- Ælfwynn
Ælfwynn ("c." 888–after 919) was the daughter of Æthelred, ruler of English
Mercia , andÆthelflæd , daughter of KingAlfred the Great and herself ruler of Mercia after her husband's death. Following the death of her mother on12 June 918 , Ælfwynn too was for a short time ruler of Mercia. The "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle " states that she was "deprived of all control in Mercia, and was led intoWessex three weeks beforeChristmas ".Ælfwynn's parents may have married as early as 882 and not later than 887. According to
William of Malmesbury , Ælfwynn was the only child of Æthelflæd and Æthelred. The date of her birth is nowhere recorded, but it is presumed that she was born soon after her parent's marriage, perhaps around 888. William's account states that her birth was a difficult one, and that this led her mother to abstain from further sexual relations.Ælfwynn's father spent much of the decade after her birth on campaign with his father-in-law King Alfred and brother-in-law Edward ætheling (later King
Edward the Elder ). By 902 his health was poor and Æthelflæd was from then onwards the effective ruler of Mercia. William of Malmesbury states that Alfred sent his eldest grandson,Æthelstan son of Edward, to be educated at the court of Æthelflæd. William's panegyric on Æthelstan claims that he received a first-class education in Mercia, and it is thought likely that Ælfwynn will have been equally well educated.The first contemporary written evidence of Ælfwynn is dated to around 904, a
charter ( [http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=1280 S 1280] ) recording the lease of land by Æthelred and Æthelflæd for the traditional three lives—those of Æthelred, Æthelflæd and Ælfwynn—in and aroundWorcester from BishopWaerferth and the monks and clerics ofWorcester Cathedral . Ælfwynn did not witness this charter, but she may have witnessed charter [http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=225 S 225] of circa 915, concerning lands aroundFarnborough , and she is very probably the Ælfwynn who witnesses [http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=367 S 367] of circa 903 relating to lands inBuckinghamshire .Ælfwynn's mother appears to have died suddenly in the summer of 918. Unlike her mother, Ælfwynn may have lacked broad support. No opposition to Edward's decision to remove her from power and send her to Wessex in December 918 is recorded by the "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" or elsewhere. Ælfwynn is sometimes considered the last ruler of Mercia, but that kingdom was not entirely absorbed into the kingdom of the Anglo-Saxons, later the
kingdom of England , until much later. Her cousin Æthelstan was ruler of Mercia only before becoming king of the Anglo-Saxons, and so too was King Edgar ruler of the Mercians under his elder brother KingEadwig .There is no certain record of Ælfwynn after her removal from power. It is unlikely that she married and probable that she entered holy orders. It has been suggested that the religious woman named Ælfwynn who is the beneficiary ofcharter [http://www.anglo-saxons.net/hwaet/?do=get&type=charter&id=535 S 535] , a charter dated to 948 in the reign of King
Eadred , should be identified with this Ælfwynn.Rebecca Tingle's 2005 young adult novel "Far Traveler" has an imagined Ælfwynn as its protagonist.
ee also
*
Kings of Mercia family tree References
*
*
*
*
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.