Go to index. The Ruin and Conquest of Britain 400 A.D. - 600 A.D. As told by the Primary Sources Forward In 400 A.D. all of Britain (the part of the Island south of Hadrian's wall) had been part of the Roman Empire for over three centuries, and all free-born Britons had been Roman citizens for almost two centuries (since 212). Christianity was well established and the cities remained populated, if somewhat less prosperous than in the past. In the preceding half century there had been a number of worrying raids by barbarians: the Picts from north of the Antonine wall, the Scots from Ireland and the Saxons (a generic term used in the Roman world for the north-western Germanic tribes including Angles, Jutes and Fresians as well as Saxons). The Roman general Magnus Maximus had largely countered the Pictish threat by enlisting the British tribes between the Hadrianic and Antonine walls as federate allies of the Empire. However, he subsequently withdrew most of the Roman troops in his failed bid to usurp the Imperium from 383 to 388. The Empire was forced to despatch an expedition to restore order and peace to the diocese, lead by the general Stilcho. Part of his rescue may have included arranging the migration of one of the British tribes north of Hadrian's wall to Wales, to expel the Scots who had captured large parts of Western Britain at that time. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.401 Nennius The Kindred of Eight came from Ireland and lived there with all their race in Britain until today (c.830). Istoreth son of Istorinus held Dal Riada (in Western Scotland) with his people. Bolg with his people held the Isle of Man, and other islands about. The sons of Liathan prevailed in the country of the Demetians (Dyfed), and in other countries ... until they were expelled by Cunedda, and by his sons .... Cunedda, with his sons, to the number of eight, had come from the north, from the country called Manaw Gododdin (around the Firth of Forth), 146 years before Maelgwyn reigned, and expelled the Scots from these countries (Gwynedd), with immense slaughter, so that they never returned to inhabit them. ... Welsh Genealogies This is the boundary of the sons of Cunedda: from the river Dee up to the river Teifi; and they hold many regions in western Britain. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.402 Claudian To confront the Visigoths in Italy, the legions, such love they have for their general Stilcho, hastened together from every side. First hasten up the neighbouring troops ...; next the legion deployed in furthest Britain, that kept the fierce Scots in check, whose men had seen the strange devices tattooed on the bodies of the dying Picts. ... The Visigoths were soundly defeated. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 406 Stilcho was finally forced to withdraw the troops from the frontier in Gaul in order to guard Italy against attack. Zosimus The Vandals, in conjunction with the Suevi and Alani crossed the Alps and plundered the provinces beyond them in Gaul. They wrought such slaughter and became so formidable even to the armies in Britain that they compelled them, under fear of attack, to elect usurpers, namely Marcus, Gratian and then Constantine. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 407 Procopius The island of Britain revolted from the Romans, and the soldiers there chose as their leader Constantius, a man of no mean station. And he straightaway gathered a fleet of ships and a formidable army and invaded both Spain and Gaul with a great force, thinking to control these countries. Zosimus The Romans under Constantine were victorious in sharp conflict with the barbarians and killed most of them, but by not pursuing those who fled (in which case they would have annihilated them), they allowed them to recover from their defeat, muster a multitude of barbarians, and make ready for battle again. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 408 Zosimus For these reasons, then, Constantine established garrisons here in the Alps to prevent the barbarians free passage into Gaul; he also made the Rhine, which had been neglected since the time of the emperor Julian (361-363), completely secure. After these arrangements in Gaul, he bestowed the Caesar's robe on his eldest son, Constans, and sent him to Spain. He was anxious to gain control of all of the provinces here in order both to extend his own authority and to destroy the power of the relatives of Honorius (the legitimate emperor in Italy) for fear they might muster an army from the soldiers there and attack him over the Pyrenees. ... Constans therefore crossed into Spain with the Magister (commander) Gerontius ... and captured Spain. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 409 Zosimus After these successes in Spain, Constans returned to his father Constantine .... He left behind the Magister Gerontius with the Gallic troops to guard the pass from Gaul into Spain. But the Spanish troops asked that they be entrusted with this duty as usual and also that the safety of their country not be given to strangers to maintain. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 410 Zosimus Constans was sent back to Spain again by his father with Justus as Magister. Angered at this, Gerontius won over his soldiers and incited the barbarians in Gaul to revolt against Constantine. The latter was not able to oppose them because most of his army was in Spain, which allowed the barbarians over the Rhine to make unrestricted incursions. They reduced the inhabitants of Britain and some parts of Gaul to such straits that they revolted from the Roman Empire, no longer submitted to Roman law, but reverted to their native customs. The Britons, therefore, armed themselves and ran many risks to ensure their own safety and free their cities from the attacking barbarians. The whole of Armorica, and other Gallic provinces, in imitation of the Britons, freed themselves in the same way, by expelling the Roman magistrates and establishing the government they wanted. The revolt of the provinces of Britain and Gaul occurred during Constantine's tyranny because the barbarians took advantage of his careless government. ... When Alaric (the leader of the Visigoths) neither gained peace on the terms he proposed nor received any hostages, he again attacked Rome ... and finally captured it. ... Honorius sent letters to the cities of Britain, urging them to fend for themselves. Gildas The Romans gave the frightened people of Britain stirring advice, and left them manuals on weapons training.... Then they said goodbye, meaning never to return. Prosper of Aquitaine for 410 The multitude of the enemy so prevailed that the strength of the Romans was extremely diminished. Britain was devastated by an incursion of the Saxons. The Vandals and Alans wasted parts of Gaul; Constantine the usurper kept a hold on the remainder. ... Finally, the very Rome, the head of the world, was horribly exposed to the depredation of the Goths. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 411 Procopius Alaric died of disease, and the army of the Visigoths ... marched into Gaul, and Constantine, defeated in battle by Honorius, died with his sons. However the Romans never succeeded in recovering Britain, but it remained from that time on under despots. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 411- c.425 Gildas As the Romans went back home, there emerged from the coracles that had carried them across the sea-valleys the foul hordes of Scots and Picts. ... They were to some extent different in their customs, but they were in perfect accord in their greed for bloodshed: and they were readier to cover their villainous faces with hair than their private parts and neighbouring regions with clothes. They were more confident than usual now that they had learnt of the departure of the Romans and the denial of any prospect of their return. So they seized the whole north of the island from its inhabitants, right up to the wall (presumably Hadrian's). A force was stationed on the high towers to oppose them, but it was too lazy to fight, and too unwieldy to flee; the men were foolish and frightened, and they sat about day and night, rotting away in their folly. Meanwhile there was no respite from the barbed spears flung by their naked opponents, which tore our wretched countrymen from the walls and dashed them to the ground. Premature death was in fact an advantage to those who were thus snatched away; for their quick end saved them from the miserable fate that awaited their brothers and children. I need say no more. Our citizens abandoned the towns and the high wall. Once again they had to flee; once again they were scattered, more irretrievably than usual; once again there were enemy assaults and massacres more cruel. The pitiable citizens were torn apart by their foe like lambs by the butcher; their life became like that of the beasts of the field. For they resorted to looting each other, there being only a tiny amount of food to give brief sustenance to the wretched people; and the disasters from abroad were increased by internal disorders, for as a result of constant devastations of this kind the whole region came to lack the staff of food, apart from such comfort as the art of the huntsman could procure them. ASC for 418 The Romans (read Romano-Britons) collected all the hoards of gold that were in Britain; and some they hid in the earth, so that no man afterwards may find them, and some they carried away with them into Gaul. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 418 The Visigoths were allowed to settle as federates of the Empire in Aquitaine (South-West Gaul). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 425 Aetius became the Magister Militum (military commander) in Gaul. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.425- Gildas So the miserable remnants sent off a letter again, this time to the Roman commander Agitius, in the following terms: `To Agitius, thrice consul: the groans of the British.' Further on came this complaint: `The barbarians push us back to the sea, the sea pushes us back to the barbarians; between these two we are either drowned or slaughtered.' But they got no help in return. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.429 Gildas Meanwhile, as the British feebly wandered, a dreadful and notorious famine gripped them, forcing many of them to give in without delay to their plunderers, merely to get a scrap of food to revive them. Not so others: they kept fighting back, basing themselves on the mountains, caves, heaths and thorny thickets. Their enemies had been plundering the land for many years; now for the first time they inflicted a massacre on them, trusting not in man but in God. The enemy retreated from the people. Prosper of Aquitaine for 429 Agricola, a Pelagian, the son of the Pelagian bishop Severianus, corrupted the British churches by the insinuation of his doctrine. But ... Pope Celestine sent Germanus, bishop of Auxerre, as his representative, and having rejected the heretics, directed the British to the catholic faith. Constantius About this time a deputation from Britain came to tell the bishops of Gaul that the heresy of Pelagius had taken hold of the people over a great part of the country and help ought to be brought to the Catholic faith as soon as possible. A large number of bishops gathered in synod to consider the matter and all turned in help to ... Germanus and Lupus. ... And it was not long before these apostolic priests had filled all Britain ... with their fame, their preaching and their miracles; and, since it was a daily occurrence for them to be hemmed in by crowds, the word of God was preached, not only in the churches, but at the cross-roads, in the fields and in the lanes. Everywhere faithful Catholics were strengthened in their faith and the lapsed learnt the way back to the truth. When this damnable heresy had been thus stamped out ... the bishops visited the shrine of the blessed martyr Alban, to give thanks to God through him. As they were returning ... an accident ... caused Germanus to fall and injure his foot. The Bishop was detained by his injury in one place for a considerable period, in the course of which a fire accidentally broke out close to where he was staying. It had burnt several houses, which in those parts are roofed with reeds, and was being carried by the wind to the one in which he was himself lying. ... Shrinking from the house in which he was a guest, the flames leaped over it, and, although they raged on either side of it, there glittered unharmed amid the furnaces a tabernacle intact, preserved by the occupant within. Meanwhile the Saxons and Picts had joined forces to make war upon the Britons. The latter had been compelled to withdraw their forces within their camp and, judging their forces to be totally unequal to the contest, asked the help of holy prelates. The latter sent back a promise to come, and hastened to follow it. Their coming brought such a sense of security that you might have thought that a great army had arrived. ... great numbers of this pious army sought the grace of baptism. ... The soldiers paraded still wet from baptism, faith was fervid, the aid of weapons was little thought of, and all looked for help from heaven. Meanwhile the enemy had learnt of the practices and appearance of the camp. They promised themselves an easy victory over practically disarmed troops and pressed on in haste. But their approach was discovered by scouts, and ... the army ... began to take up their weapons and prepare for battle and Germanus announced that he would be their general. He chose some light-armed troops and made a tour of the outworks. In the direction from which the enemy were expected he saw a valley enclosed by steep mountains. Here he stationed an army on a new model, under his own command. By now the savage host of the enemy was close at hand and Germanus rapidly circulated an order that all should repeat in unison the call he would give as a battle-cry. Then, while the enemy were still secure in their belief that their approach was unexpected, the bishops three times chanted the Alleluia. All, as one man, repeated it and the shout they raised rang through the air and echoed many times in the confined space between the mountains. The enemy were panic-stricken, thinking that the surrounding rocks and the very sky itself were falling on them. Such was their terror that no effort of their feet seemed enough to save them. They fled in every direction, throwing away their weapons and thankful if they could at least save their skins. Many threw themselves into a river which they had just crossed with ease, and were drowned in it. Thus the British army looked on at its revenge without striking a blow, idle spectators of the victory they achieved. The booty strewn everywhere was collected; the pious soldiery obtained the spoils of a victory from heaven. The bishops were elated at the rout of the enemy without bloodshed and a victory gained by faith and not by force. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 430s Gildas So the impudent Irish pirates returned home (though they were shortly to return) and for the first time the Picts in the far end of the island kept quiet from now on, thought they occasionally carried out devastating raids of plunder. So in this period of truce the desolate people found their cruel scars healing over. But a new and more virulent famine was quietly sprouting. In the respite from devastation, the island was so flooded with abundance of goods that no previous age had known the like of it. Alongside there grew luxury. ... And it was not only this vice that flourished, but all those that generally befall human nature Ñ and especially the one that is the downfall of every good condition nowadays too, the hatred of truth and its champions and the love of falsehood and its contrivers. ... Kings were anointed not in God's name, but as being crueller than the rest; before long they would be killed, with no inquiry into the truth, by those who anointed them, and others still crueller chosen to replace them. Any king who seemed gentler and rather more inclined to the truth was regarded as the downfall of Britain: everyone directed their hatred and their weapons at him, with no respect. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.432 Irish Annals for 432 Saint Patrick landed in Ireland. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.434 Irish Annals for 434 First Saxon raid on Ireland. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?440- Nennius Vortigern ruled in Britain, and during his rule he was under pressure, from fear of the Picts and Irish, and of a Roman invasion, and not least, from dread of Ambrosius. Gildas God, meanwhile, wished to purge his family, and cleanse it from such an infection of evil by the mere news of trouble. The feathered flight of a not unfamiliar rumour penetrated the pricked ears of the whole people - the imminent approach of the old enemy, bent on total destruction and (as was their wont) on settlement from one end of the country to the other. But they took no profit from the news. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?443 ASC for 443 The Britons sent overseas to Rome, and begged assistance against the Picts; but they had none, for the Romans were at war with Atilla, king of the Huns. Then sent they to the Angles, and requested the same from the nobles of that nation. Gallic Chronicle for c.441 or c.445 The British provinces, which up to this time have suffered various catastrophes and events, have been handed over across a wide area to the rule of the Saxons (read Angles). AC preface In the fourth year of Vortigern's reign, the English came to Britain. Bede In the year 582, Maurice, the fifty-fourth from Augustus, ascended the throne .... the fourteenth year of this emperor (595) was about the one hundred and fiftieth after the coming of the Angles into Britain (445) .... ASC for 560 Ella was the son of Iff, son of Usfrey, son of Wilgis, son of Westerfalcon, son of Seafowl, son of Sebbald ... Nennius Saebald begot Saefugl, begot Soemil (?read Westerfalcon?). He first separated Deira from Bernicia (read Britain). ... Wilgsil begot Wycsfrea begot Yffe, begot Aelle. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.445 A plague throughout the Roman world probably reached Britain. Gildas `The stubborn servant', says Solomon, `is not corrected with words'. For a deadly plague swooped brutally on the stupid people, and in a short period laid low so many people, with no sword, that the living could not bury the dead. But not even this taught them their lesson. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 446 Aetius became consul for the third time. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.449 Gildas And they convened a council to decide the best and soundest way to counter the brutal and repeated invasions and plunderings by the peoples I have mentioned. Then all the members of the council, together with the proud tyrant, were struck blind; the guard Ñ or rather the method of destruction Ñ they devised for our land was that the ferocious Saxons (name not to be spoken!), hated by man and God, should be let into the island likes wolves into the fold, to beat back the peoples of the North . Nothing more destructive, nothing more bitter has ever befallen the land. How utter the blindness of their minds! How desperate and crass the stupidity! Of their own free will they invited under the same roof a people whom they feared worse than death even in their absence. Bede The British consulted what was to be done and where they should seek assistance to prevent or repel the cruel and frequent incursions of the northern nations. They all agreed with their king Vortigern to call over to their aid, from the parts beyond the sea, the Saxon nation. ... The two first commanders are said to have been Hengest and Horsa. Nennius ... the Saxons were received by Vortigern 347 (read 447) years after the Passion (read Nativity) of Christ (i.e. 448 A.D.). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.450 ASC for 449 Martian and Valentinian assumed the Roman empire (actually in 450) and reigned seven winters. In their days Hengest and Horsa, invited by Vortigern, king of the Britons to his assistance, landed in Britain in a place that is called Ipwinesfleet; at first to help the Britons, but later they fought against them. Nennius After ... the end of the Roman Empire in Britain (?410), the British went in fear for 40 years. ... Then came three keels, driven into exile from Germany. In them were the brothers Horsa and Hengest .... Vortigern welcomed them, and handed over to them the island that in their language is called Thanet, in British Ruoihm. Gildas Then a pack of cubs burst forth from the lair of the barbarian lioness, coming in three keels, as they call warships in their language. The winds were favourable; favourable too the omens and auguries, which prophesied, according to a sure potent among them, that they would live for three hundred years in the land towards which their prows were directed, and that for half that time, a hundred and fifty years, they would repeatedly lay it waste. On the orders of the ill-fated tyrant, they first fixed their dreadful claws on the east side of the island, ostensibly to fight for our country, in fact to fight against it. Geographer of Ravenna The race of the Saxons, coming from Old Saxony, under their prince Anschis (presumably Hengest is meant) settled the island of Britain some time back (from c.700). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?452 Gildas The mother lioness learnt that her first contingent had prospered, and she sent a second and larger troop of satellite dogs. It arrived by ship and joined up with the false units. Hence the sprig of our iniquity, the root of our bitterness, the virulent plant that our merits so well deserved, sprouted in our soil with savage shoots and tendrils. The barbarians who had been admitted to the island asked to be given supplies, falsely representing themselves as soldiers ready to undergo extreme danger for their excellent hosts. The supplies were granted and for a long time `shut the dog's mouth'. Then they again complained that their monthly allowance was insufficient, purposely giving a false colour to individual incidents, and swore that they would break their agreement and plunder the whole island unless more lavish payments were heaped on them. Nennius. And it came to pass, after the English were encamped in the aforesaid island of Thanet, the aforesaid king promised to supply them with food and clothing without fail; and they agreed and promised to fight bravely against his enemies. But the barbarians multiplied their numbers, and the British could not feed them. When they demanded the promised food and clothing, the British said "We cannot give you food and clothing, for your numbers are grown. Go away, for we do not need your help." So they took counsel with their elders, to break the peace. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?453 Nennius But Hengest was an experienced man, shrewd and skilful. Sizing up the king's incompetence, and the military weakness of his people, he held a council, and said to the British king "We are a few; if you wish, we can send home and invite warriors from the fighting men of our country, that the number that fight for you and your people may be larger." The king ordered it be done, and envoys were sent across the sea, and came back with sixteen keels, with picked warriors in them. In one of the keels came Hengest's daughter, a beautiful and very handsome girl. When the keels had arrived, Hengest held a banquet for Vortigern, and his men and his interpreter, whose name was Ceretic, and told the girl to serve their wine and spirits. They all got exceedingly drunk. When they were drinking Satan entered Vortigern's heart and made him love the girl. Through his interpreter he asked her father for her hand, saying "Ask of me what you will, even to the half of my kingdom". Hengest took council with the elders of England, to decide what they should ask of the king for the girl, and they all agreed that they all agreed to ask for the country that in their language is called Canturguoralen, in ours Kent. So he granted it to them, although Gwyrangon was ruling in Kent, and he did not know that his kingdom was being handed over to the heathens, and that he himself given secretly to their power on his own. The Triads The second of the unfortunate counsels of the Island of Britain was to allow Horsa and Hengest and Rhonwen (his daughter) into this Island. AC preface From (?the beginning of?) Vortigern's reign to the strife between Ambrosius and Vitalinus are 12 years, that is Wallop, the battle of Wallop. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?454 So the girl was given in marriage to Vortigern, and he slept with her and loved her deeply. Hengest said to Vortigern "I am your father, and will be your adviser. Never ignore my advice, and you will never fear conquest by any man or any people, for my people are strong. I will invite my son and his cousin to fight against the Irish, for they are fine warriors. Give them land in the North about the Wall of Hadrian that is called Guaul." So he told him to invite them, and he invited Octha and Ebissa, with forty keels. They sailed around the Picts and wasted the Orkney Islands, and came and occupied many districts beyond the Frenissican Sea, as far as the borders of the Picts. In this way Hengest gradually brought over more and more keels until they left the islands whence they came uninhabited; and as his people grew in strength and numbers, they came to the aforesaid land of the Kentishmen. ASC for 449 The king Vortigern directed them to fight against the Picts; and they did so; and obtained victory wherever they went. They sent to the Angles, and desired them to send more assistance. They described the worthlessness of the Britons, and the richness of the lands. They sent them greater support. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 454 Aetius was murdered at the order of the Emperor Valentian. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?455 Muirchu St. Patrick's conflict with Coroticus, king of Ail (Al Clud, that is Strathclyde): ... News came to him of the quite iniquitous action of a certain British king called Coroticus, an ill-starred and cruel tyrant. He was a very great persecutor and murderer of Christians. Now Patrick tried to recall him to the way of the truth by means of a letter; but he scoffed at its salutary writings. Patrick's letter to Coroticus With my own hands I have written and composed these words to be ... sent to the soldiers of Coroticus. I do not say my fellow citizens nor to fellow-citizens of the holy Romans, but to fellow citizens of the demons, because of their evil actions. Like the enemy they live in death as allies of the heathen Irish and Picts and apostates. These blood thirsty men are bloody with the blood of innocent Christians, whom I have begotten for God in countless numbers and have confirmed in Christ! On the day after the neophytes, clothed in white, had received the chrism (its fragrance on their brows as they were butchered and put to the sword by those I have mentioned), I sent a letter with a holy priest whom I had taught from early childhood ... the letter requested that they should grant us some of the booty and the baptized prisoners that they had captured; they roared with laughter at them. ... What should I do, Lord? I am very much despised. See, Your sheep are torn to pieces around me and are carried off, and by the raiders I have mentioned, on the aggressive orders of Coroticus. Far from God's love is the man who delivers Christians into the hands of Irish and Picts.... ... the church mourns and weeps for its sons and daughters who so far have not been put to the sword, but have been carried off and transported to distant lands ...; and there freeborn men have been sold, Christians reduced to slavery --- and what is more as slaves of the utterly iniquitous, evil and apostate Picts. ... ... Perhaps they do not believe that we have received one baptism or have one God as Father. It is an affront to them that we are Irish. ... I earnestly beg that ... this letter ... may not be suppressed or hidden on any account by anyone, but rather be read out in front of all the people and in the presence of Coroticus himself. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?456 William of Malmesbury At Vortimer's suggestion, the truce was broken seven years after their arrival (taken to be 449). Nennius Vortigern's son Vortimer fought vigorously against Hengest and Horsa and their people. ... Vortimer fought four keen battles against them. The first battle was on the river Darenth (the Derwent in Kent). ASC for 456 or 457 Hengest ... fought with the Britons on the spot that is called Crayford (on the confluence of the Cray and the Derwent), and there slew four thousand men. The Britons then forsook Kent and in great consternation fled to London. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 457 Aegidius was appointed Magister Militum in Gaul. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.457 AC for 457 Saint Patrick went to the Lord. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?458 Nennius The second battle was at the ford called Episford in their language, Rhyddergafael in ours, and there fell Horsa and also Vortigern's son Catigern. ASC for 455 Hengest and Horsa fought with Vortigern (read Vortimer) the king on the spot that is called Aylesford (in Kent). His brother Horsa being there slain, Hengest afterwards took the kingdom .... Bede Horsa, being slain in battle by the Britons, was buried in the Eastern parts of Kent, where a monument bearing his name (more likely a Roman military monument bearing the word "COHORS") is still (in 730) in existence. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?461 Nennius The third battle was fought in the open country by the Inscribed Stone on the shore of the Gallic sea (probably Richborough in Kent). The barbarians were beaten and he was victorious. They fled to their keels and were drowned as they clambered aboard them like women. ASC for 461 or 465 Hengest ... fought with the Britons, near Wippedsfleet; and there slew twelve leaders, all Britons. On his side a thane was there slain, whose name was Wipped. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?462-5 Nennius Vortimer expelled them as far as the aforesaid Thanet, and there three times shut them up and besieged them, attacking, threatening and terrifying them, and drove them out for five years (?465-470?). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 464 Aegidius died. His son Syagrius became Rex Romanorum (King of the Romans) in North-West Gaul. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 467 The Roman Senate finally accepted Anthemius, the Eastern Empire's nominee, as the Western Emperor. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.468 Jordanes Now Eurich, king of the Visigoths, perceived the frequent change of Roman Emperors and strove to hold Gaul by his own right. The Emperor Anthemius heard of it and asked the Britons for aid. Their king Riothamus came with twelve thousand men into the state of the Bitturges (Bourges, in central Gaul) by way of the Ocean, and was received as he disembarked from his ships. Sidonius --- To his friend Riothamus (c.468) Here is a letter in my usual style, for I combine complaint with greeting, not with the express intention of making my pen respectful in its superscription but harsh in the letter itself, but because things are always happening about which it is obviously impossible for a man of my rank and cloth (Bishop of Clermont-Ferrond) to speak without incurring unpleasantness or to be silent without incurring guilt. However I am a direct witness of the conscientiousness which weighs on you so heavily, and which has always been of such delicacy as to make you blush for the wrongdoing of others. The bearer of this letter, who is humble and obscure, and so unassertive that he might even be taxed with harmless indolence, complains that his slaves have been enticed from him by underhand persuasion of certain Britons. I cannot say whether his complaint is just: but if you bring the opponents face to face and impartially unravel their contentions, I fancy that this poor fellow is likely to make good his plaint; that is, if amid a crowd of noisy, armed, and disorderly men who are emboldened at once by their courage, their numbers and their comradeship, there is any possibility for a solitary unarmed man, a humble rustic, a stranger of small means, to gain a fair and equitable hearing. Farewell. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.469 Sidonius --- To his friend Vincentius (c.469) I am distressed by the fall of Arvandus the Imperial prefect of Gaul. ... He was arrested and brought in bonds to Rome. ... Amongst other pleas ... the provincials ... were bringing against him an intercepted letter which Arvandus' secretary (who had been arrested) admitted to have written at his master's dictation. It appeared to be a message addressed to the king of the Visigoths, dissuading him from peace with the "Greek Emperor" Anthemius, insisting that the Britons stationed beyond the Loire should be attacked, and declaring that Gaul ought according to the law of nations to be divided up with the Burgundians, and a great deal more mad stuff in the same vein, fit to rouse a war-like king to fury and a peaceful one to shame. The opinion of the lawyers was that this letter was red-hot treason. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.470 Jordanes --- History of the Goths Eurich, king of the Visigoths, came against them with an innumerable army, and after a long fight he routed Riothamus, king of the Britons, before the Romans could join him. So when he had lost a great part of his army, he fled with all the men he could gather together, and came to the Burgundians, a neighbouring tribe then allied to the Romans. Gregory of Tours The Britons were driven from Bourges by the Goths, and many were slain at the village of Deols. Count Paul with the Romans (presumably those Riothamus was expecting) and the Franks made war on the Goths and took booty. Nennius But Vortimer soon after died. Before he died he told his followers to set his tomb by the coast, in the port from which they had departed, saying "I entrust it to you. Wherever else they (the English) may hold a British port or may have settled, they will not live again in this land." But they ignored his command and did not bury him where he had told them, for he is buried in Lincoln. Henry of Huntingdon ... when Leo was Emperor, who reigned seventeen years (457-474), Vortimer, the flower of the youth of Britain, fell sick and died. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.471 Nennius But the barbarians returned in force, for Vortigern was their friend, because of his wife, and none was resolute to drive them out. Irish Annals for 471 Second Saxon raid on Ireland (conceivably at Vortigern's direction). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 471 Sidonius --- To his dear Ecdicius (c.474) Now (in 474), if ever, you are wanted by my Arvernians (citizens of Clermont-Ferrond)... for manifold reasons. ... I make no mention of the congregation of learning assembled from all parts of the world for the benefit of your youthful years, and that at one time it was due to you personally that the leading families, in their efforts to throw off the scurf of Celtic speech, were initiated into oratorical style and now again into the measures of the Muses. What chiefly kindles the devotion of the whole community to you is that after first requiring them to become Latins, you next (in 471)prevented them from becoming barbarians. Never can the image slip from the hearts of the citizens who crowded, men and women of every age and rank, on our half-tottered walls to watch you cross the level space between us and the enemy. In mid-day, through the midmost of the foe, you rode with your band of scarcely eighteen horsemen across some thousands of Goths Ñ a deed that posterity will find it hard to believe. At the sound of your name, at the sight of you in person, a stupor overwhelmed those battle-scarred battalions. Their chiefs could not tell in bewilderment how numerous they were, how few you were. Their whole line was withdrawn headlong to the top of a sharp hill; they, who had been the besiegers, were unable with you in view to move into battle-order. You cut down some of their best men, whom rashness not laziness had put in the rear. With not one man lost in the important clash, you remained master of a quite exposed plain with fewer henchmen at your side than you usually have guests at your table. My vows can better conjure up than my words depict the crowd streaming to meet you on your casual way citywards, the salutes, the applause, the tears of joy. We beheld the most auspicious ovation of your mobbed return, the courts of your spacious house thronged, some welcomers kissing off your battle-dust, others removing the bridles slippery with foam and blood, others turning up and ranging the sweat-drenched saddles, undoing the cheek-pieces of the helmet you longed to take off, or unlacing your greaves (leggings). We saw folk counting the nicks on swords blunted with many deaths or measuring with trembling, pale fingers the holes broken in cuirasses by cut or thrust. ... Finally, I remark nothing of your services in raising from your private resources Ñ with very little aid from our magnates Ñ what amounted to a public force, with which you have held up the inroads of the barbarians and chastised their devastations. I remark nothing of surprise attacks wiping out whole squadrons with the loss of only two or three men. To the enemy these unforeseen onslaughts proved disastrous. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 472 Jordanes When Eurich beheld these changes (another civil war amongst the Romans and the death of Anthemius) he seized the city of Arverna, where the Roman general Ecdicius was at that time in command. He was a senator of most renown family and the son of Avitus, a recent Emperor who had usurped the reign for a few days. Ecdicius strove for a long time against the Visigoths, but he had not the power to prevail. So he left the country and (what was more important) the city of Arverna to the enemy and betook himself to safer regions. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.472 Nennius So it came to pass after the death of Vortimer, son of king Vortigern, and after the return of Hengest and his hosts, they instigated a treacherous plan to trick Vortigern and his army. They sent envoys to ask for peace and make a permanent treaty. Vortigern called a council of his elders to examine what they should do. Ultimately one opinion prevailed with all, that they should make peace. The envoys went back, and a conference was convened, where the two sides, British and English, should meet, unarmed, to confirm the treaty. But Hengest told his followers to hide their daggers under their feet in their shoes, saying "When I call out to you and say `Nimmeth oure saxas' (`draw your knives'), take your daggers from your shoes and fall upon them, and stand firm against them. But do not kill the king; keep him alive, for my daughter's sake, whom I wedded to them, for it is better for us that he be ransomed from us." So the conference assembled, and the English, friendly in words but wolfish in heart and deed, sat down, like allies, man beside man. Hengest cried out as he had said, and all three hundred Seniors of king Vortigern were murdered, and the king alone was taken and held prisoner. To save his life, he ceded several districts, namely Essex and Sussex. ... Then the king (Vortigern) invited his wizards to him, and asked them what was to be done. They said `Go to the farthest borders of your kingdom, and find a fortified stronghold to defend yourself, for the nation whom you have received into your kingdom has turned against you, and will seek to slay you treacherously, and will occupy all the countries you love, and all your people, after your death. Then the king came with his wizards to seek the stronghold, and encompassed many countries and many provinces, and did not find it, and at last they came to the country called Gwynedd; and when he was exploring the mountains of Eryi (Snowdon), he at length reached a place in one of the mountains that was suitable for building a stronghold. So his wizards said to him `Make a stronghold in this place, for it will be for ever safest against the barbarian peoples.' So he assembled his workmen, that is the masons, and assembled the timber and stones, and when he had assembled all the material, it disappeared in one night. Three times he ordered it to be assembled, and it was nowhere to be seen. So he summoned his wizards and interrogated them about the cause of the evil, and how it came about. They answered `Unless you find a child without a father, and he is killed, and the stronghold is sprinkled with his blood, it will never be built at all.' ... The boy answered `This mystery is revealed to me and I will make it plain to you. ... the people who have seized many people and countries in Britain ... will reach almost from sea to sea; but later our people will arise and will valiantly throw the English people across the sea. But you go forth from this fortress, for you cannot build it, and I will stay here.' Then the king asked the lad `What is your name?' He replied `I am called Ambrosius', that is, he was shown to be lord Emrys. The king asked `What family do you come from?' and he answered `My father is one of the consuls of the Roman people.' So the king gave him the fortress, with all of the kingdoms of the western part of Britain, and he went himself with his wizards to the northern part, and came to the region called `Gwynessi', and there he built a city that is called by his name, Caer Gwrtheyrn (that is, the fortress of Vortigern). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.473 ASC for 473 This year Hengest ... fought with the Britons and took immense booty. And the Britons fled from the English as if from fire. Gildas In just punishment for the crimes that had gone before, a fire heaped up and nurtured by the hands of the impious easterners spread from sea to sea. It devastated town and country round about, and, once it was alight, it did not die down until it had burned almost the whole surface of the island and was licking the western ocean with its fierce red tongue. All the major towns were laid low by the repeated battering of enemy rams; laid low too the inhabitants --- church leaders, priests and people alike, as the swords glinted all around and the flames crackled. It was a sad sight. In the middle of the squares the foundation stones of high walls and towers that had been torn from their lofty base, holy alters, fragments of corpses, covered with a purple crust of congealed blood, looked as though they had been mixed up in some dreadful wine-press. There was no burial to be had save in the bellies of beasts and birds. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.474 Gildas So a number of the wretched survivors were caught in the mountains and butchered wholesale. Others, their spirit broken by hunger, went to surrender to the enemy; they were fated to be slaves forever, if indeed they were not killed straight away, the highest boon. Others made for lands beyond the sea; beneath the swelling sails they loudly wailed, singing a psalm that took the place of a shanty: "You have given us like sheep for eating and scattered us among the heathen". Others held out, though not without fear, in their own land, trusting their lives with constant foreboding to the high hills, steep, menacing and fortified, to the densest forest and to the cliffs of the sea coast. Sidonius --- To his friend Namatius (c.480) ... the saxons give the impression that every member of the crew in their high-prowed ships is the captain, so accustomed are all of them both to issue and to obey orders, to teach and to learn piracy. ... As an enemy they are unsurpassed in brutality. They attack without warning, but when sighted, slip away. bar their way and destroy those they catch unaware; they are invariably succesful in pursuit and in escaping. Shipwreck, far from terrifying them, is an exercise in seamanship. ... They gladly endure the danger of a rock-bound coast if it enables them to achieve surpirse. Moreover, when ready to unfurl their sails for the voyage home from the continent to set sail for home, it is their custom on the evening of their departure to sacrifice one in ten of their prisoners by drowning or crucifixion, performing a rite which is all the more tragic for being due to superstition, and distributing to the collected band of doomed men the iniquity of death by the equity of lot. Such is the nature of their religion. William of Leon In those days, many holy men gave themselves up to martyrdom; others, in conformity to the Gospel, left the greater Britain which is now (1017) the Saxon's homeland, and sailed across to the lesser Britain (Brittany). Nennius When he was hated for his sin, because he received the English people, by all men of his own nation, mighty and humble, slave and free, monk and layman, poor and great, Vortigern wandered from place to place until at last his heart broke, and he died without honour. He had three sons, whose names are Vortimer, who fought against the barbarians, as I have described above; the second Catigern; the third Pascent, who ruled in two countries called Builth and Gwerthrynion (Powys?) after his father's death by permission of Ambrosius the great king among all the kings of the British nation. Welsh Genealogies (amalgamated) for Powys Selyf is son of Cynan son of Brochmail son of Cincen son of Maucant son of Pascent son (read brother) of Cattegirn son of Catel durnluc/Vortigern the thin. Nennius' Genealogy of Builth, and Welsh Genealogies (amalgamated) Tewdwr is king of the country of Builth, the son of Pascent, son of Gwyddgant, son of Moriud, son of Eldat, son of Elaerth, son of Paul, son of Meuric, son of Idnerth, son of Briacat, son of Pascent, son of Vortigern the Thin, son of Vitalis son of Vitalinus ... of Gloiu (Gloucester). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.475-c.518 Gildas After a time, when the cruel plunderers had gone home, God gave strength to the survivors. Wretched people fled to them from all directions, as eagerly as bees to a beehive when a storm threatens, and begged whole-heartedly ... that they should not be altogether destroyed. Their leader was Ambrosius Aurelianus, a gentleman who, perhaps alone of the Romans, had survived the shock of this notable storm. Certainly his parents, who had worn the purple, were slain in it. His descendants in our day have become greatly inferior to their grandfather's excellence. Under him our people regained their strength, and challenged the victors to battle. The Lord assented, and the battle went their way. From then on, victory went now to our countrymen, now to the enemy. Bede --- Chronica Majora In the reign of Zeno (474-491) ... The Britons, under the leadership of Ambrosius Aurelianus (a gentleman who, alone of the Romans, had survived the disaster of the Saxons in which his parents, who had worn the purple, had been killed), challenged the victors to battle and defeated them. Nennius At that time the English increased their numbers and grew in Britain. On Hengest's death his son Octha came down from the North of Britain to the kingdom of the Kentishmen. ... They sent envoys overseas to Germany to summon keels with vast numbers of fighting men. And afterwards they used to fight against the kings of one nation, sometimes victoriously advancing their frontiers, sometimes being defeated and expelled. Bede Those who came over were of the three most powerful nations of Germany: the Saxons, the Angles, and the Jutes. From the Jutes are descended the men of Kent, and the men of the Isle of Wight, and also those opposite the Isle of Wight, that part of the kingdom of Wessex that men still (in 730) call the nation of the Jutes. From the Old Saxons came the people of Essex and Sussex and Wessex. From Anglia, the land between the kingdoms of the Jutes and the Saxons, came the East Angles, the Middle Angles, the Mercians, and all of those north of the Humber. Anglia is said to have remained deserted from that day to this. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 476 Romulus Augustulus, the last Roman emperor in the West, was deposed by his Germanic Magister Militum, Odavacer. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.477 ASC for 477 Aelle came to Britain with his three sons (?read son) Cymen (?read father of?) Wlenking (?read father of?) Cissa, in three keels at the place called Cymen's-ore and there they slew many Britons and drove some to flight in the wood that is called Andred's-ley (North of Sussex). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?480 William of Malmesbury The kingdom of the East Angles arose before the West Saxons (c.500), though after the kingdom of Kent (c.453). Felix The descent of ... a certain man of distinguished Mercian stock .. was traced in set order through the most noble names of famous kings, back to Icel in whom it began in days of old. ASC Creoda was the son of Cynewald, Cynewald of Cnebba, Cnebba of Icel. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.485 ASC for 485 Aelle fought the Britons near Mercred's-Burnsted. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.486 Gregory of Tours In the fifth year of his (Clovis, king of the Franks) reign, Siagrius, king of the Romans, son of Aegidius, had his seat in Soissons .... And Clovis came against him with Ragnachar, his kinsman, because he used to possess the kingdom, and demanded that they make ready a battle-field. And Siagrius did not delay nor was he afraid to resist. And so they fought against eachother and Siagrius, seeing his army crushed, turned his back and fled swiftly to king Alaric (of the Visigoths) at Toulouse. ... Alaric surrended him in chains to Clovis' envoys. This left Britain as the only Diocese of the Western Roman Empire not under Germanic rule. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.488 ASC for 488 Oesc succeeded to the kingdom, and he was king of the men of Kent twenty-four winters. Bede Aethelbert was the son of Oermenric, whose father was Octha, whose father was Orric, surnamed Oesc, from whom the Kings of Kent are wont to be called Oescingas. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.491 ASC for 491 Aelle ... besieged Anderida (The Roman fort of Pevensey) and slew all that were therein; not one Briton there was left. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.495 ASC for 495 Cerdic ... came to Britain with five ships, at a place that is called Cerdic's-ore. And they fought with the Britons the same day. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?495- Nennius Then Arthur fought against them in those days, together with the kings of the Britons; but he was their leader in battle. The first battle was at the mouth of the river Glein (probably entering the Wash). The second, third, fourth and fifth were on another river, called the Douglas, which is in the country of Lindsey (about Lincoln). William of Malmesbury Ambrosius ... overpowered the presumptuous barbarians with the distinguished service of the warlike Arthur. This is the Arthur about whom the trifles of the Britons rave even now (1125), one certainly not to be dreamed of in false myths, but proclaimed in truthful histories --- indeed, who long sustained his faltering nation, and roused the broken spirits of his countrymen to war. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.498 Irish Annals Fergus the great, son of Erca of Dal Riada, went to Britain (Scotland). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.501 ASC for 501 This year Porta and his two sons, Bieda and Maegla, came into Britain with two ships at a place called Portsmouth and slew a young Briton, a very noble man. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?500s Nennius The sixth battle was on the river called Bassas (unlocatable). The seventh battle was in the Caledonian forest (north of Hadrian's wall), that is the Cat Coit Celidon. The eighth battle was in Guinnion fort (unlocatable), and in it Arthur carried the image of the holy Mary, the everlasting Virgin, on his shoulder and the heathen were put to flight on that day, and there was great slaughter upon them. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.506 John of Glastonbury The kingdom of Wessex began about the year of grace 495 .... In the eleventh year of Cerdic, ... Arthur ... began to reign over the Britons. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.508 ASC for 508 Cerdic ... slew a British king, whose name was Natanleod, and five thousand men with him. After this the land was named Natan-ley as far as Cerdic's-ford. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 510s Nennius The ninth battle was fought in Carleon. The tenth battle was fought on the bank of the river called Tryfrwyd (unlocatable). The eleventh battle was on the hill called Agned (unlocatable). Welsh Genealogies After a long campaign Cadwallon Longhand expelled the Scots from Mon (the Island of Anglesey). Maelgwyn was the son of Cadwallon Longhand, son of Enniaun Girt. Cuneglasus was the son of Eugein White-tooth, son of Enniaun Girt. Vortipor was the son of Aercol ... the Tribune (the first king of Dyfed with a British (non-Irish) name). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.518 Nennius The twelfth battle was on Badon hill and in it nine hundred and sixty men fell in one day, from a single charge of Arthur's, and he alone laid them low; and he was victorious in all his campaigns. AC for 518 Battle of Badon (Bath) in which Arthur carried the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ on his shoulders for three days and three nights and the Britons were the victors. Gildas From then on, victory went now to our countrymen, now to the enemy. This lasted right up until the year of the siege of Badon Hill, pretty well the last defeat of the villains and certainly not the least. That was the forty-fourth year, as I know, with one month having already passed; it was also the year of my birth. Bede The first ... of the English kings that had the sovereignty of all the southern provinces that are divided from the northern by the river Humber ... was Aelle, king of the South Saxons. ... Henry of Huntingdon About this time (514-19) died the king of the South Saxons,Aelle, whom all the Saxons acknowledged as their king. ASC preface About six years after they had landed (495), they overran the kingdom of the West Saxons ... And Cerdic held the kingdom for sixteen years (i.e. until c.517). ... Creoda was the son of Cerdic. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?520s Leland At the very south end of the church of South Cadbury stands Camalat, once a famous town or castle, upon a tor or hill wonderfully strengthened by nature. ... The people there can tell nothing but that they have heard it said that Arthur much resorted to Camalat. Popular legend of the Durotriges who inhabit the foot of the hill of Camalat, proclaims ... the name of Arthur, the one-time inhabitant of a fort, which was formerly situated, most magnificent, most strongly fortified, and on a most lofty eminence, where the hill rises up. Nennius ... in the country of Ergyng (Herefordshire) ... there is a tomb by a spring, called Licat Anir; the name of the man who is buried in the tomb is Anir. He was the son of the soldier Arthur and he killed him there and buried him. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.530 ASC for 530 Cerdic (read Creoda) and Cynric took the Isle of Wight and slew a few men (probably Jutes). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 530s Adam of Bremen for 531 The Saxon people ... leaving the Angles of Britain, urged on by the need and desire to find new homes, sailed to Hatheloe on the German coast, where king Theodoric of the Franks was at war with the Thuringian leader Hermenfred.... Theodoric sent envoys to these Saxons, whose leader was called Hadugat ... and promised them homes for settlement in return for victory. Procopius The island of Britain is (in the 530s) inhabited by three very populous nations, each having one king over it. And the names of these nations are the Angles, the Frisians and the Britons, the last being named from the island itself. And so great appears to be the populations of these nations that every year they emigrate thence in large companies and go to the land of the Franks. And the Franks allow them to settle in the part of their land which appears to be more deserted, and by this means they say that they are winning over the island. Thus it actually happened that not long ago the king of the Franks, in sending some of his intimates on an embassy to the Emperor Justinian in Byzantium, sent with them some of the Angles, thus seeking to establish his claim that this island was ruled by him. And he (Justinian) never ceased pouring out great gifts of money to all the barbarians ... as far as the inhabitants of the island of Britain. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.534 ASC for 534 Cerdic (read Creoda) died .... Cynric his son succeeded to the government and reigned for twenty six winters. ASC preface Cynric was the son of Creoda. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.539 AC for 539 The strife of Camlann in which Arthur and Medraut perished. The Triads The third of the unfortunate counsels of the Island of Britain was the three-fold dividing by Arthur of his men with Medrawd at Camlann. The Dream of Rhowanbay I am Iddawc the son of Mynyo, yet not by my name, but by my nickname am I best known ... it is Iddawc the Churn of Britain. I was one of the messengers between Arthur and Medrawd his nephew, at the battle of Camlan; and I was then a reckless youth, and through my desire for battle, I kindled strife between them, and stirred up wrath, when I was sent by Arthur the Emperor to reason with Medrawd, and to show him, that he was his foster-father and his uncle, and to seek for peace, lest the sons of the Kings of the Island of Britain; and of the nobles, should be slain. And whereas Arthur charged me with the fairest sayings he could think of, I uttered unto Medrawd the harshest I could devise. And therefore am I called Iddawc the Churn of Britain, for from this did the battle of Camlan ensue. