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him. When the battle began, he withdrew from CHA P. the conflict, and waited calmly for the event in a distant position. This secession may have produced a panic among the troops of Penda, or by occupying the jealous attention of part of them, diminished the number which acted against Oswy. The principal leaders of the Mercians fell in defending Penda, and the country happening to be overflowed, more perished by the waters than by the sword.

By the death of Oswin the hexarchy returned; by the death of Penda, a pentarchy appeared; for the kingdom of Mercia was so weakened by the result of this battle, that it fell immediately into the power of Oswy, who conquered also part of

Scotland.

troduces

Mercia.

PENDA, during his life, had appointed one of his sons, Peada to be king of that part of his dominions and conquests which were called Middle Angles; a youth of royal demeanour and great merit. Peada Peada inhad visited Oswy in Northumbria, and solicited his Christiadaughter, Alchfleda, in marriage. To renounce nity into his idols and embrace Christianity, was made the condition of her hand. As his father was such a determined supporter of the ancient Saxon superstition, and was of a character so stern, the princess must have inspired her suitor with an ardent affection to have made him balance on the subject. Peada submitted to hear the Christian preachers; and their three great topics, the resurrection, the hope of future immortality, and the promise of a heavenly kingdom, inclined him to adopt the religion which revealed them. The persuasions of Alfred, the eldest and intelligent brother of the

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BOOK princess, who had married his sister Cyneburga, completed the impression. He decided to embrace Christianity, even though Alchfleda should be refused to him. He was baptised with all his earls and knights, who had attended him, and with their families, and took four priests home with him to instruct his people. 19 The Saxon mind appears to have then reached that state of activity and judgment, which had become dissatisfied with its irrational idolatry, and was thus become fitted to receive the belief of Christianity, as soon as they were influenced to attend steadily to its interesting and enlightening truths. The exertions of the ecclesiastics were successful. Every day, many Mercians, both nobles and laity, became converted.

THE mind of Penda himself had seemed at last to lessen its aversion to the new faith before his fall. He allowed it to be preached in his own dominions to those who chose to hear it; and he took a fair distinction on the subject. He permitted them to believe, if they practised what they were taught. He is stated to have hated and despised those who adopted Christianity, but did not perform its injunctions; exclaiming that those miserable creatures were worthy only of contempt, who would not obey the God in whom they believed. This important revolution of opinions occurred to Mercia about two years before Penda's death. 20 His character was violent and ambitious, but his mind was strong, decided, and of a superior

19 Bede, lib. iii. c. 21. The names of the four priests were, Cidd, Adda, Betti, and Diuma. The three first were Angles, the last an Irishman, ibid.

20 Bede, lib. iii. c. 21.

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energy. If literature and Christianity had im- CHAP. proved it, his talents would have placed him high among the most applauded of the Anglo-Saxon kings.

PENDA's death led to the complete conversion of Mercia. Oswy, after his victory, reigned three years over it, and gave to his son-in-law Peada the sovereignty of the Southern Mercians, whom the Trent divided from the Northern. To read that Mercia beyond the Trent contained but seven thousand families, and in its other part only five thousand ", leads us to the opinion, that its successes under Penda had not arisen from the numbers of its population, but rather from his great military abilities and powerful capacity. From his reign it advanced with a steady and rapid progress. Christianity spread through it with great celerity after Penda's death. Its two first bishops were Irishmen; and the third, though born an Angle, was educated in Ireland.

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In the spring after his father's death, Peada was His assasassassinated at his Easter festival; and, with the sination. report preserved by the chroniclers, that it was from the treachery of his queen. 22

21 Bede, lib. iii. c. 24.

Another tra

22 So Bede, c. 24.; Sax. Chron. 33.; and Malmsb. p. 27. It is not uninteresting to read how characteristically an ancient monk expresses the incident. "The enemy of the human race instigated against him that nature, by which he deprived us of the joys of Paradise; to wit, his wife Alfleda, who betrayed and slew him." Hug. Cand. p. 4. The Norman Rhimed Chronicle also ascribes the crime to the queen :

Alfled la reine engine taunt doluersment,
Ke ele sun barun tuat par graunt traisement.

