Kingdom of Essex
The Kingdom of the East Saxons, today referred to as the Kingdom of Essex, was one of the seven traditional kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. It was founded in the 6th century and covered the territory later occupied by the counties of Essex, Hertfordshire, Middlesex and Kent. The last king of Essex was Sigered of Essex and in 825, he ceded the kingdom to Ecgberht, King of Wessex.
Extent
The kingdom was bounded to the north by the River Stour and the Kingdom of East Anglia, to the south by the River Thames and Kent, to the east lay the North Sea and to the west Mercia. The territory included the remains of two provincial Roman capitals, Colchester and London. The early kingdom included the land of the Middle Saxons, later Middlesex, most if not all of Hertfordshire and may at times have included Surrey. For a brief period in the 8th century, the Kingdom of Essex controlled what is now Kent.The modern English county of Essex maintains the historic northern and the southern borders, but only covers the territory east of the River Lea, the other parts being lost to neighbouring Mercia during the 8th century.
In the Tribal Hidage it is listed as containing 7,000 hides.
History
Although the kingdom of Essex was one of the kingdoms of the Heptarchy, its history is not well documented. It produced relatively few Anglo-Saxon charters and no version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; in fact the only mention in the chronicle concerns Bishop Mellitus. As a result, the kingdom is regarded as comparatively obscure. For most of the kingdom's existence, the Essex king was subservient to an overlord – variously the kings of Kent, Anglia or Mercia.Origin
Saxon occupation of land that was to form the kingdom had begun by the early 5th century at Mucking and other locations. A large proportion of these original settlers came from Old Saxony. According to British legend the territory known later as Essex was ceded by the Britons to the Saxons following the infamous Treachery of the Long Knives, which occurred ca. 460 during the reign of High King Vortigern. Della Hooke relates the territory ruled by the kings of Essex to the pre-Roman territory of the Trinovantes.The kingdom of Essex grew by the absorption of smaller subkingdoms or Saxon tribal groups. There are a number of suggestions for the location of these subkingdoms including:
- The Rodings,
- the Haemele, Hemel Hempstead
- Vange - "marsh district"
- Denge
- Ginges
- Berecingas - Barking, in the south west of the kingdom
- Haeferingas in the London Borough of Havering
- Uppingas - Epping.
Essex monarchy
The Essex kings issued coins that echoed those issued by Cunobeline simultaneously asserting a link to the first century rulers while emphasising independence from Mercia.
The tomb of Sæbbi of Essex was visible in Old St Paul's Cathedral until the Great Fire of London of 1666 when the cathedral and the tombs within it were lost.
Christianity
The earliest English record of the kingdom dates to Bede's Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, which noted the arrival of Bishop Mellitus in London in 604. Æthelberht was in a position to exercise some authority in Essex shortly after 604, when his intervention helped in the conversion of King Saebert of Essex, his nephew, to Christianity. It was Æthelberht, and not Sæberht, who built and endowed St. Pauls in London, where St. Paul’s Cathedral now stands. Bede describes Æthelberht as Sæberht’s overlord. After the death of Saebert in AD 616, Mellitus was driven out and the kingdom reverted to paganism. This may have been the result of opposition to Kentish influence in Essex affairs rather than being specifically anti-Christian.The kingdom reconverted to Christianity under Sigeberht II the Good following a mission by St Cedd who established monasteries at Tilaburg and Ithancester. A royal tomb at Prittlewell was discovered and excavated in 2003. Finds included gold foil crosses, suggesting the occupant was Christian. If the occupant was a king, it was probably either Saebert or Sigeberht. It is, however, also possible that the occupant was not royal, but simply a wealthy and powerful individual whose identity has gone unrecorded.
Essex reverted to Paganism again in 660 with the ascension of the Pagan King Swithelm of Essex. He converted in 662, but died in 664. He was succeeded by his two sons, Sigehere and Sæbbi. A plague the same year caused Sigehere and his people to recant their Christianity and Essex reverted to Paganism a third time. This rebellion was suppressed by Wulfhere of Mercia who established himself as overlord. Bede describes Sigehere and Sæbbi as "rulers … under Wulfhere, king of the Mercians". Wulfhere sent Jaruman, the bishop of Lichfield, to reconvert the East Saxons.
Wine and Erkenwald were appointed bishops of London with spiritual authority over the East Saxon Kingdom. Although London was lost by the East Saxons in the 8th century, the bishops of London continued to exert spiritual authority over Essex as a kingdom, shire and county until 1845.
Later history and end
Despite the comparative obscurity of the kingdom, there were strong connections between Essex and the Kentish kingdom across the river Thames which led to the marriage of King Sledd to Ricula, sister of the king, Aethelbert of Kent. For a brief period in the 8th century the kingdom encompassed the Kentish Kingdom to the South. During this period, Essex kings were issuing their own sceattas, perhaps as an assertion of their own independence. However, by the mid 8th century much of the kingdom, including London, had fallen to Mercia and the rump of Essex, roughly the modern county, was now subordinate to the same. After the defeat of the Mercian king Beornwulf around AD 825, Sigered, the last king of Essex, ceded the kingdom which then became a possession of the Wessex king Egbert.The Mercians continued to control parts of Essex and may have supported a pretender to the Essex throne since a Sigeric rex Orientalem Saxonum witnessed a Mercian charter after AD 825. During the ninth century, Essex was part of a sub-kingdom that included Sussex, Surrey and Kent. Sometime between 878 and 886, the territory was formally ceded by Wessex to the Danelaw kingdom of East Anglia, under the Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum. After the reconquest by Edward the Elder the king's representative in Essex was styled an ealdorman and Essex came to be regarded as a shire.
List of kings
The following list of kings may omit whole generations.Reign | Incumbent | Notes |
527 to 587 | Æscwine or Erchenwine | First king according to some sources, others saying son Sledd was first |
587 to ante 604 | Sledd | Son of Æscwine/Erchenwine |
ante 604 to 616/7? | Sæberht | Son of Sledd |
616/7? to 623? | Sexred | Son of Sæberht. Joint king with Saeward and a third brother; killed in battle against the West Saxons |
616/7? to 623? | Saeward | Son of Sæberht. Joint king with Sexred and a third brother; killed in battle against the West Saxons |
616/7? to 623? | Joint king with Sexred and Saeward; killed in battle against the West Saxons | |
623? to ante c.653 | Sigeberht the Little | |
c.653 to 660 | Sigeberht the Good | Apparently son of Sæward. Saint Sigeberht; Saint Sebbi |
660 to 664 | Swithhelm | |
664 to 683 | Sighere | son of a Sigeberht, probably 'the Good'. Joint-king with Sæbbi |
664 to c.694 | Sæbbi | Son of Sexred. Joint-king with Sighere; abdicated in favour of his son Sigeheard |
c.694 to c.709 | Sigeheard | Joint-king with his brother Swaefred |
c.695 to c.709 | Swæfred | Son of Sæbbi. Joint-king with his brother Sigeheard |
c. 709 | Offa | Joint-king during latter part of reign of Swæfred and perhaps Sigeheard |
c.709? to 746 | Saelred | Representing distant line descended from Sledd. Probably joint-king with Swaefbert |
c.715 to 738 | Swæfbert | Probably joint-king with Saelred |
746 to 758 | Swithred | Grandson of Sigeheard |
758 to 798 | Sigeric | Son of Saelred. Abdicated |
798 to 812 | Sigered | Son of Sigeric. Mercia defeated by Egbert of Wessex, sub-kingdom of Essex subsumed into Wessex; from 812 to about 825 held it only as dux. |