Eadgifu, Anglo-Saxon Queen

Picture of Queen Eadgifu from "The Saxon Cathedral at Canterbury and The Saxon Saints Buried Therein"
Picture of Queen Eadgifu from “The Saxon Cathedral at Canterbury and The Saxon Saints Buried Therein”

What little historical records we have pertaining to Queen Eadgifu tell us she exercised considerable power. She was the third wife of Edward the Elder, son of Alfred the Great. While she didn’t have much prominence during the life of her husband or her stepson Aethelstan, she came to exert her influence during the reigns of her sons and grandsons. She was the first important queen of the tenth century due to her landed interests and to her role in the family politics of the time.

The best estimate of a birthdate for Eadgifu is c. 901. She was the daughter of Ealdorman Sigehelm of Kent. She owned extensive and widespread landholdings in Kent and held Minster in Thanet, and possibly Ely. Edward the Elder had been living with a woman named Ecgwynn at this father’s court. We don’t know for sure he was married to Ecgwynn but he had two children with her, Aethelstan and an unnamed daughter. In 901, when Edward had been king for two years, he had a new wife named Aelflaed. Together they had at least eight children, two sons and six daughters. Around 919-920, Edward set aside Aelflaed and she became a nun at Wilton where she was joined by two of her daughters. It was at this time Edward married Eadgifu, most likely to gain control of her landholdings since he already had plenty of heirs.

Eadgifu would have been around twenty at the time of her marriage. She was called seo hlæfdige or The Lady of Wessex. She had a son named Edmund who was born in 920/1 and another son Eadred, born in 921/2. She also had at least two daughters. Eadburh was a nun who died c. 960 and Elgiva married Louis, King of Arles. Eadgifu gained more lands during her marriage due to grants from Edward. Edward was to die in July of 924, leaving Eadgifu a widow with young children.

There were three half-brothers to her children who stood to succeed to the throne before her sons; Aethelstan, Edward’s eldest son by his first wife and then there was Edwin and Aethelweard by Edward’s second wife. Aethelweard died shortly after his father in 924 and Edwin died in a mysterious drowning in 933. The succession after Edward’s death was not truly settled for about a year when Aethelstan finally secured his position as king. Eadgifu probably lived as an obscure widow during the reign of Aethelstan, bringing up her children at court. But by the end of Aethelstan’s reign, she had maneuvered herself into a better position because Aethelstan named her sons as his heirs. Aethelstan may or may not have promised not to marry in order to secure their succession.

At the Battle of Brunanburh in 937, King Aethelstan was victorious and Eadgifu’s son Edmund fought at his side. Aethelstan reigned for two more years and died in October of 939. Edmund succeeded him as king at the age of eighteen. Eadgifu appears to have gained sudden prominence in the 940’s after a long period where West Saxon queens remained in obscurity. Her power derived from her status as a widow and the mother of the king. She had more power during her son Edmund’s reign that she ever had before. Edmund was married twice and she eclipsed both his wives, maintaining her power and position.

Eadgifu's son King Edmund I
Eadgifu’s son King Edmund I

It is unlikely she was designated as the actual regent for her sons. She is commonly called The King’s Mother in documents from the period. Eadgifu appears in witness lists as one of the most regularly recorded witnesses of diplomas and charters during Edmund’s reign and is the only woman in the lists. And her name appears directly after the king’s. This meant she was included in the hierarchy of the newly expanded kingdom of her sons.

King Edmund was known as the “Magnificent”. He was a great warrior and possibly had a fondness for spectacle. He was stabbed to death in a brawl at Pucklechurch near Bath in 946. His two sons Eadwig and Edgar were too young to rule so his brother Eadred succeeded him as king. Eadred suffered from some kind of stomach ailment and had trouble swallowing. But his illness didn’t affect his ability to rule and he was a strong warrior. He united the kingdom of England once again after some rifts had occurred.

Eadgifu witnessed even more charters during the reign of Eadred, most granting land to laity and the church. She was a patron of the monastic revival and reform in England. It was always beneficial to garner the support of the saints and the church for one’s family. She influenced her sons to support the church reforms. Payments were frequent between kings, queens and churchmen during this time. She assisted in advancing bishops like Dunstan and Athelwold who were significant in driving the reforms. She maintained a high degree of power during Eadred’s reign by making an alliance with Dunstan. Eadred had no wife to challenge her position. After a long illness, Eadred died at Frome, Somerset on November 23, 955.

