ABSTRACT

Edward the Elder, son and successor of King Alfred, was one of the greatest architects of the English state and yet is one of the most neglected kings of English history. During his 24-year reign, Edward led a series of successful campaigns against the Vikings and by the time of his death controlled most of southern and midland England, with his influence also felt in Wales and the north. Edward the Elder is a timely reassessment of his reign and helps to restore this ruler to his rightful place in English history.
The period of Edward's reign is notably lacking in primary materials for historians. But by drawing upon sources as diverse as literature, archaeology, coins and textiles, this book brings together a rich variety of scholarship to offer new insight into the world of Edward the Elder. With this wealth of perspectives, Edward the Elder offers a broad picture of Edward's reign and his relation to the politics and culture of the Anglo-Saxon period.

chapter 1|11 pages

Edward The Elder's Reputation

An introduction

chapter 3|15 pages

Edward As ÆTheling

chapter 4|27 pages

Edward, King Of The Anglo-Saxons

chapter 5|12 pages

The Coinage Of Edward The Eeler

chapter 6|10 pages

The West Saxon Tradition Of Dynastic Marriage

With special reference to the family of Edward the Elder

chapter 7|13 pages

View From The West

An Irish perspective on West Saxon dynastic practice

chapter 10|16 pages

Edward The Elder's Danelaw

chapter 11|15 pages

The Shiring Of Mercia — Again

chapter 13|21 pages

The North-West Frontier

chapter 14|12 pages

A Kingdom Too Far

York in the early tenth century

chapter 16|18 pages

The Northern Hoards

From Cuerdale to Bossall/Flaxton

chapter 18|14 pages

Dynastic Monasteries And Family Cults

Edward the Elder's sainted kindred

chapter 19|16 pages

On Pa WÆpnedhealfe

Kingship and royal property from Æthelwulf to Edward the Elder

chapter 20|12 pages

The Junius Psalter Gloss

Tradition and innovation

chapter |5 pages

Endpiece