Alfred and the Battle of Edington

7 Apr, 2005 940 History of Europe

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss King Alfred and the defeat of the Vikings at Battle of Edington. At the end of the 9th century the Vikings controlled almost all of what we now call England. Mercia had fallen and its king had fled, Northumbria had fallen and so had Essex. The only independent kingdom left standing against the rampaging Danes was Wessex, and Alfred the Great; then he was overrun, his treasury, palaces and castles taken whilst he and his most loyal followers were left to wander the moors. Yet he came back. The Battle of Edington in 878 is taken by many to be the great founding Battle of England. It is the conflict in which Alfred, King of Wessex, came back to defeat the Vikings and launch a grand project to establish a new entity of Englishness, what he called the ‘Anglecynn’ in the South of the island of Britain.How did Alfred manage to defeat the Vikings when he had been so thoroughly routed? What motivated his project to fashion Englishness? And without Edington, would there be no England?

Play on BBC Sounds website

Guests

  • Richard Gameson 6 episodes
    Reader in Medieval History, University of Kent at Canterbury
  • Sarah Foot 6 episodes
    Professor of Early Medieval History, University of Sheffield
  • John Hines 6 episodes
    Professor in the School of History and Archaeology, Cardiff University

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Programme ID: p003k9gm

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p003k9gm

Auto-category: 942 (History of England and Wales)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. The Battle of Eddington in 878 is taken by many historians to be the founding battle of England.