Eni of East Anglia

Eni of East Anglia

Eni or Ennius was a supposed early 7th century King of East Anglia. He was certainly the son of Tyttla and brother of Raedwald, both Kings of East Anglia.

There is no historical mention of Eni as a King of the East Angles, nor is there any clear evidence that he was one. The principal references to him are in Bede's Ecclesiastical History, and in the East Anglian dynastic tally preserved in the "Anglian Collection". The tally is not a regnal list but a series of genealogical affiliations - hence it does not mention Raedwald, who was not a direct ancestor of the line of Eni.

It is possible, but nowhere indicated, that Raedwald associated Eni to his power as an East Anglian regent or sub-king during the period of his own ascendancy, 616-624. The sources we have indicate that Eorpwald, Raedwald's son, succeeded his father.

Eni is identified by Bede as the father of three East Anglian Kings, namely Anna (r. c636-654), Aethelhere (r. 654) and Aethelwold (r. 654-664). In the Anglian Collection tally he is also the grandfather of King Ealdwulf (r. 664-713), whose father was Aethilric son of Eni ("Ening"). Since the power reverted to Ealdwulf in 664 after the rule of his uncles, it is often supposed that Aethilric was an elder brother of Anna, Aethelhere and Aethelwold, and may be the same person as King Ecgric, who shared the throne with Sigeberht (c 629-634) and died with him in 636. Hereswith, Ealdwulf's mother, had already left East Anglia for a monastic life in Gaul by 647 (Bede, History, iv.23) so Athilric had probably died by then.

Many of Eni's descendants appear to have been extremely devout Christians, and as an immediate member of Raedwald's household he must certainly have been aware of, and possibly even shared in, Raedwald's baptism, which occurred in Kent under the sponsorship of King Aethelbert of Kent before 616, at the hands of the mission sent by Pope Gregory I. Eni's devout son Anna was presumably resident at Exning in 631 when Anna's daughter Etheldreda (Saint Audrey) was born there. Exning is close to the Isle of Ely where, at "Cratendune", Saint Augustine of Canterbury himself (d. c604) is stated (in "Liber Eliensis") to have established a church. It is possible, therefore, that the Christianity of Eni's descendants had its origins in an East Anglian phase of Augustine's own mission.

ee also

*Wuffing dynasty family tree

ources

*B. Colgrave and R.A.B. Mynors (eds). (1969). "Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People". Oxford.
*D.N. Dumville. (1976). 'The Anglian Collection of Royal Genealogies and Regnal Lists' in "Anglo-Saxon England 5", 23-50.
*S. Plunkett. (2005). "Suffolk in Anglo-Saxon Times". Stroud: Tempus Publishing


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Eni (East Anglia) — Eni († um 618) entstammte der angelsächsischen Königsdynastie der Wuffinger aus dem Königreich East Anglia. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Quellen 3 Weblinks 4 Einzelnachweise …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tytila of East Anglia — Tytila (died c. 593) was the King of East Anglia from about 578 until his death, and the father of Raedwald of East Anglia and his brother Eni of East Anglia.His name is the Anglo Saxon form of the Gothic Totila.ee also*Wuffing dynasty family… …   Wikipedia

  • Ecgric of East Anglia — Ecgric was an East Anglian king who shared the kingdom with his kinsman Sigebert until the abdication of Sigebert c 634. He then ruled alone until c 636, when both were killed together in a battle defending East Anglian from a Mercian military… …   Wikipedia

  • Ælfwald of East Anglia — Ælfwald was the son of Ealdwulf and became king of the East Angles upon his father s death, ruling from c.713 to 749.Although the 36 years of Ælfwald s reign fell short of Ealdwulf s 49, it was still a considerable achievement. The two reigns… …   Wikipedia

  • Ealdwulf of East Anglia — Ealdwulf or Aldwulf was King of East Anglia from 663 to c. 713.Ealdwulf s reign of forty nine years was extraordinary in length: only Æthelberht of Kent s (c 560 616), Ethelbald of Mercia s (716 757) and Offa of Mercia s (757 796) are comparable …   Wikipedia

  • Æthelhere of East Anglia — Æthelhere (died November 15, 655) was a King of East Anglia (653/654 ndash;655). He succeeded his brother King Anna. Æthelhere s family and origins Æthelhere was probably the third of the sons of Eni (brother of Raedwald), of whom four are… …   Wikipedia

  • Anna of East Anglia — Anna was a mid 7th century King of East Anglia. He was the nephew of Raedwald of East Anglia, and probably the second of the sons of Eni, Raedwald s brother, to hold the kingdom, ruling ( c . 636 ndash;653/654).FamilyAnna is always referred to by …   Wikipedia

  • Æthelwold of East Anglia — Æthelwold was King of East Anglia from c. 654 until his death in 664. He was probably the fourth of the sons of Eni, Rædwald s brother, to hold that authority. His rule spanned the last decade in which the Roman rite and the Celtic rite of… …   Wikipedia

  • Sigeberht of East Anglia — (also known as Saint Sigebert) was King of East Anglia from c 629 to c634. He was the first English king to receive a Christian baptism and education before coming into his regnal power, and the first to abdicate in order to enter the monastic… …   Wikipedia

  • Eorpwald of East Anglia — Eorpwald was the son of Raedwald and ruled as King of East Anglia from c 624 to c627.He received Christian teaching and sacraments (i.e. baptism and communion at least) for himself and on behalf of his kingdom or nation, and became the first… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”