- Five Burghs
The Five Burghs or more usually The Five Boroughs or The Five Boroughs of the
Danelaw were the five main towns of DanishMercia (what is now theEast Midlands ). These wereDerby ,Leicester , Lincoln,Nottingham and Stamford. The first four would later becomecounty town s.Establishment and rule
After harrying much of England, the Viking army under
Ivarr the Boneless wintered atRepton in 874, where KingBurgred of Mercia was unable to dislodge them and was then expelled. Ceolwulf II was installed as the Mercian king by the Vikings, who returned in 877 to partition Mercia. The west of the kingdom went to Coelwulf II, whilst in the east the Five Boroughs began as the fortifiedburh s of five Danish armies who settled the area and introduced their native law and customs (seeDanelaw for more details).Each of the Five Boroughs was ruled as a Danish
Jarldom , controlling lands around a fortified burh, which served as the centre of political power [ [http://www.btinternet.com/~simonmarchini/History/Danish_History.htm Measham History: Danish Period] . Retrieved on2008-01-14 ] . These rulers were probably initially subject to their overlords in the Viking Kingdom ofJorvik (orYork )Walker, Ian W (2000). "Mercia and the Making of England" Sutton ISBN 0-7509-2131-5] and operated their armies sometimes independently but often in alliance with rulers of their neighbours. In addition to the Five Boroughs there were also a number of very large Danish settlements to the south, includingNorthampton andBedford which existed in a similar fashion.Derby
_da. Djúra-bý. Although the area was settled by Danes from 877, it was not under English threat until 913 when Lady
Aethelflaed of Mercia campaigned deep into Danish territory and established a burh at nearbyTamworth . In 917 Aethelflaed launched her first offensive foray and selected thefortress at Derby as her target. At that time the local ruler had probably joined with the armies from Northampton and Leicester in a number of raids to attack Mercia. Aethelfled took advantage of the weakened burh, and successfully assaulted the town in July 917; the whole region subsequently being annexed into English Mercia.The Danes may well have established their military headquarters on former Roman fort of
Derventio (Little Chester) [Fellows-Jensen, Gillian (1994) "The Vikings and their Victims: The Verdict of the Names" Viking Society ISBN 0-903521-39-3 p19] . This convert|6|acre|m2|sing=on [ [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=50714 British History Online: Antiquities, Derbyshire.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] rectangular fort would have given the burh the equivalent of "c." 500 hides. The Vikings had camped at nearbyRepton in 874, and had abandoned it a year later after suffering significantly from disease during their stay (leading to the discovery of a grave containing 245 bodies).Leicester
One of the more formidable Danish burhs, the local ruler combined his army with that of Northampton and raided the West Saxon territories of Bedfordshire and Oxfordshire in 913, and defied King
Edward the Elder to siege theWest Saxon burh ofHertford . This provokedAethelflaed to move her armies up to the fringes of Danish occupied territory around Leicester in 914 and to construct a burh atWarwick . In July 917, as part of a three-pronged assault, the combined forces of Leicester and Northampton, and possibly Derby, laid siege to the Mercian burh atTowcester . Isolated by the loss of Derby and Northampton later that year, the Mercian army returned in early 918 to ravage the local countryside, and as a result the fortress surrendered peacefully to Aethelflaed's troops.Relieved of English rule by King Olaf of York in 941, King
Edmund I besieged the Viking army at Leicester the same year. Olaf and his advisorWulfstan I, Archbishop of York , both escaped and the siege was lifted after a peace negotiation ceded the Five Boroughs to the Kingdom of York. Jarl Orm, the likely ruler of Leicester at the time (and attested charters between 930 and 958 [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20nobility.htm Anglo-Saxon Nobility: Danish Origin.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] ) married his daughter to King Olaf later that year to cement the alliance. The burh may have made use of the walls of the Roman Leicester (Ratae Corieltauvorum ), of approx convert|7800|ft|m|abbr=on [ [http://www.roman-britain.org/rb_towns.htm Romain-Britain.org: Romano-British Walled Towns.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] ("c." 1900 hides).Lincoln
The burh at Lincoln guarded the route between Wessex and
York , and was protected from much of the Anglo-Danish fighting due to its isolated location. The Lincoln Danes settled the area formerly occupied by the Anglo-SaxonKingdom of Lindsey , where the Vikings had previously wintered in the nearby fortress ofTorksey in Lindsey from 873 to 874. Lincoln probably surrendered in 918 following the capitulation of all the Danish territories on the border of Mercia and Wessex. As a formerRoman legionary town, the burh may have based its walls on the old fortress of 41 acres [ [http://www.roman-britain.org/places/lindum.htm Roman-Britain.org: Lindum.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] ("c."1300 hides).Nottingham
The Viking army under Ivar the Boneless and
Halfdan Ragnarsson first occupied Nottingham in 868 and subsequently set up winter quarters there. Burgred and his West Saxon allies laid siege, but made peace and allowed the Vikings to retreat after little serious fighting in 869. Danish reoccupation and settlement began in 877, and lasted until the assault by Edward of Wessex in the summer of 918. Edward constructed a second burh on the opposite side of theTrent in 920 to further fortify the area from Danish attack. Saxon Nottingham was known to have covered about 39 acres [ [http://nottinghamchurches.org/history/city.htm Notingham Churches: City History.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] , which may have put the burh at "c." 1300 hides.tamford
The area around Stamford was invaded by West Saxon
Ealdorman Aethelnoth in the summer 894, but the town was not besieged and Danish rule was unaffected. The end came when King Edward assaulted Stamford in late May 918 which soon fell to the army of Wessex. Later that year Edward built a second burh on the south side of theRiver Welland . From Roffe, the ramparts of the northern burh may have been of approx 3100 ft ("c." 750 hides), and the Edwardian burh of around 2700 ft ("c." 650 hides) [ [http://www.roffe.co.uk/articles/stamfordorigins.htm Roffe: Stamford Origins.] Retrieved on 2008-01-15.] .The Danish Burhs to the south
The following burhs were not part of the Five Boroughs, but were Danish settled towns with large armies and ruled in a similar manner. These Danes often acted in allegiance with those of the Five Boroughs and the Danish King of East Anglia.
