Everything about Eorpwald Of East Anglia totally explained
Eorpwald was the son of
Raedwald and ruled as
King of East Anglia from c
624 to c
627.
He received Christian teaching and
sacraments (for example baptism and communion at least) for himself and on behalf of his kingdom or nation, and became the first English king to suffer death as a consequence of his Christian faith, though the motive for his assassination was probably political as well as religious. The primary source for Eorpwald is
Bede's
Ecclesiastical History, ii.15.
Eorpwald's inheritance
Raedwald himself was the senior brother of
Eni, and his use of the letters R and E in the name-fastening of the next generation reproduced that of his own. On this principle Eorpwald would be junior to his brother Raegenhere, who was slain at the
Battle of the River Idle in 616, and therefore it's inferred that he was Raedwald's younger son, and became heir to Raedwald's kingdom after Raegenhere's death. In the later part of his rule, 616-624, Raedwald wasn't only King of the East Angles within the Wuffinga dynastic succession, but also the most powerful king amongst the rulers of the various English kingdoms, occupying the role which was later described by the term
Bretwalda. At his death, for which a late series of annals supplies the date 624, the regnal power of East Anglia reverted to the kingdom only, while the authority of supreme ruler lay open to whichever king might be powerful enough to seize it.
Inheritance of senior kingship
Raedwald had achieved his position by bringing
Northumbria firmly under fealty when, following the battle of 616, he returned
Edwin to his rightful position as ruler of
Deira (centred at
York) and made possible his dominion of
Bernicia, the northern Northumbrian province. While Edwin was in exile at Raedwald's court, shortly before the battle of 616, he was offered certain encouragements that he should some day become a greater king than any Englishman before him, if he'd consider accepting Christian teaching. If the account of that conversation contains truth, it signifies that Raedwald foresaw Northumbria's future power and intended that Edwin should succeed to the highest authority after him.
Soon after Raedwald's death Edwin married the sister of the Christian king
Eadbald of Kent. An attempt on his life was made by the
West Saxons, whose ruling house had ancient links with that of Bernicia. Edwin suppressed the West Saxons in a military expedition. He then accepted Christian teaching for himself and was baptised with other members of his family and court by
Paulinus of York, a member of the Gregorian mission. The first conversion of Anglo-Saxon Northumbria was therefore within the Roman Church. York had formerly been an important bishopric of the Church in
Roman Britain.
Conversion of Eorpwald
Edwin and Paulinus undertook the conversion of the Northumbrian people, and also those of
Lindsey (
Lincolnshire) and East Anglia. (Lindsey had been within Raedwald's secure dominion because its western frontier was the scene of the Battle of the Idle just over the
Lincolnshire-
Nottinghamshire border, near
Gainsborough). This Christian patronage helped to affirm Edwin's position as senior ruler of the English, and until his final confrontation with
Cadwallon ap Cadfan of
Gwynedd in 632-3 he also held the British or
Welsh powers under his dominion.
It was at Edwin's prompting that Eorpwald, together with his kingdom, received the Christian faith and sacraments. Eorpwald was therefore not yet a Christian during his father's lifetime nor at his own accession. It isn't known whether his baptism took place in East Anglia, Northumbria or Kent, but it's very likely that Edwin, now a senior ruler, was his sponsor at baptism. The conversion had the political benefit of bringing the entire eastern seaboard from Northumbria to
Kent under the dominion of Christian rulers in alliance with Edwin, with the single exception of the
East Saxons.
Death
Not long after his conversion Eorpwald was slain (
occisus) by a
heathen (
viro gentili) named
Ricberht. The circumstances are not recorded, so that it isn't known whether Ricberht represented an internal East Anglian opposition to Christian rule, or if he was an emissary from an external power wishing to diminish Edwin's influence. Eorpwald shares his feast as royal saint and martyr with Edwin of Northumbria, 4 October.
Bede states that after the slaying of Eorpwald the kingdom reverted to heathen rule (
in errore versata est) for three years. This doesn't necessarily mean an overt struggle between the worship of the
Anglo-Saxon gods and the worship of Christ, but could equally express a conflict in the political allegiances which Edwin's rise to power had prompted. The attribution of these three years to a supposed rule of Ricberht is a banner of convenience, though the fact that his name was remembered at all (when East Anglian history of this period is dependent upon very fragmentary records) indicates that he was a person of some importance.
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