6 May 878 A.D. Alfred the Great and Battle at Ethadum—Christianity Survives in England
6 May
878 A.D. Alfred the Great and Battle at Ethadum—Christianity Survives
in England.
Graves,
Dan. “The Crucial Battle at Ethadum.” Christianity.com.
Apr 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/601-900/the-crucial-battle-at-ethandun-11629771.html. Accessed 6 May 2014.
Ethandun. Dane versus Saxon. Pagan versus Christian. Guthrum versus
Alfred. Battle Worm versus Elf Counsel. The battle which took place at Ethandun
on this day, May 6, 878 ensured that
Christianity would
survive in England. As with every major battle, the events preceding and
following Ethandun were as important as the battle itself. The battle was
merely the nexus, the watershed, the moment of crisis.
Alfred stood to lose everything. Vikings had attacked the British Isles
for many years. Northumbria, East Anglia and Mercia had fallen. By 877 the
kingdom of Wessex alone resisted the invaders. In a surprise winter attack,
having sworn a false peace, Guthrum drove Alfred from his throne. It seemed the
Danes had triumphed. They thought Alfred, like other nobles and kings, would
flee overseas. Christianity would be forced underground. Civilization would
take a beating. The Saxons would be slaves.
But Alfred didn't run. He hid on the Isle of Athelney in Somerset. When
spring came, he sent out messengers, summoning the Anglo-Saxons to Egbert's
Stone. The thanes responded, weeping for joy at seeing their king alive. They
marched to confront Guthrum.
The armies met at Ethandun. Guthrum with his professional soldiers was
the loser. He fled to his fortress at Reading. A few days later he surrendered.
For once Alfred had sufficient arms and men to destroy his enemy. Instead, he
baptized Guthrum and thirty of the pirate's earls. For twelve days he
catechized these new converts in the peace of Christ then let them go away.
Guthrum kept peace, rising against Alfred only once. Alfred himself
became the only English king called "Great." He built a new style
ship which proved successful against the Danish long boats. An innovative
system of forts allowed Alfred to field a permanent standing army while
protecting the populace at home. With consummate diplomacy he tied Mercia to
Wessex and brought Wales under Saxon authority. A wise treaty with the Danes
reduced feuds. He revised the laws, building on Bible teachings.
Alfred is sometimes called the "father of the English
language." War had destroyed Latin learning in England. Alfred saw that he
could either preserve learning by utilizing the early English language or he
could stick to Latin and watch learning founder. Deeply concerned for his
people's souls, he chose to go vernacular. Scholars were in such short supply
he had to import them. He himself learned Latin and spearheaded the drive to
translate psalms, Gregory's Pastoral Care, Orosius' Geography, Boethius'
Consolation of Philosophy, and several other works.
Because of Alfred, England possessed a native and wholly Christian
literature long before other Western countries. He also updated and distributed
the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Bibliography:
Alfred the Great: papers from the eleventh-centenary conferences. Editor
Timothy Reuter. Aldershot, Hants, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2003.
"Alfred" and "Asser." Dictionary of National
Biography. Edited by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. London: Oxford University
Press, 1921-1996.
Allen, John. One Hundred Great Lives. New York: Journal of Living, 1944.
Asser. Life of Alfred. Various editions.
Duggan, Alfred. The King of Athelney. London: New English Library, 1961.
Novel.
Duckett, Eleanor Shipley. Alfred the Great. University of Chicago Press,
1956.
Kunitz, Stanley L. British Authors Before 1800; a biographical
dictionary. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1952.
Mapp, Alf J. The Golden Dragon: Alfred the Great and his times. La
Salle, Illinois: Open Court, 1974.
Plummer, Charles. The Life and Times of Alfred the Great; being the Ford
lectures for 1901, by Charles Plummer ... With an appendix. Oxford, Clarendon
Press, 1902.
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