- South Saxons
South Saxons were the followers of King Ælle (see
Aelle of Sussex ) a warlord fromOld Saxony in north-westernGermany who were among the Anglo-SaxonDark Age invaders ofBritannia at the end of the 5th Century. The name "South Saxons" is probably not a self-appellation but rather a geographical distinction made later by scholars inCanterbury inKent for the southernmost Saxon polity ofDark Age Britain. South Saxon in Old English is "Suð Seax" from which we getSussex . The terms "South Saxons" and "Kingdom of Sussex " are interchangeable.The South Saxon kingdom was founded after the final collapse of the Romano-British defence of the "Civitas Regnensis" in
491 when theSaxon Shore fort ofAnderitum (Pevensey Castle ) fell and it's garrison was slaughtered. The campaign of conquest led byÆlle had begun in477 when he first made landing at "Cymenes ora" (somewhere in modernSussex ) with his sons and slew the local Welsh defenders and drove the remainder into theForest of Andred . A subsequent and decisive battle between Ælle's forces and the native inhabitants is recorded by theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle at "Mearcredes burne" in485 before the siege and capture of "Caer Andred" in 491.The dynasty established by King
Ælle - the "Ællingus" - ruled with varying degrees of independence at least until825 when the kingdom was annexed byWessex (the West Saxons). At some pointsSussex was united under one king and at other times the kingdom appears to have been divided between several 'sub-kings' but all were probably from the same ruling clan and could trace their ancestry back to Ælle.Between 491 and 607 there are no known records of the South Saxons apart from that they existed. In
607 it is recorded in theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle that there was war between Sussex and Wessex and this may have been over sovereignty of land to the west called "The Meon" opposite theIsle of Wight or perhaps over sovereignty ofSurrey to the north - this is however, just speculation. In681 the Chronicle records that SaintWilfrid of York was exiled inSussex from his home inNorthumbria where he remained until 686 converting its pagan inhabitants. According toBede ,Aethelwalh , king of Sussex, had been previously baptised. After Saint Wilfrid's apparent miracles in relieving a famine which occurred in Sussex the king granted him eighty-sevenhides (an area of land) in and near the peninsula ofSelsey which remained thereafter the seat of the South Saxon bishopric (and thus also their capital) until theNorman Conquest .Shortly afterwards, however, Aethelwalh was slain and his kingdom ravaged by the exiled West Saxon prince Caedwalla. The latter was eventually expelled by two princes named
Berhthun and Andhun, who thereupon assumed the government of the kingdom. In686 the South Saxons intervened in a civil war inKent , in support of a Prince Eadric, but soon afterwards KingBerhthun was killed and the kingdom subjugated for a time by Caedwalla, who had by now become king ofWessex .In
692 a grant is made by a king calledNothelm of Sussex to his sister, which is witnessed by two other "kings" called Nunna and Uuattus. Nunna is probably Nun, a relative of KingIne of Wessex who fought with him against theWest Welsh , in 710. In 722 we find Ine of Wessex at war with the South Saxons, apparently because they were supporting a rival claimant of the West Saxon throne.After this we hear nothing more until about
765 , when a grant of land is made by a king namedAldwulf . In770 a grant is made by a KingOsmund of Sussex which is witnessed by KingOffa of Mercia . Offa also appears as witness to two charters of anÆthelbert of Sussex in772 . It is probable that about this timeOffa claimed overlordship of the kingdom of Sussex, as several local rulers, Osmund, Ælfwald and Oslac, who had previously used the royal title, now sign with that of "dux".Mercian power collapsed in the years following Offa's death in
796 and the South Saxons re-emerged as an independent political entity. But this was to be short lived indeed because a new power was rising - that of Wessex - and Sussex was to become the first kingdom of the oldheptarchy to be annexed by Wessex in a process which was to bring about the gradual unification of the "Ænglecynne" and the foundation of a united England. Sussex was annexed by KingEgbert of Wessex in825 and from this time onwards they remained subject to theWest Saxon dynasty.It is thought that the "Æellingi" (the South Saxon royal house) continued to govern
Sussex as "eorldermen" (earls) underWest Saxon sovereignty until theNorman Conquest in1066 .
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