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Edward of Wessex I "The Elder"
(0870-0924)
Eadgifu of Kent
Deceased
King Edmund of Wessex I "The Elder"
(0921-0946)
Saint Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury
(-0944)

King Eadwig of Wessex
(0941-0959)

 

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Spouses/Children:
1. Ælfgifu of Wessex

King Eadwig of Wessex 1

  • Born: 941
  • Marriage (1): Ælfgifu of Wessex
  • Died: 1 Oct 959 aged 18 2
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bullet  General Notes:

Eadwig, more rarely Edwy (941? \endash 1 October 959), sometimes nicknamed All-Fair or the Fair, was King of England from 955 until his death four years later. The eldest son of King Edmund and Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury, Eadwig was chosen by the nobility to succeed his uncle Eadred as King. His short reign was marked by ongoing conflicts with his family, thegns, and especially the Church, under the leadership of Saint Dunstan and Archbishop Odo.
On the death of Eadred, who had no children, Eadwig was chosen to be king since he was the oldest of the children in the natural line of the House of Wessex. He became king at 16 and displayed some of the tendencies one could expect in one so young, royalty or not.
Historians have not treated Eadwig especially well, and it is unfortunate for him that he ran afoul of the influential Bishop Dunstan (friend and advisor to the recently deceased king, Eadred, future Archbishop of Canterbury and future saint), early in his reign. An incident, which occurred on the day of Eadwig's consecration as king, purportedly, illustrates the character of the young king. According to the report of the reliable William of Malmesbury, all the dignitaries and officials of the kingdom were meeting to discuss state business, when the absence of the new king was noticed. Dunstan was dispatched, along with another bishop, to find the missing youth. He was found with his mind on matters other than those of state, in the company of the daughter of a noble woman of the kingdom. Malmesbury writes, Dunstan, " regardless of the royal indignation, dragged the lascivious boy from the chamber and...compelling him to repudiate the strumpet made him his enemy forever." The record of this incident was picked up by future monastic chroniclers and made to be the definitive word on the character of Eadwig, mainly because of St. Dunstan's role in it.
Dunstan was, after that incident, never exactly a favorite of Eadwig's, and it may be fair to say that Eadwig even hated Dunstan, for he apparently exiled him soon after this. Eadwig went on to marry Ælgifu, the girl with whom he was keeping company at the time of Dunstan's intrusion. For her part, " the strumpet" was eventually referred to as among "the most illustrious of women", and Eadwig, in his short reign, was generous in making grants to the church and other religious institutions. He died, possibly of the Wessex family ailment, when he was only 20.

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bullet  Noted events in his life were:

• Title, 955. 2 King of Wessex


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Eadwig married Ælfgifu of Wessex.


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Sources


1 Denis R. Reid, <i>Royals GEDCOM file 1992</i>, Surety: 3. .... <i>Britannia - http://www.britannia.com/history/monarchs</i>, Surety: 2.

2 <i>Britannia - http://www.britannia.com/history/monarchs</i>, Surety: 2.


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