Alhfrith
Alhfrith | |
---|---|
King of Deira | |
Reign | 655 - 664 AD |
Predecessor | Æthelwold |
Successor | Ecgfrith |
Born | ca.630 AD |
Died | 664 AD |
Consort | Cyneburh |
Father | Oswiu |
Mother | Rieinmelth |
Alhfrith or Ealhfrith was a son of King Oswiu of Northumbria and Rieinmelth of Rheged.
In around 655 Alhfrith was appointed by his father as sub-king of Deira, the southern part of the Northumbrian kingdom. He replaced his cousin Æthelwold, who had supported Oswiu's enemy Penda of Mercia in the campaign leading up to the Battle of the Winwaed. Alhfrith was married to Penda's daughter Cyneburh; Cyneburh's brother Peada was doubly Alhfrith's brother-in-law as he later married Alhfrith's sister Ealhflæd.
At the Synod of Whitby in 664, Alhfrith was the chief supporter of Wilfrid. Bede, in the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (Book III, chapter 14), states that Alhfrith attacked his father. No further details are known. Bede's Lives of the Abbots states that Alhfrith asked his father for permission to accompany Benedict Biscop on a pilgrimage to Rome, but the dating of this request is unclear. With this, Alhfrith disappears from the record.
While generally presumed to be the son of Aldfrith, a half-brother of Alhfrith, the possibility is admitted that Osric may have been a son of Alhfrith and Cyneburh.
References
- Kirby, D.P., The Earliest English Kings. London: Unwin Hyman, 1991. ISBN 0-04-445691-3
- Yorke, Barbara, Kings and Kingdoms in Early Anglo-Saxon England. London: Seaby, 1990. ISBN 1-85264-027-8
External links
Wikisource has the text of the 1885–1900 Dictionary of National Biography's article about Alchfrith. |
- Ealhfrith 1 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
- Bede's Ecclesiastical History and the Continuation of Bede (pdf), at CCEL, translated by A.M. Sellar.
- Bede's Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow at Internet Medieval Sourcebook, translated by J. A. Giles.