Also known as Edward II, Saint Edward, St. Edward, King Edward II, Saint Edward the Martyr, St. Edward the Martyr, King Edward the Martyr, Edward, king of England
King of the English (975-978)
Edward the Martyr was a young English king who ruled from 975 to 978 before his death at age 15 or 16. His short reign and mysterious death made him an important historical figure in early English history, though the exact circumstances surrounding the end of his rule remain uncertain.
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5 total works indexed
· 1953 · cited 29,702x
· 2000 · cited 27,642x
Edward the Martyr (c. 962 – 18 March 978) was King of the English from 8 July 975 until he was killed in 978. He was the eldest son of King Edgar (r. 959–975). On Edgar's death, the succession to the throne was contested between Edward's supporters and those of his younger half-brother, the future King Æthelred the Unready. As they were both children, it is unlikely that they played an active role in the dispute, which was probably between rival family alliances. Edward's principal supporters were Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Æthelwine, Ealdorman of East Anglia, while Æthelred was backed by his mother Queen Ælfthryth and her friend Æthelwold, Bishop of Winchester. The dispute was quickly settled. Edward was chosen as king and Æthelred received the lands traditionally allocated to the king's eldest son in compensation.
Edgar had been a strong and overbearing king and a supporter of the monastic reform movement. He had forced the lay nobility and secular clergy to surrender land and sell it at low prices to the monasteries. Æthelwold had been the most active and ruthless in seizing land for his monasteries with Edgar's assistance. The nobles took advantage of Edgar's death to get their lands back, mainly by legal actions but sometimes by force. The leading magnates were split into two factions, the supporters of Ælfhere, Ealdorman of Mercia, and Æthelwine, who both seized some monastic lands which they believed belonged to them, but also estates claimed by their rivals. The disputes never led to warfare.
· 1938 · cited 24,318x
· 2000 · cited 23,708x
· 1963 · cited 18,944x
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