BretwaldaThe title of Bretwalda was one perhaps used by some of the kings of the kingdoms of England (the so-called Anglo-Saxon heptarchy) in the second half of the first millennium AD. Such a king was considered to be the overlord of several Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. This was not a title, as such, and was certainly not inherited or even maintained within a kingdom. Most Bretwaldas had to fight for overlordship; violence should never be overlooked in Anglo-Saxon politics. The word is derived from the Anglo-Saxon Bretanwealda, "Lord of Britain" — refering to the Saxon king's claim to overlordship of the Britons, or perhaps "wide-ruling". Bede does not use the title Bretwalda, as is commonly thought, for the first seven of the following kings. Bretwalda is an Old English word and Bede was writing in Latin. Bede attributes these kings with holding imperium. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle uses Bede as its source for the first seven kings and adds later kings of Wessex, primarily due to it being of West Saxon origin. The term Bretwalda is a problematic one and is best left in favour of the word 'overlord' which better describes the relationship the king held with the various other kings and peoples of Britain. A Bretwalda, if we are to use the term, exercised overlordship over several other kingdoms, and often these were furthered through marriage. A clear sign of overlordship was a 'Bretwalda' granting land with charters in another kingdom. When a Bretwalda ruled over a larger kingdom, such as a Mercian ruler over East Anglia, the relationship would have been more equal than in the case of a larger kingdom ruling over a smaller one, as in the case of Mercia and Hwicce.
See also\n*Mythical pre-Saxon King of the Britons\n*List of monarchs of England\n*List of British monarchs \n |
||
"It is better to be quotable than to be honest." - Tom Stoppard |