Northampton
First recorded invading newly ceded Mercian territories with their allies in 913, the Northampton Danes were initially very successful. However, on their return they were defeated by local Mercian forces near
Luton , losing many horses and weapons. In December 914, their strength was further depleted when a number of Northampton Danes submitted to Edward at Bedford. With the loss of Derby and East Anglia and the advance of King Edward, their ruler, Jarl Thurferth, and the men of Northampton and Cambridge submitted to the West Saxons in 917. Thurferth remain the client ruler, and attested four charters of KingÆthelstan dated between 930 and 934.Northampton was later incorporated in the enlarged Earldom of East Anglia under
Æthelstan Half-King in the 930s. In 941, then in the hands of the Mercians, Northampton faced an unsuccessful siege by King Olaf of York. The 'army' of Northampton was still in existence in 984 when they were recorded witnessing the sale of land. The size of the Anglo-Danish burh at Northampton has been estimated have ramparts convert|3000|ft|m|abbr=on in length [Blanchard, Ian (2007). "The Twelfth-Century: A Neglected Epoch in British Economic and Social History, Chapter 8 Burhs and Borough" Newlees p165] (equivalent to "c." 700 hides), making it one of the smaller Danish burhs.Bedford
The Danish burh was first under threat from the advance of the West Saxon army in 914. In November that year Bedford was surrounded by in a pincer movement by Edward, and the ruling Jarl Thurketel submitted with all of his followers. Edward returned in November 915 to the Danish-held fortress, this time taking direct control of it and building a second burh on the south bank of the River
Ouse . Thurketel then became Edward's client, until he permitted the Danish ruler to leave with his followers for France in the summer of 916. In July 917 the DanishEast Anglian army advanced toTempsford and launched an attack to recover Beford. The Danish army was defeated and put to flight. It was later incorporated into the enlarged Earldom of East Anglia in the early 10th century.Huntingdon
The Danes of
Huntingdon were allies with the East Anglian Danes when they advanced toTempsford and built a new fortress in July 917. From here, the joint army attempted to recover the recently fallen burh at Bedford, but were severely defeated and put to flight by the English garrison. The burh was occupied by the Edward's West Saxon army shortly afterwards.Cambridge
Cambridge was first occupied by the Danes under kings Guthrum, Osketel and Anwend in 875, whose armies took up quarters there over the winter. In 911 it was first threatened by Edward, who built an opposing burh at
Hertford . With the fall of Huntingdon, it left Cambridge the last independent host which Danish East Anglia could rely on, however the tide had turned and the Danes of Cambridge submitted to Edward in late 917.Anglo-Saxon and Danish reconquest
Danish rule of the Five Boroughs was lost following the English reconquests under Aethelflaed of Mercia and Edward the Elder of Wessex during 916 and 917. The area was subsequently ruled by the
Earls of Mercia until King Olaf of York reoccupied the five former Danish burhs following a major offensive in 941, perhaps assisted by local Danish leaders. Danish rule was not restored for long before King Edmund recovered the Five Boroughs in 942.It is at this time the Five Boroughs are first recorded in an English poem known as the "Redemption of the Five Boroughs"Stenton, F. M. (1971). "Anglo-Saxon England" Third Edition Oxford: Oxford University Press ISBN 978-0-19-280139-5] . For many years afterwards the Five Boroughs were a separate and well defined area of the country where rulers sought support from its leaders, including Swein Folkbeard who gained the submission of the Five Boroughs in 1013, before going on to be king of England.
In 1015 there is a unique reference to the 'Seven Boroughs', which may have been the additional of Torksey and York.
Earldom of the Five Boroughs
Following Danish conquest in 1016, Earl Sired succeeded to the newly created Earldom of the Five Boroughs under King
Canute in 1019 [ Falkus, Malcolm & Gillingham, John (1989). "Historical Atlas of Britain" Kingfisher ISBN 0-86272-395-0 p52] . By 1035 the Earldom had been subsumed into that ofLeofric, Earl of Mercia , and it was to longer form a formal administrative unit in future.ee also
*Danelaw
*Treaty of Wedmore References
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