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?545 Gildas In this letter I shall deplore rather than denounce; my style may be worthless, but by intentions are kindly. What I have to deplore with mournful complaint is a general loss of good, a heaping up of bad. But no-one should think that anything I say is said out of scorn for humanity or from a conviction that I am superior to all men. No, I sympathize with my country's difficulties, and rejoice in remedies to relieve them. I had decided to speak of the dangers run not by brave soldiers in the stress of war but by the lazy. And it was, I confess, with unmeasured grief at heart that I kept silent as the space of ten years or more passed by. Then, as now, my inexperience and my worthlessness restrained me from writing any warning, however modest. "What, you wretch?" I say to myself, "Have you, like some important and eminent teacher, been given the task of standing up ... against the rope of congenital sin that has been stretched so far and wide for so many years together? Look after what is committed to your trust, and keep silent. ... Britain has her governors, she has her watchmen. Why should you stutter out your ineptitudes?" Yes she has them, I answer: if not more than she needs, at least not fewer. But they are bowed under the pressure of their great burdens, and have no time to take breath. ... The final victory of our country ... has been granted to our times by the will of God. ... But the cities of our land are not populated now as they once were; right to the present they are deserted, in ruins and unkempt. Foreign wars may have stopped, but not civil ones. For the remembrance of so desperate a blow to the island and of such unlooked for recovery stuck in the mind of those who witnessed both wonders. That was why kings, public and private persons, priests and churchmen, kept to their own stations. But they died; and an age succeeded them that is ignorant of that storm and has experienced only the calm of the present. All the controls of truth and justice have been shaken and overthrown, leaving no trace, not even a memory among the orders I have mentioned: with the exception of a few, a very few. ... God ... lit for us the brilliant lamps of holy martyrs. Their graves and the places where they suffered would now have the greatest effect in instilling the blaze of divine charity in the minds of beholders, were it not that our citizens, thanks to their sins, have been deprived of many of them by the unhappy partition with the barbarians. I refer to St. Albans of Veralumium, Aaron and Julius, citizens of the city of the legion and the others of both sexes who, in different places, displayed the highest spirit in the battle-line of Christ. ... Britain has kings, but they are despots; she has judges, but they are wicked. They often plunder and terrorize Ñ the innocent; they defend and protect Ñ the guilty and the thieving; they have many wives Ñ whores and adulteresses; they constantly swear Ñ false oaths; they make vows Ñ but almost at once tell lies. they wage wars Ñ civil and unjust; they chase thieves energetically all over the country Ñ but love and reward the thieves that sit at their table; they distribute alms profusely --- but pile up an immense mountain of crime for all to see; they take their seats as judges --- but rarely seek out the rules of right judgement; they despise the harmless and the humble, but exalt to the stars, so far as they can, their military companions, bloody, proud and murderous men, adulterers and enemies of God .... They hang around the altars swearing oaths --- then shortly afterwards scorn them as though they were dirty stones. (1) This unspeakable sin is not unknown to the despot Constantinus, whelp of the filthy lioness of Dumnonia. This very year he bound himself by a dreadful oath not to work his wiles on our countrymen ...; then, in the bosom of the two mothers he should have respected --- the church and their mother in the flesh --- and in the habit of a holy abbot, he most cruelly tore at the tender sides and the vitals of two royal youths and their two guardians. ... so that the place of divine sacrifice was touched by the purple cloaks (as it were) of their drying blood. Nor did this deed follow upon any commendable actions. For many years before, overcome by the stench of frequent and successive adulteries, he put away his lawful wife against the ban of Christ . ... I know full well that you are still alive, and I charge you as though you were present: come, executioner of your own soul, why are you stupefied? ... (2) What are you doing, Aurelius Caninus, lion-whelp ... ? Are you not engulfed by the same slime as the man I just talked of, if not a more deadly one, made up of parricides, fornications, adulteries ...? Do you not hate peace in our country as though it were some noxious snake? In your unjust thirst for civil war and constant plunder, are you not shutting the gates of heavenly peace and consolation to your soul? ... Remember, I pray you, the empty outward show of your fathers and brothers, their youthful and untimely deaths. ... (3) Why are you senseless and stiff, like a leopard in your behaviour, and spotted with wickedness? Your head is already whitening, as you sit upon a throne that is full of guiles and stained from top to bottom with diverse murders and adluteries, bad son of a good king (Agricola): Vortiporius, despot of the Demetians (Dyfed). The end of your life is gradually drawing near; why can you not be satisfied by such violent urges of sin, which you suck down like vintage wine ...? Why, to crown your crimes, do you weigh down your wretched soul with a burden you cannot shrug off, the rape of a shameless daughter after the removal and honourable death of your own wife? ... (4) Why have you been rolling in the filth of your past wickedness ever since your youth, you bear, rider of many and driver of the chariot of the Bear's Stronghold (Probably Dun Arth in eastern Gwynedd), despiser of God and oppressor of his lot, Cuneglasus (son of Eugein White-tooth).... Why do you wage such a war against men and God? --- against men, that is our countrymen, with arms special to yourself, against God with infinite sins. Why, aside from countless other lapses, have you rejected your own wife and now ... do you cast your eyes, with all the reverence (or rather dullness) of your mind, on her villainous sister, although she has promised to God perpetually chaste widowhood ...? ... (5) What of you, dragon of the island, you who have removed many of these despots from their country and even their life? You are last on my list, but first in evil, mightier than almost all in both power and malice, more profuse in giving, more extravagant in sin, strong in arms but stronger still in what destroys a soul, Maglocunus (son of Cadwallon Longhand). ... The King of all kings has made you higher than almost all the generals of Britain, in your kingdom as in your physique: why do you not show yourself to him better than the others in character, instead of worse? Did you not, in the first years of your youth, use sword and spear and flame in the cruel dispatch of the king your uncle (possibly Eugein White-tooth) and nearly his bravest soldiers ...? Little did you heed the words of the prophet: "Men of blood and craft will not live out half their days". What retribution would you expect for this alone from the just judge, even if it had not been followed by the sort of thing that did follow: for again he said through his prophet: "Woe to you who plunder --- will not yourself be plundered? and to you who kill --- will you not be killed? And when you have ceased to plunder, then you will fall". After your dream of rule by force had gone according to plan, were you not seized by the desire to return to the right road? Perhaps remorseful in the knowledge of your sins, you first pondered a great deal at that time, day and night, on the godly like and the Rule of the monks; then, publishing it to the knowledge of the public breeze, you vowed to be a monk for ever, with (as you said) no thought of going back on your promise .... you came swiftly and in safety to the caves and consolation of the saints that you can trust so well. In fact, your conversion to good fruit brought as much joy and sweetness in heaven and earth then as your wicked return like some sick hound) to your disgusting vomit has brought grief and weeping now. ... Your excited ears hear not the praises of God from the sweet voices of the tuneful recruits of Christ, not the melodious music of the Church, but empty praises of yourself from the mouths of criminals who grate on the hearing like raving hucksters --- mouths stuffed with lies and liable to spatter bystanders with their foaming phlegm. Your mind is dulled by a heap of folly: yet it finds such stumbling blocks of evil no obstacle. Like a lively foal to whom everything unknown seems attractive, it is whirled by an uncontrollable fury over wide plains of crime, piling new sins on old. Your presumptive first marriage, after your vow to be a monk had come to nothing, was illegal --- but at least it was your own wife. You spurned it and sought another, not with some widow, but with the beloved wife of a living man, no stranger either, but your brother's son. ... to crown your sacrilege, you ventured on two murders, the killing of this man and of your wife, after you had enjoyed her for some little time. Next you married the woman with whose collusion and encouragement you lately entered on such masses of sin. The wedding was public, and, as the lying tongues of your parasites cry (but from their lips only, not from the depths of their hearts), legitimate: for she was a widow. But I call it most scandalous. Yet surely you have no lack of warnings: for you have had as your teacher the refined master of almost all Britain. ... Do not, I beseech you, reject the unspeakable mercy of God ... You may hear this with deaf ears, spurning the prophets, regarding me, worthless as I am, as of no importance; though it is with sincere piety of mind that I obey the pronouncement of the prophet. Here, or even earlier, I should have finished this tearful history, this complaint on the evils of the age, so that my lips would not andy longer have to speak of the actions of men. But ... I want to a summary of the threats uttered by the oracles of the prophets against these five mad and debauched horses from the retinue of Pharaoh .... These oracles will form a reliable and beautiful covering for the endeavour of my little work, to protect it from the rain showers of the hostile that will compete to beat upon it. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.547 ASC for 547 Ida began his reign in Bernicia, from whom first arose the royal kindred of Northumbria. Ida reigned twelve years. He built Bamburgh Castle, which was surrounded by a hedge and afterwards a wall. Nennius When they were defeated in all their campaigns, the English sought help from Germany, and continually and considerably increased their numbers, and they brought over their kings from Germany to rule over them in Britain. This continued down to the time of Ida who was the first king in Bernicia, that is, in Berneich. Ida, son of Eobba, held the countries in the north of Britain, that is, north of the Humber sea, and reigned twelve years, and joined Deira to Bernicia. At that time Outigern fought bravely against the English nation. Then Talhaern `father of the muse' was famed in poetry; and Aneirin and Taliesin and Bluchbard and Cian, who is called `wheat of song', together at the same time were renowned in British poetry (a few decades later). King Maelgwyn the Great was reigning among the British, in Gwynedd. For his great-great grandfather, Cunedda, with his sons, to the number of eight, had come from the north, from the country called Manaw Gododdin, 146 years before ... . -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.549 AC for 549 A great mortality in which died Maelgwyn king of Gwynedd. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.552 ASC for 552 Cynric fought with the Britons on the spot that is called Sarum, and put them to flight. In this year Aethelbert the son of Oermenric was born, who on the thirty second year of his reign received the rite of Baptism, the first of all the English kings in Britain. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.556 ASC for 556 Cynric and Ceawlin fought with the Britons at Beranbury. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?560 Laws of Hywel The privileges of Arvon: Here (in Arvon, in Gwynedd) Elidyr the courteous, a man from the North (Rheged), was slain, and after his death, the men of the North came here to avenge him. The chiefs, their leaders, were Clydno of Eydin (Edinburgh); Nedd the generous, son of Senyllt, Mordav the generous, son of Servari; and Rhydderch the generous (of Strathclyde), son of Tudwal Tudglyd; and they came to Arvon; and because Elidyr was slain at Aber Mewdyus in Arvon, they burned Arvon as a further revenge. And then Rhun, son of Maelgwyn, and the men of Gwynedd, assembled in arms and proceeded to the banks of the Gweryd (perhaps the river Wear near Durham) in the North ... And thereupon the men of Arvon advanced in the van, and were valorous there: and Taliesin sang "Behold! from the ardency of their blades, With Rhun the reddener of armies, The men of Arvon with their ruddy lances." And then on account of the length of time they remained in arms, their wives slept with their bond servants: and on that account Rhun granted them fourteen privileges. ... Welsh Genealogies Rhydderch hen was the son of Tutagual, son of Clinoch, son of Dumgual hen, son of Cinuit, son of Ceretic guletic. Clinog eitin was the son of Cinbelin, son of Dumgual hen. LLywarch hen was the son of Elidyr the courteous, son of Merchiaun, son of Gurgust, son of Keneu, son of Coel hen. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.560 ASC for 560 Ceawlin took the government of the West Saxons; and Ella, on the death of Ida, that of the Northumbrians (actually just the Deirans), each of whom reigned about thirty years. Nennius Adda, son of Ida, reigned eight years in Bernicia to 568. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.564 AC for 564 Saint Columba went to Britain (Scotland). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?565 Taliesin --- In Praise of Cynan Cynan, war's bulwark, poured on me prizes ... Descendant of Cadell, steadfast in battle, made war on the Wye, spears without number: He slew men of Gwent with a blood-stained blade. In Mon (Anglesey), mighty battle, superlative praise, crossing the Menai (Anglesey strait): quite easy, the rest! War at Crug Dyfed, Aergol on the run, never any before seen heading his heard. Brochfael's son, broad-realmed, bent on dominions, menaces Cornwall, casts doubt on its fate, brings on its distress till it pleads for peace. My patron, Cynan, first into battle, with bright flames far-spread setting soaring fires, was in Brychan's land (Brycheiniog): Hill-fort, a mole-hill! Pathetic princes, cringe before Cynan! -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?565 ASC for 560 or 565 This year Aethelbert came to the kingdom of the Kentishmen and held it fifty-three winters. Roger of Wendover In 527, Justinian governed the Roman empire thirty-eight years till 565. ... pagans came from Germany and occupied East Anglia, that is, the country of the East Angles; and some of them invaded Mercia, and waged war against the British. But since the leaders were many, their names have been lost. In this year was founded the kingdom of the East Saxons, which is now called Essex. It was first held, it is said, by Erkenwine. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.567 AC for 567 The voyage of Gildas to Ireland. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.568 ASC for 568 Ceawlin and his brother Cutha (probably short for Cuthwulf), fought with Aethelbert, and pushed him into Kent, and killed two ealdormen, Oslaf and Cnebba, at Wibbandum (probably Wimbledon, Surrey). Nennius Aethelric, son of Ida, reigned four years in Bernicia to 572. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?570 Welsh Genealogies About this time was bornArthur, son of Petr, son of Cincar, son of Vortipor of Dyfed. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.571 AC for 571 The `Synod of Victory' was held between the Britons. Gildas' Penetentials of the Synod of the Grove of Victory ... They who afford guidance to the barbarians shall do penance for thirteen years, provided there be no slaughter of Christians or effusion of blood or dire captivity. If, however, such things do take place the offenders shall perform penance, laying down their arms for the rest of life. But if one planned to conduct the barbarians to the Christians, and did so according to his will, he shall do penance for the remainder of his life. ASC for 571 Cuthwulf fought with the Britons at Bedcanford (Bedford), and took four towns, Lenbury, Aylesbury, Benson and Ensham. And this same year he died. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c. 571 Henry of Huntingdon The founder of the kingdom of East-Anglia, which includes Norfolk and Suffolk, was Uffa, from whom the kings of the East Anglia were called Uffingas. Roger of Wendover In the year 571 ... Uffa reigns in East Anglia. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.572 Nennius Theodoric, son of Ida, reigned seven years in Bernicia to 579. ... Theodoric fought vigorously against Urien (of Rheged) and his sons. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.572 AC for 572 Gildas, wisest of the Britons, died. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.575 AC for 575 The battle of Arfderydd between the sons of Elifer (of York) and Gwenddolau son of Ceidio (of Carlisle), in which battle Gwenddolau fell; Myrddin (Gwenddolau's bard) went mad. The Triads The third of the Faithful War-Bands of the Island of Britain was the War-Band of Gwenddolau son of Ceidiaw at Arfderydd, who continued the battle for a fortnight and a month after their lord was slain. The number of the War-Band ... was twenty-one hundred men. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.577 ASC for 577 Cuthwine and Ceawlin fought with the Britons, and slew three kings, Commail, Condida and Farinmail, on the spot that is called Deorham, and took from them three cities, Gloucester, Chirenchester and Bath. ASC for 688 ... Cuthwin was the son of Ceawlin ... The Ruin Snapped rooftrees, towers fallen; the work of the Giants, the Stonesmiths Mouldereth ... Came days of pestilence, on all sides men fell dead, death fetched off the flower of the people; Where they stood to fight, waste places; and on the acropolis ruin. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.578 Henry of Huntingdon East Anglia was afterwards held by Uffa's brother Titulus, the bravest of the East-Anglian kings. Roger of Wendover In the year 578 ... Uffa, king of the East-Angles, from whom the kings of that province are called "Uffingas", was succeeded by Titilus his son (read brother), who was the father of Redwald. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.579 Taliesin --- The Battle of Argoed Llwyfain There was a great battle Saturday morning From when the sun rose until it grew dark. The fourfold hosts of Fflamddwyn (= flame-bearer, perhaps Theodoric) invaded, Goddau (an unknown kingdom) and Rheged (Urien's kingdom centred around Cumbria) gathered in arms, Summoned from Argoed (by the wood) as far as Arfnydd (by the mountain) --- They may not delay by so much as a day. With a great blustering din, Fflamddwyn shouted "Have these hostages come? Are they ready?" To him then Owain , scourge of the eastlands, "They've not come, no! They're not, nor shall they be ready. And a whelp of Coel would indeed be afflicted Did he have to give any man as a hostage!" And Urien, lord of Yrechwydd (?Lake district), shouted "If they would meet us now for a treaty, High on a hilltop let's raise our ramparts, Carry our faces over the shield rims, Raise up our spears, men, over our heads, And set upon Fflamddwyn in the midst of his hosts And slaughter him, aye, and all that go with him!" There was many a corpse beside Argoed Llwyfain (forest of Elmwood); From warriors ravens grew red. And with their leader a host attacked. For a whole year I shall sing to their triumph. Nennius Frithwald reigned six years in Bernicia to 585. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?580 Taliesin --- Death song of Owain The soul of Owein, son of Urein, may the Lord consider its need. The chieftan of Rheged that the dense green grass conceals: It is not frivolous to praise him in verse; the grave of the hero renowned in song, vastly praised, whose whetted spears were like the rays of the dawn --- for no equal can be found to the lord of LLwyfenydd (unlocatable), the reaper of enemies; strong of grip; one kind with his fathers. When Owain slew Fflamddwyn it was no more than sleeping. Sleeps now the wide host of England with the light upon their eyes and those that had not fled were braver than were wise. Owain dealt them doom as the wolves devour sheep; Splendid he was, in his many-coloured armour. Horses he gave to all who asked. Gathering wealth like a miser freely he shared it for his soul's sake. God, consider the soul's need of Owain son of Urien. Taliesin --- Urien of Yrechwydd (?Lake district) Urien of Yrechwydd, most liberal of all Christians. Much do you give to the people of your land. As you gather so you dispense. Happy the Christian bards while you stand. More is the gaiety and more is the glory that Urien and his heirs are for riches renowned. And he is the sovereign supreme, ruler all highest. The stranger's refuge, first of fighters found. This the English know when they tell their tales. Death have they suffered and many a shame. Burnt are their homesteads, bare are their bodies. And many a loss and many a blame, But never a respite from Urien of Rheged. Rheged's defender, famed lord, your land's anchor, All that is told of you has my acclaim. Intense is your spear-play when you hear ploy of battle, when to battle you come 'tis a killing you can, Fire in their houses each day in the lord of Yrechwydd's way. Yrechwydd the beautiful and its generous clan. The Angles are succorless. Around the fierce king are his fierce offspring. Of those dead (Owain?) and those living Of those yet to come, you head the column. ... Gold king of the Northland and of kings king. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.582- AC for 582 Gwrgi and Peredur, sons of Elifer (of York), died. The Triads The second faithless war-band of the Island of Britain was the war-band of Gwrgi and Peredur, who abandoned their lords at Caer Greu, when they had an appointment to fight the next day with Eda Big-knee (probably a Deiran leader); and there they were both slain. The third passive chieftain of the Island of Britain was Gwgon Gwron son of Peredur son of Elifer of the Great Retinue. And this is why those were called "Passive Chieftains": because they would not seek to regain their rightful dominion. Welsh Genealogies (amalgamated) Peredur was the son of Elifer, son of Gurgust letlum, son of Ceneu, son of Coel Hen. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.584 ASC for 584 Ceawlin and Cutha (Cuthwine) fought with the Britons on the spot that is called Fethanleag (***). There Cutha was slain. And Ceawlin took many towns, as well as immense booty and wealth. And he returned to his own people in anger. Life of Maedoc The English raised a great army and came to Britain (Wales) ... The British assembled quickly against them, and sent to Saint David, to ask him to send them Maedoc ... Maedoc came ... and, since the British were engaging in batlle ill prepared, Maedoc .. prayed to God for the British against the English; the English were forthwith put to flight, and the British pursuit lasted for seven days, with great slaughter. Bede The second... of the English kings that had the sovereignty of all the southern provinces that are divided from the northern by the river Humber ... was Ceawlin, king of the West Saxons. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.585 Roger of Wendover In the year 585 began the kingdom of the Mercians, whose first king was Credda. At this time then, all the kingdoms of the Angles or Saxons were completed, to the number eight; that is to say, the kingdom of Kent, whose capital is Canterbury; the kingdom of the South Saxons, or Sussex, whose capital is Chichester; the kingdom of the East Saxons, or Essex, whose capital city is London; the kingdom of the East-Angles, or East Anglia, whose capital city is Norwich; the kingdom of the West Saxons, whose capital city is Winchester; the kingdom of Mercia, or Middle-Anglia, whose capital city is Dorchester; the kingdom of Northumbria, whose capital city is York. The last kingdom was divided into two (Bernicia and Deira). At this time there reigned in the island eight kings, whose names are as follow: Aethelbert in Kent, Cissa in Sussex, Ceawlin in Wessex, Credda in Mercia, Erkenwine in Essex, Titilus in East-Anglia, Ella in Deira, and Affrid (?for one year only?) in Bernicia. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?585 Taliesin --- The battle of Gwen Ystrad Catreath's (Catterick's) men are up at daybreak For a conquering prince, cattle-raider. Urien is he, far-famed chieftain, He bridles monarchs and hews them, Strong in war, true lord of Christians. Pictland's men deadly war-bands. Gwen Ystrad your post, battle-honer: Neither field nor forest was spared, Land's bulwark, by the force that came. Like waves roaring harsh onto shore I saw savage men in war-bands: After morning's fray, torn flesh. I saw border-crossing forces dead, Strong and angry the clamour one heard. Defending Gwen Ystrad one saw a thin rampart and lone weary men. At the ford I saw men stained with blood Downing arms before a grey-haired lord: They wished for peace, for they found the way barred, Hands crossed, on the strand, cheeks pallid. Their lords wondered at Idon's rich wine (river running red with blood?); Waves washed the tails of their horses. I saw pillaging men blunted And blood spattering their garments, And quick close-grouping for battle: Of battle's cloak, not of flight, was his thought, Rheged's lord, I marvel, when challenged. I saw noble men about Urien When he cut down his foes in Llech Wen. Routing foes in wrath gave him joy, Men's bucklers were borne where needed: Lust for battle never leaves Urien. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.586-93 Nennius Hussa reigned seven years in Bernicia to 593. Four kings fought against him, Urien (of Rheged), and Rhydderch Hen (of Strathclyde), and Gwallawg (probably of Elmet) and Morcant. ... During that time, sometimes the enemy, sometimes the Cymry (the citizens i.e. Britons) were victorious, and Urien blockaded them for three days and nights in the island of Medcaud (Lindisfarne). But during this campaign, Urien was assassinated on the instigation of Morcant, from jealousy, because his military skill and generalship surpassed that of all other kings. Roger de Hoveden Fribuld (read Affrid?) ... having reigned one year, was succeeded by Hussus (i.e. Hussa), who after a reign of seven years, lost his kingdom and his life. The Triads The second of the Battle-Leaders of the Island of Britain was Urien son of Cynfarch. The third of the unfortunate assassinations of the Island of Britain was by Llofan Severing Hand who slew Urien son of Cynfarch. Welsh Genealogies (amalgamated) Urien was the son of Cynfarch, son of Merchianum, son of Gurgust letlum, son of Ceneu, son of Coel Hen. Guallauc was the son of Laenauc, son of Masguic clop, son of Gurgust letlum, son of Ceneu, son of Coel Hen. Morcant bulc was the son of Cincar braut, son of Bran hen, son of Dumgual moilmut, son of Garbani aun, son of Coel Hen. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.587 Roger of Wendover In the year 587 ... died Erkenwine, king of the East Saxons, and was succeeded by his son Sledda ... who reigned ten years. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.588 ASC for 588 King Ella died; and Aethelric (?his brother?) reigned after him five years in Deira. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.589 Roger of Wendover In the year 589, Sledda, king of the East Saxons, begat by his wife (the daughter of Oermenric, king of Kent), Sebert, who reigned after his father. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.589 Irish Annals In the year 589 Dewi Sant went to the Lord. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.590 Roger of Wendover In the year 590, on the death of Cissa, king of the South Saxons, that kingdom devolved on Ceawlin, king of the West Saxons. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.591 ASC for 591 There was great slaughter of Britons at Wanborough; Ceawlin was driven from his kingdom, and Ceolric reigned six years. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?593- ASC for 593 Ceawlin died, and Cwichelm, and Cryda (probably Credda, king of the Mercians); and Aethelfirth succeeded to the kingdom of the Northumbrians. He was the son of Aethelric, Aethelric of Ida. Nennius Aethelfirth the artful ... reigned 24 years in the two kingdoms (Bernicia and Deira). Roger of Wendover In the year 588 (correctly not earlier than 593) Aethelfirth, king of the Bernicians, married Acca, daughter of Ella, king of Deira, and in the process of time had by her seven sons, Eanfrid, Oswald, Oswin, Oslac, Oswy, Osa and Offa. In this year died Credda, king of the Mercians, and was succeeded by his son Wibba. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.596 ASC for 596 Pope Gregory sent Augustine to Britain with very many monks, to preach the word of God to the English people. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.597 ASC for 597 Ceolwulf began to reign over the West Saxons; and he constantly fought and conquered, either the Angles, or the British, or the Picts, or the Scots. He was the son of Cutha (probably Cuthwulf), Cutha of Cynric .... This year Augustine and his companions came to England. AC for 597 Augustine and Miletus converted the English to Christ. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ?597 Bede Aethelfirth, a most worthy king, and ambitious of glory, governed the kingdom of the Northumbrians, and ravaged the Britons more than all the great men of the English .... He conquered more territories from the Britons, either making them tributary, or driving the inhabitants clean out, and planting English in their places, than any other king or tribune. AC for 597 The death of king Dunod (perhaps of Dent in the central Pennines, including Catterick) son of Pabo, pillar of Britain. Welsh Genealogies Dunaut was the son of Pabo, pillar of Britain, son of Arthwys, son of Mar, son of Ceneu son of Coel hen. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- c.598 Irish Annals for 598 Cathratha in Druad (battle of Catterick?). The Triads The first of the Noble Retinues of the Island of Britain was the retinue of Mynyddawg of Eiddyn (Edinburgh) Aneirin Ñ Y Gododdin (not in order) Men went to Gododdin (the British kingdom around Edinburgh), laughter-loving, bitter in battle, each blade in line. A brief year they were quiet, in peace (preparing for battle). ... In the great hall I (Aneirin) drank wine and mead. Many were his (Mynyddawg's) spears. In the clash of men he fashioned a feast (of carrion) for eagles. ... Since I drank, I crossed the border, sad fate. Men went to Catraeth (Catterick), they were renowned. Wine and mead from gold cups was their drink, a year in noble ceremonial, three hundred, three score and three gold-torqued men. Men went to Catraeth at dawn: all their fears had been put to flight. Three hundred clashed with ten thousand. They stained their spears ruddy with blood. He held firm, bravest in battle, before the men of Mynyddawg the wealthy. Warriors went to Catreath , their host was swift, fresh mead was their feast and it was bitter, three hundred fighting under command, and after the cry of jubilation there was silence. ... Though the men of Gwynedd and Gogledd (the North) came, through the planning of the sons of Ysgyrran there would be shattered shields. ... Wearing a brooch, in the forefront, armed in the fight, before his death a mighty warrior in combat, a princely leader charging before armies, five fifties fell before his blades. Of the men of Deira and Bernicia there fell a hundred score into oblivion in one hour. ... While song lasts, Hyfaidd Hir will be praised. In might a man, a youth in years, of boisterous valour; Swift long-maned steeds under the thigh of a handsome youth; A light broad shield on a slender fleet horse's crupper ; Bright blue swords, fringes of worked gold. ... A beloved friend was Ywain, it is wrong that he is beneath a cairn. ... There was none who so completely from the fortress of Eidyn scattered the enemy. Tudfwlch Hir from his lands and homesteads drove out the English without ceasing. ... Amid scattered weapons, broken ranks, standing steadfast, with great destruction, the champion overthrew the host of the men of England, he cast lances in the forefront of battle in the spear fight, he laid men low and made women widows before his death, Graid son of Hoywgi formed a battle-pen against the spears. ... It was true as Cadlew spoke, no one's horses overtook Marchlew. He cast spears in battle from a bounding, wide-tracked charger. ... Warriors charged, leaping forward together, short-lived, drunk over the clarified mead, the retinue of Mynyddawg, renown in battle, they paid for their mead feast with their lives. ... Warriors went to Catreath, embattled, with a cry, a host of horsemen in dark blue armour, with shields, spear-shafts held aloft with sharp points, and shining mail shirts and swords. ... He attacked in battle before the cattle herds of the Eastlands, a host with lowered shields arose. With shattered shield before the cattle, the vociferous Beli, a lord above the bloodshed, speedy defender of the border, a grey-haired warrior, a gold-torqued ox, sustained us on his leading horse, spirited and erect. ... The warriors arose, they assembled, together with one accord they attacked. Short were their lives, long their kinsmen's grief for them, they slew seven times their number of the English. ... When trusted men came from the regions of Dineidyn (Dunedin, that is, Edinburgh), the chosen warriors of every prudent land, in strife with the mixed host of England, nine score to one, around each mail-clad man, a multitude of horses and armour and silken clothing, Gwaednerth defended his rights through combat. ... He charged before three hundred of the finest, he cut down both centre and wing, he excelled in the forefront of the noblest host, he gave gifts of horses from the herd in winter. Gwawrddur made his strength a refuge, the front line's bulwark. He glutted black ravens on the rampart of a fortress, but he was not Arthur. ... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Epilogue For Arthur was long dead, and none who followed him could effectively mobilize the military resources of the British kingdoms against the English. The battle of Catterick was almost the last time the British attempted to overthrow the power of the English in the North. With the annihilation of the mounted host of Gododdin, the English secured control of a continuous block of territory in the east of Britain, from north of Hadrian's wall to the Bristol channel. By 600 A.D. the Roman diocese of Britain was a dim memory, and the future of the Island clearly lay with the realms of the English, which were just beginning the process of conversion into Medieval Christian kingdoms. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Notes Aetius It is generally accepted that Gildas' "Agitius thrice consul" must be Aetius the Magister Militum, because the dates are roughly commensurate and because Aetius was the only Roman (apart from the Emperors) who was thrice consul in the fifth century. Furthermore, some have taken this form of address to date the "groans of the Britons" to 446-454, the years in which Aetius had been three times a consul. However, this conclusion is based on the assumption that Gildas really is quoting a letter verbatim, rather than fabricating it for rhetorical purposes. There are a number of reasons to think that the latter is the case. First, Gildas says that he is using "not so much literary remains from this country (which, such as they were, are not now available, having been burnt by enemies or removed by our countrymen when they went into exile) as foreign tradition; and that has frequent gaps to blur it." Second, his mis-spelling of Aetius as Agitius, perhaps influenced by the name of Aegidius (457-464) points to oral tradition: it is highly unlikely that the Britons (whether in 425 or 450) could not spell the name of the most powerful Roman commander in the West. Third, the wording of the letter also does not sound genuine; it is too casual. Thus we can conclude that Gildas knew of a letter to Aetius (but wrongly spelled his name), that he knew of its intent, and that he knew that Aetius had been thrice consul. The date assigned to the letter here (c.425) gives a much better fit with the other evidence (including Gildas' narrative) than a date of c.450. Return to: 425 446454457464 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- St. Germanus The traditional site of the Alleluia victory is in Clwyd, in North Wales. This is is supported by Constantius' description of a valley enclosed by steep mountains. It might be thought that this makes the Saxons unlikely enemies, especially as Gildas does not mention Saxon raiders at all. However, there is no reason that Saxons could not have been operating in Wales as a few years later (434) they are reported raiding even further afield in Ireland (perhaps because resistance in Britain had stiffened following Germanus' victory). All in all, it seems likely that Gildas is unreliable and there was considerable Saxon raiding, and perhaps even some settlement, in Britain at this time. That Gildas ignores earlier Saxon raiding is backed up by the fact that Gildas describes the Saxons when they do arrive (449) as being "feared worse than death". This surely would only be if the Britons had had prior experience of the Saxons as enemies. Return to: 429 434449 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Several Houses This house burning in the vicinity of St. Germanus' dwelling indicates that urban life certainly survived in some form in Britain until 429. The roofs were evidently thatched, rather than tiled, but how significant this is it is hard to judge. The reference in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle for 577 to the capture of the three cities of Gloucester, Chirenchester and Bath suggests (but does not imply) that urban life continued for much longer in the celtic west. Archaeology supports a limited survival of urban life in some towns (e.g. Viroconium, that is Wroxeter, then in Powys) into the 6th century. In fact a large two-story timber building at Viroconium has been called the last classically inspired building in Britain until modern times. Return to 429 577 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ambrosius The Ambrosius Aurelianus who fought the Saxons in the 470s and perhaps beyond is probably not the Ambrosius who was Vortigern's rival in the 440s and who fought Vitalinus in ?453. Ambrosius Aurelianus had parents who, according to Gildas, had worn the purple (indicating a high position in British society) and who were slain in the "storm" of ?473. If Ambrosius Aurelianus was politically active in the 440s it is unlikely that his parents would be still alive in the 470s. More likely the earlier Ambrosius was the father of Ambrosius Aurelianus, and died in ?473. It is only on Nennius' authority that Ambrosius Aurelianus was the high-king of Britain. Return to: 440 453472474475 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A wide area The arrival of Angles (Saxons to Roman authors) in Britain as federates is largely ignored by insular sources. In particular, Gildas makes no mention of it, putting all of his emphasis on the arrival of the three keels in 450. Either he did not know of this earlier migration, or chose to ignore it (which is understandable as he was writing for rhetorical effect rather than for posterity). Archaeological evidence indicates that the "wide area" handed over constituted East Anglia (including Cambridgeshire), Lindsey, Deira (East of York), and the upper Thames valley. All but the last were areas probably subject to Pictish raids. The upper Thames valley mercenaries may have been intended as reserves, or for deployment against the Scots anywhere in the west. They may even have been settled there from an earlier time, as Roman auxilliaries. Return to: 444 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Thanet The settling of Hengest's mercenaries on the isle of Thanet (now joined to the mainland and forming the Easternmost part of Kent) was obviously seen as a pivotal event by the early authors. This is probably because it was these soldiers who apparently instigated the revolt against the Britons while the earlier federates were still living peacefully with their hosts. Their placement in the east of Kent indicates that their chief purpose was to support Vortigern's power against fellow Britons and against Rome, rather than to fight the Picts (although it does not rule out the expedition to the north). Return to: 450 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vitalinus The Vitalinus who fought Ambrosius was probably a member of Vortigern's family, since, according to Nennius, Vortigern's grandfather was called Vitalinus (see 474). From the fact that Vortigern feared both Ambrosius and a Roman invasion we might see in the conflict between Ambrosius and Vitalinus evidence of a pro-Imperial and anti-Imperial faction in Britain respectively. The gift of Kent to Hengest may have been the cause of the outbreak of hostilities between the two camps. If this interpretation is correct, then Ambrosius failed to overthrow Vortigern. The location of the battle, Wallop, may be in Shropshire (which was then part of Powys) or perhaps in Hampshire. Return to: 453 474 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fellow-citizens of the holy Romans St. Patrick's statements carry significant information regarding mid-5th century British society. Firstly, he refers to Ceretic's soldiers (milites), rather than warriors. This suggests that some degree of Roman military organization continued. Second, from his statement that he would not call Ceretic's soldiers "fellow-citizens of the holy Romans" we can infer that he would be expected to address them as such. This implies that even the Britons to the North of Hadrian's wall continued to identify with Rome, or at least her church. Finally, Patrick's letter gives no hint of paganism among Ceretic's men, even though the nearby Picts and Scots clearly are seen as heathen. This points to the strength of the church among the Britons even North of Hadrian's wall. There can be little doubt that that South of the wall the Christian church had no real rival (except among the Anglo-Saxons of course). Return to: 455 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Second battle This is the one instance where I have altered the ordering of the events in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle. Clearly the two battles referred to by Nennius and the ASC are identical, as both mention the death of Horsa. But Nennius, who is the earlier source, states that it is the second battle. At this early stage the dates in the ASC are only approximate. An error of three years is no cause for concern. Return to: 458 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Four keen battles The identity of the fourth battle of Vortimer is a subject of some debate, as the following text numbers only three. Here I have taken the fourth battle to be the expulsion of Hengest and his followers from Thanet. This is actually mentioned earlier than the three numbered battles, but is in a section which is a summary of what is to come. The besieging and final expulsion of Hengest would obviously fit better at the end of the war, rather than at the beginning. Also, the absence of Hengest from Britain would seem to be a necessary condition for the expedition of a British army to Gaul in c.468. Return to: 456 465 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Riothamus The high-king of the Britons named Riothamus is otherwise unknown, and has been identified with Ambrosius and even with Arthur. Here I favour the alternative hypothesis that he is identical to Vortimer. This is suggested by the following facts. First, according to the chronology I am proposing, Vortimer would have been the high king at (or at least immediately before) the time that Riothamus was campaigning. Second, according to this chronology Vortimer would have died around the same time as Riothamus' defeat. Third, Riothamus comes from the British ri-tamo = king-high and Vortimer from vor-tamo-ri = over-high-king. Perhaps after his victory over Hengest Vortimer modified his name or title to Riothamus to distance himself from his father's title Vortigern = over-lord. Return to: 469 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ecdicius The exploits of Ecdicius have little or no influence on the history of Britain. However they do shed light on it in two ways. First, Sidonius' account shows that Celtic rather than