Offa and the Mercian Wars

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Offa and the Mercian Wars Page 23

by Chris Peers


  ‘Lichfield Angel’

  Lilla

  Lincoln

  battle of

  Lindisfarne

  Lindsey

  London

  Ludeca, king of Mercia

  Magonsaetan

  Maldon, battle of

  Maserfelth, battle of

  ‘Mercian Register’

  Merewalh, king of the Magonsaetan

  Merton, battle of

  Meurig, king of Gwent

  Middle Angles

  Mount Badon, battle of

  Mugdock, battle of

  Mul, prince of Wessex

  Nechtansmere, battle of

  Nennius, as source for Mercian history

  Noirmoutier

  Northampton

  Norwegians

  Nottingham

  siege of

  Oengus mac Fergus, king of the Picts

  Offa, king of Angeln

  Offa, king of the East Saxons

  Offa, king of Mercia

  Offa’s Dyke

  Ohtar, Jarl

  Old Sarum, battle of

  Osbald, king of Northumbria

  Osberht, king of Northumbria

  Osfrith, prince of Northumbria

  Osric, king of Deira

  Osthryth, queen of Mercia

  Oswald, king of Northumbria

  Oswestry

  Oswine, king of Deira

  Oswy, king of Northumbria

  Otford, battle of

  paganism

  pattern welding

  Paulinus, Bishop

  Peada, king of Mercia

  Penda, king of Mercia

  Peterborough

  Picts

  plague

  Powys

  Procopius of Caesarea

  Pybba

  Quentovic

  Raedwald, king of East Anglia

  Raegenhere, prince of East Anglia

  Ragnar Lothbrok

  Reading

  Repton

  Rhodri ap Merfyn, king of Gwynedd

  Rhuddlan, battle of

  rivers

  battles on

  navigation on

  as obstacles

  roads

  evidence for post-Roman survival

  influence on military operations

  Rochester

  Romans in Britain surviving buildings

  Saebbi, king of the East Saxons

  ‘Saint Chad Gospels’

  salt

  Saxo Grammaticus

  Scots

  seaxes

  Secandune, battle of

  Seckington

  Selred, king of the East Saxons

  Severn, River

  sheep

  Sheppey

  Sherwood Forest

  shields

  ‘shieldwall’ tactics

  ships

  Viking

  siege techniques

  Sigeberht, king of East Anglia

  Sigeberht, king of Wessex

  Sigehere, king of the East Saxons

  silver

  slaves/slavery

  slings

  snakes

  Somerton, siege of

  spears

  Stafford

  ‘Staffordshire Hoard’

  standards

  Stiklarstadir, battle of

  Strathclyde

  Surrey

  Sussex

  Sutton Hoo

  Svoldr, battle of

  swords

  tactics

  Anglo-Saxon

  Viking

  Tamworth

  taxation/tribute

  Tempsford, battle of

  Tettenhall, battle of

  Tewdwr ap Bili, king of Strathclyde

  Thames, River

  Thanet

  thegns

  Theodore, Archbishop

  Thetford

  Torksey

  Towcester

  Trent, River

  battle of

  Tribal Hidage

  Ubbi

  Uppsala

  Vikings

  armies

  invasions

  settlement in England

  Vortigern, King

  Wales

  armies

  political organisation

  Wall

  Warwick

  weapons

  Wednesfield

  Weohstan, ealdorman

  wergild

  West Heslerton

  ‘Widsith’

  Wiglaf, king of Mercia

  Wigstan, Saint

  Winbertus

  Winchcombe

  Winchester

  Winwaed, battle of

  Winwick

  witan

  Woden

  Woden’s Barrow, battle of

  Woden’s Field, battle of

  wolves

  wounds, archaeological evidence for

  Wulfhere, king of Mercia

  ‘Y Gododdin’

  York

  battle of

  fortifications of

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  1. A surviving section of the Roman Icknield Street in Sutton Coldfield Park, approximately ten miles south of its junction with Watling Street at Wall. Although the ditches on either side are partially filled in, the original metalled surface is still visible. Such roads allowed Mercian armies to move swiftly across the country long after the departure of the legions that had built them.

  2. The Roman settlement at Wall, believed to have been a principal Mercian stronghold in the seventh century. The royal hall was probably situated on the hill where the church now stands.

