sources

Secondary sources

Further reading

External links