Latin was still spoken by the leading families in Gaul in the mid 5th century. Therefore it would probably have been even more entrenched in Britain at that time. Secondly, his victory over the Visigoths outside Arverna shows the effectiveness of even small numbers of heavy cavalry against disordered barbarian infantry. This is a model for the victories of Ambrosius and Arthur, and suggests that Nennius' account of Arthur's charge at Badon (c.518) is not as unrealistic as might be assumed. The other near contemporary model for Arthur'campaigns is that of the Gododdin in 598. Arthur is closer in time to Ecdicius, but closer in space to Manaw Gododdin. Return to: 471 472518 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- A fire In Gildas' narrative, between the Saxon's threat to "plunder the whole island" (which I have placed in 452) and the "fire which spread from sea to sea" (placed in 473) there is only the sentence "There was no delay". The battles between Vortimer and Hengest, the latter's expulsion, the former's death, and the latter's return are all ignored or unknown to Gildas. Assuming Nennius is trustworthy here, it is not unlikely that Gildas did deliberately ignore Vortimer; for some political, religious or rhetorical reason Gildas wishes to praise only one warrior, that is Ambrosius . He even fails to mention St. Germanus' role in the conflict with the Picts (429), and it is hard to believe that he did not know of and approve of this saint. It must simply be accepted that Gildas was very selective in the events he recorded. See also below. In my reconstruction of events, the great raid by Hengest may have been in response to resistance he met in trying to make good his claim to Essex and Sussex extorted from Vortigern. Certainly it appears that Sussex was not conquered by Hengest, but by Saxons under Aelle from 477 onwards. Return to: 473 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cerdic The royal line of the West-Saxons is anomolous in a number of ways. First, their followers are first referred to as Gewisse, a Saxon word which may mean allies or federates. Second, the coast where the invasion supposedly took place was already occupied by Jutes, as recorded by Bede (see 475). Third, the first ruler (Cerdic) has a British name (Caradoc) rather than a Saxon name. Fourth, the arrival of two more ships in 501 has no apparent relation to Cerdic; Porta is obviously a name invented to explain Portsmouth, while one of his sons (Maegla) again has a British name (Bieda is a Saxon name, the same as that of the Venerable Bede). Even in the 7th century, the obviously British-named Cadwalla turns up as king of Wessex. It seems that the politics of the 5th century were not as clear-cut as the ASC would have us believe. It is quite likely that Cerdic was of British origin, but employed Saxons as federates. Alternatively, he may have been of mixed parentage, and had both British and Saxon followers. In this second case, it is interesting that his lifespan is not incompatible with his being the son of Rowena and Vortigern. Return to: 475 495501 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- On his shoulder It is often suggested that the phrase "on his shoulder" should read "on his shield" because of the similarity of the two Welsh words "ysguid" and "ysguidd". This is despite the fact that Nennius wrote in Latin. Also, there are references in Y Gododdin (c. 598) to warriors "wearing a brooch" which suggests that icons worn on the shoulders may not have been unusual. On these grounds it seems best not to amend the text. Return to: 500 598 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Carleon As one of the few Arthurian battle sites which can be identified, Carleon in South Wales is a surprising location for a British battle leader whose enemy was the Saxons. But there is other evidence that the British kings Aircol in Dyfed and Cadwallon Longhand in Gwynedd were fighting the Scots (Irish) at that time, so it is more likely that they were Arthur's enemy here. Around the same time (498) Fergus the great is supposed to have landed in Scotland, indicating a resurgence of Irish interest in colonizing Britain. Alternatively, this battle (and some of the other recorded battles) may have been fought against other Britons. Certainly civil strife is recorded both before (see 453), during (see 539), and after (see 545, 560, 565, 575) Arthur's time. Return to: 498 510 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Aelle, whom all the Saxons acknowledged The identification of Aelle, king of the South Saxons, as the first overlord of the English kings in the South, is surprising. His recorded campaigns are confined to Sussex, and his kingdom was the least important of the seven or eight traditional founding kingdoms of the English. The most likely explanation is that he led a combined force of a number of English kingdoms in a campaign against the British in the early 6th century. The fact that his death is recorded around 514, close to the AC date of 518 for the battle of Badon, suggests that the campaign ended in this massive defeat. Cerdic's death is also recorded around the same time, which suggests he participated as well. Aelle's primary position may have been due to his seniority. Return to: 518 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Not by brave soldiers It is often argued that Arthur's historicity is in doubt because he is not mentioned by Gildas in his account of Badon. This is hardly reasonable, given that Gildas does not name any Briton between Magnus Maximus and his own time, except for Ambrosius (see above). Furthermore, as quoted in the text for 545, Gildas specifically says that he "had decided to speak ... not of brave soldiers in the stress of war". The fact that Ambrosius is the last mentioned commander before the battle of Badon in no way implies that he was the leader there. In fact the forty three year gap between Ambrosius' first battle and the battle of Badon makes this unlikely. Return to: 518 545 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Creoda Creoda is a very shadowy figure, mentioned only in the preface of the ASC. In the body of the ASC Cerdic continues to fight the Britons in a series of battles after 508 and before 530. However, most of these are obvious duplications of the battles up to 508, separated by a difference of 19 years (one Easter cycle). The true history of the family of Cerdic will never be known, but the contemporary evidence of Gildas for the peace that followed Badon makes an uneventful (and subsequently almost forgotten) reign by Creoda quite plausible. Return to: 518 530534 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Camelot The name Camelot is an invention of French Romance (perhaps inspired by the Roman Camulodonum, that is Colchester). But Leland's identification of the hill fort by South Cadbury as Arthur's chief place of residence may have a firmer footing. Archaeological digs by L. Alcock in the late 1960s showed that the hill was re-fortified within twenty years of 500 --- exactly the time we would expect if it really was a fort used by Arthur. The entire top of the hill was surrounded by four ramparts of earth, the innermost (stretching more than 1 km) being topped with a 5 metre thick wall of stone and timber. The enclosed area of several hectares is considerably larger than that of any other dark age hill fort discovered in Britain. Inside are the remains of a number of timber buildings including a large (200 sq.m) hall, plus large amounts of pottery from the Mediterranean. The site was evidently the base for a war-lord or king of considerable power. It may have been used by the Dumnonians or Durotrigans until the area was lost to the West Saxons in the 7th century. Return to: 520 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Each having one king There is no reason to think Procopius particularly reliable here, but if there is any truth in saying that the Britons, Angles and Fresians had one king each, these rulers may have been Arthur, Cynewald (grandson of Icel), and Eormenric (king of Kent, which was settled mainly by Fresians and Jutes). The West Saxons and South Saxons were evidently so limited in power following the battle of Badon that they did not rate a mention. Neither do the Scots or the Picts, but it is unlikely that Procopius would have any knowledge about the northern half of the Island. Return to: 530 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Civil war and constant plunder The second of Gildas' despots, whom he names Aurelius Caninus, has always been the most hard to locate. It has been suggested before that Caninus (dog) is Gildas' pun on the Welsh name Cynan. In this case Cynan map Brochfael, king of Powys, would seem an obvious candidate, as that would make Gildas' 5 despots correspond to the 4 most powerful British kingdoms in the South: Dumnonia (Constantine), Powys (Cynan), Dyfed (Vortipor) and Gwynedd (split between Cuneglasus in the East and Maglocunus in the West). This hypothesis is supported by Gildas castigation of Aurelius Cynan in c.545 for "civil war and constant plunder", which is matched by Taliesin's praise of Cynan Garwyn for exactly the same behaviour, perhaps 20 years later. Durotrigia (if it was distinct from Dumnonia at this stage) may also have been a major kingdom, but there is textual evidence (see N. Higham: Rome, Britain and the Anglo-Saxons) that Gildas himself was living in Durotrigia, which would explain why its ruler was not criticised. Return to: 545 565 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Empty praises The earliest extant literature in Welsh (or indeed in any living Western European language) is the song of praise to Cynan by his bard Taliesin, possibly as early as the 560s. However, Gildas' testimony on the empty praises of Maelgwyn's "parasites" shows that the practice was at least a generation older. It may very well trace back to the pre-Roman Celtic bards. Nennius list of Arthur's twelve battles is also likely to come from a poem of praise to Arthur, perhaps even composed during Arthur's lifetime since no mention is made of Camlann. Return to: 545 565 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The privileges of Arvon The story told in this section of the laws of Hywel makes sense in the following context. Rhun, the son of Maelgwyn and presumably king of Gwynedd, was, according to some genealogies, an illegitimate son. Elidyr, king of South Rheged and husband of Eurgain, the daughter of Maelgwyn, may therefore have been attempting to usurp the throne of Gwynedd. The men of the North who came to avenge Elidyr were presumably allies of Rheged. The counterattack by Rhun shows the power of Gwynedd and why Maelgwyn was regarded as a great king by Gildas and Nennius. Return to: 560 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Menaces Cornwall That Cynan, whose base was probably Viroconium (Wroxeter), was able to menace Cornwall (that is, Dumnonia) shows that a powerful British king could, in the 560s, project his power across half the country. In the following century, the kings of Powys and Mercia campaigned against the Northumbrians as far north as Stirling in what is now Scotland. In the preceding century, the high king of the Britons (Riothamus) campaigned in Gaul. These facts show that warfare in the fifth and sixth centuries could be highly mobile. There is thus no reason to reject Nennius' list of Arthur's battles simply because of their apparently wide geographical spread, especially since Arthur is described, not as a king of some localized realm, but as the leader in battle for all of the British kings. This is further supported by Nennius' giving Arthur simply the title "soldier", rather than "king" (see 520). Moreover the fact that many of the twelve are not locatable at all suggests their authenticity. If the list had been fabricated, familiar names would have been chosen. Return to: 495 520565 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pagans came The text by Roger of Wendover implies that Mercia and Essex were founded in 527, the beginning of Justinian's reign rather than the end of it, as implied here. The reasons for the emendation are: first, Gildas' contemporary statement that foreign wars had ceased in his lifetime; second, Erkenwine, the reported first ruler of Essex, is supposed to have died in 587 which is very unlikely if he founded a kingdom in 527. Return to: 565 587 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Arthur Arthur map Petr of Dyfed is one of a number of princes Christened with this name in Britain around 570. Before this time, it is recorded only for Arthur, the battle-leader of the Britons. This suggests that the name was already revered around this time, a generation or so after the death of the original Arthur, when the Angles and Saxons were again on the move, threatening to undo all of Arthur's achievements. This, along with the reference by Taliesin in The Gododdin (598) to Arthur, apparently as a warrior to be emulated, constitutes the earliest references to Arthur's name and fame. Slightly later, the anonymous Death-song of Cynddylan (possibly mid 7th century) calls the warriors of Powys "the heirs of great Arthur, the mighty defender." As to the name itself, it may derive from the Latin name Artorius which, although rare, is attested in Britain as in Lucius Artorius Castus, a 2nd-century prefect of the legion VI Victrix at York. However, when "Arthur" was relatinized in the early chronicles, it was usually as Arturus, rather than Artorius. In an interesting essay "Arthur's Name",Toby Griffen suggests that the original, in Latin/Briton, was Arturus/Artur, both meaning roughly "Bear-Man". Return to: 570 598 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- David, to ask him to send them Maedoc The death of Saint David's is traditionally placed in 589, and Maedoc was his pupil late in his life (according to Morris). Thus the defeat of an English host in Western Britain through the prayers of Maedoc may well refer to the campaign by Ceawlin in which his was slain and he returned in anger. Return to: 584 589 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Coel Coel Hen (Coel the old, remembered in the nursery rhyme Old King Cole) was, according to the genealogies, the great-great-great-great-grandfather of Owain map Urien. He is also claimed as the ancestor of many other Northern kings, including Gwrgi and Peredur of York, Morcant, Gwallawg of Elmet, and Dunod. In legend, his daughter "Gwawl" (i.e. "Wall") is named as Cunedda's wife. All of these suggest that he may have been the last dux Britanniarum, commander of the legion VI Victrix at York and the troops of Hadrian's wall, around the start of the 5th century. Return to: 401 560 572 582 586 597 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Return to The Ruin and Conquest of Britain ______________________________________________________