  3. Excavated Roman ruins at Wall. These stood considerably higher in Anglo-Saxon times, and may have been incorporated into a defensive perimeter justifying the Welsh description of the site as a ‘caer’ or fortress.

  4. Sculptures depicting prominent saints and kings of England decorate the façade of Lichfield Cathedral, briefly the seat of a Mercian archbishop in the eighth century.

  5. An idealised representation of Penda, rather incongruously carrying a Christian cross, on the front of Lichfield Cathedral.

  6. Offa, as depicted on the facade of Lichfield Cathedral. The bishop’s mitre is an appropriate symbol of the close ties with the church which buttressed his power.

  7. Saint Chad’s Well at Stowe, near Lichfield. Largely forgotten today, this was an important place of pilgrimage in the Middle Ages, and may mark the spot where Chad established his seat as bishop of Mercia in the late seventh century.

  8. A close up view of the gold-and garnet-decorated hilt from a reproduction of the Sutton Hoo king’s sword. This elaborate ornamentation is characteristic of the weapons carried by elite warriors of the seventh century, and several similar examples have been found in the Staffordshire Hoard. (Mark Talbot)

  9. A reproduction Anglo-Saxon sword of around the ninth century, based on an example discovered at Gilling in Yorkshire in 1976, and now in the Yorkshire Museum. The plainer ‘lobed’ pommel is typical of both English and Scandinavian weapons of the Viking era. (Paul Craddock, Mercia Sveiter)

  10. A reconstruction of the eighth-century Coppergate helmet from York. Note the narrow nasal and hinged cheek pieces, which together provide almost complete protection for the face without compromising the wearer’s vision. Like the Sutton Hoo sword this was an expensive item, typical of the era when warfare was the preserve of a privileged elite. (Paul Craddock, Mercia Sveiter)

  11. Another view of the reconstructed Coppergate helmet, showing the reinforcing bars acro
ss the crown and the mail aventail to protect the neck. (Paul Craddock, Mercia Sveiter)

  12. A reproduction spangenhelm, a simpler and cheaper type of helmet popular with Frankish and Viking warriors in the ninth and tenth centuries. Although no examples have yet been excavated in England, it is likely that similar helmets were widespread in Mercia during the Viking Wars. (Mercia Sveiter)

  13. The church of All Saints at Brixworth, Northamptonshire. Probably built during the reign of Offa, this is the largest and best-preserved building of the Anglo-Saxon period in England. Stone quarrying and brick making appear to have been lost arts in Offa’s day, and the church is constructed mainly from materials plundered from the ruins of Roman Leicester.

  14. The tower at Brixworth. Solidly built and with narrow windows suitable for archers to shoot from, the smaller round tower seems perfectly designed for defence. However, it is not certain that it was constructed at the same time as the original church, and it may have been added in the ninth or tenth century as a response to the Viking threat.

  15. The River Tame at Tamworth. Offa’s capital was situated at the junction of the rivers Tame and Anker, but we have no evidence that they were important for navigation. Although the modern watercourse seems quite adequate for Viking longships or their English equivalents, it may have been shallower, faster flowing and less reliable in the days before the banks were artificially straightened.

  16. Tamworth Castle. Built by the Normans in a strategic location overlooking the confluence of the two rivers, it is possible that it occupies the site where Offa’s hall had stood three centuries earlier, explaining why no trace of the latter has been found. Alternatively the lost hall may lie beneath the church of Saint Editha, a short distance to the north.

  17. The River Ouse at Bedford. Somewhere on this stretch of the river the lost mausoleum of King Offa may still await future archaeologists.

  18. In many places parts of the series of earthworks known as Offa’s Dyke are still easily visible on the ground. This section is near Craignant, north of Oswestry, on the border between Mercia and the Welsh kingdom of Powys.

  19. In this sector the eastern slope of the dyke is relatively gentle, supporting the theory that its intention was to deter incursions from the west.

  20. The steep approach to the top of Offa’s Dyke from the western side, facing the Berwyn Mountains. Though not a serious obstacle to a lightly equipped Welsh raider unless defended by a substantial garrison, it would have been clear of trees when first built and must have been an imposing sight, visible for many miles.

 

 

 


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