Ed. Sparke, 243.

BOOK dition, but of slender authority, ascribes it to the arts of her mother, who was still a pagan.

III. 23 It may 655. have arisen from the resentments of those who lamented the fall of the ancient idolatry, which Peada had first subverted in Mercia. He had laid the foundation of the celebrated monastery at Peterborough before he fell, which his brother completed. 24

659. Cenwalch

THE chieftains of Mercia had submitted to the Northumbrian king with an impatient reluctance. They concealed Wulfhere, another of Penda's children, among themselves, till a fit occasion arose of using his name and rights: and after Peada's death, three of them placed Wulfhere at their head, assembled in arms, disclaimed the authority of Oswy, expelled his officers, and made their young leader their king. They succeeded in establishing the independence of their country. WESSEX now began to emerge into activity and Her king, Cenwalch, defeated the Britons, who had imagined, that, after his defeat by Penda, he would prove an easy conquest. 26 Pen in Somersetshire was the place of their conflict: the Britons attacked with an impetuosity that was at first successful, but at length were defeated, and chased,

in Wessex. power.

25

23 Speed quotes Rob. Swapham to this effect, but I have not met with the passage. The Register of Peterborough, Ap. Dugd. i. p. 63., uses the phrase, indigna et immatura morte, without designating the person, whom Ingulf also omits. Huntingdon has merely, ipso occiso, p. 317.

24 Chron. Petrib. p. 1. It was called Medeshamstede, because there was a well there named Medes-wel. Sax. Chron. 33.

25 Bede, lib. iii. c. 24.

26 Huntingdon, lib. ii. p. 317., et facta est super progeniem Bruti plaga insanabilis in die illa. Ib.

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with a slaughter from which they never recovered, CHA P. to Pedridan on the Parrett. 27 This locality would seem to intimate, that it was the Britons of Cornwall and Devonshire who had principally invaded. Animated by this success, Cenwalch sought to revenge on Mercia and Wulfhere the disgrace which he had suffered from his father. A struggle ensued, in which, after some reverses, the Mercians prevailed, and part of Wessex was subjected to the authority of the Mercian king. 28

Christia

ESSEX about this period restored Christianity, Essex rethrough the instrumentality of Oswy. Sigeberht its king came frequently into Northumbria, and Oswy nity. used to reason with him, that those things could not be gods which the hands of men had made; that wood and stone could not be the materials of which Deity subsisted: these were destroyed by the axe and by fire, or were often subjected to the

27" Et persecuti sunt eos usque ad locum qui Pederydan nuncupatur." Ethelwerd, p. 836. So the Saxon Chronicle, hy geflymde oth Pedridan, p. 39.-There is a place on the Parret, in Somersetshire, the entrance of which was called Pedridan muth, perhaps the Aber Peryddon of Golyddan.

28 Matt. West. 216. The issue of this battle has been dif

ferently stated. Ethelwerd, 837., makes Cenwalch take Wulfhere prisoner at Escesdun, or Aston, near Wallingford, in Berks. The Saxon Chronicle, 39., and Flor. Wigorn. 241., as far as they express themselves, imply the contrary. Malmsb. says, the Mercian was at first graviter afflictus by the loss, but afterwards avenged himself, p. 27. The expressions of Bede, that Wulfhere gave the Isle of Wight and a province in West Saxony to the king of Sussex in one part of his life, lib. iv. c. 13., and that Cenwalch, during Wulfhere's life, was gravissimis regni sui damnis sæpissime ab hostibus adflictus, lib. iii. c. 7., fully countenance the idea, that if Cenwalch at first prevailed, the ultimate triumphs were enjoyed by Wulf

here.

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