With the death of her son, Eadgifu’s position was perilous. Her power was at the mercy of any shift in influence. There was a struggle between her two grandsons Eadwig and Edgar, both teenagers. Eadwig declared his position as king and planned to marry a woman of royal descent named Aelfgifu. She was Eadwig’s third cousin once removed. Dunstan didn’t approve of Eadwig marrying a woman he was so closely related to and started working to replace Eadwig with his brother Edgar. Eadgifu may have supported Dunstan in this plan. Neither one of them wanted to give up what power they had. With the support of some noblemen, Eadwig sent Dunstan into exile from court as well as from the kingdom. He also seized Eadgifu’s lands.

Eadgifu disappeared from court and the record. When Eadwig died suddenly in 959, Edgar asserted his position as king and restored Eadgifu’s land to her. Her role as queen/regent was through and she was rarely at court after 959, most likely in a nunnery. She came out of retirement in 966 to attend a meeting granting additional privileges to the New Minster at Winchester. There was also a family celebration to recognize the legitimacy of Edgar’s new son, born to his third wife Aelfthryth.

Eadgifu’s reputation has been heightened by the supportive position she plays in the Lives of Dunstan and Athelwold. She was very interested in acquiring churches and land and actively promoted the extension of West Saxon power. She may have been, for all intents and purposes a regent in Kent. Eadgifu survived her husband Edward by over forty years. It is believed she died c. 966/7. Associated with the monastery at Wilton, she may have been buried there.

Further reading: “The Kings and Queens of Anglo-Saxon England” by Timothy Venning, “Queen Emma & Queen Edith: Queenship and Women’s Power in Eleventh-Century England” by Pauline Stafford, “Queens, Concubines and Dowagers: The King’s Wife in the Early Middle Ages” by Pauline Stafford, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England” edited by Michael Lapidge, John Blair, Simon Keynes and Donald Scragg, “Edward the Elder: 899-924” edited by N.J. Higham and D.H. Hill

16 thoughts on “Eadgifu, Anglo-Saxon Queen

  1. Great piece, as ever, Susan. I wonder if Eadgifu and Elgiva weren’t corruptions of the title Aelfgyva – which meant a consecrated queen – rather than given names of these powerful women. Kings might marry but their wives could only be entitled queen with consecration in the church and the approval of the pope in Rome. Aelfgyva was the Norman – and perhaps also the Anglo-Saxon – way of designating that a wife (especially when there were multiple wives) had been married in the church, had received the pope’s assent to be recognised royal, and been consecrated as a royal queen by holy rite. This allowed her to witness royal charters and exercise authority in the realm as a regent consistent with your account for Eadgifu.

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    • Thanks for reading Kathleen. I don’t have any information on the nomenclature of Anglo-Saxon or Norman women. However, I’ve come across many women in my research from the 7th C. onwards who were queens, witnessed charters and wielded authority in their husband’s kingdoms without being consecrated. The royal family of Wessex was known for NOT calling their wives “queen” because an earlier King of Wessex, Beorhtric, had a bad experience with his Mercian wife Eadburh. The earliest record of a wife of a king of Wessex being consecrated was Judith of Flanders and she was crowned on the continent before coming to England with King Aethelwulf, father of Alfred the Great. The first record of an English queen being crowned in England was Aelfthryth in 973, wife of King Edgar, the grandson of Eadgifu in this article. Seo hlæfdige (The Lady) was the term used to describe the king’s wife in Old English, consecrated or not and this does not indicate it meant anything less than a Queen. By the time of Emma of Normandy’s arrival in England in 1002, “the Lady” could be applied to a king’s wife, his mother or a consecrated Queen. After Aelfthryth was crowned, it might have become customary to call the king’s wife Queen or in Old English “cwen”.

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  2. Very interesting post, Susan! I wonder if Aelflaed had a choice about becoming a nun at Wilton, along with her daughters? I would so love to go back in time and see these women, their faces, their hair, their clothes. That’s what is so fascinating about history!

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    • Most likely Aelflaed had no choice in the matter Jo and it doesn’t sound like this was an unusual practice. But maybe she was okay with retiring with her daughters to the quiet contemplation of the nunnery. I was wondering the same thing about the clothes! I had to do an extensive search for portrayals of Anglo-Saxon women and found very little. I don’t think anyone is entirely sure what people wore during this time. And I agree it does make for fascinating stuff. 🙂

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  3. This post is very interesting but the funny part is that I can not pronounced the names, I have to find a way to listen and learn how to pronounced the names. Love to learn about that era.

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    • HaHaHa! I get your point. I’ll look into that. I’ve been researching these people for so long I’m kind of used to it now.

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      • Thank you. I just think it might help me to keep them straight. Were they ever “modernized” into other spellings? Is there a way to link them to different areas or cultures? Hope you understand my curiosity about the names and their spellings and what the name itself may tell us.

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      • I understand completely SGB. A few of the names where I know the English equivalents: Cynethryth most likely turned into Cynthia. Eadgyth would be Edith. Eadgifu’s name would probably become Edgiva. Aelfthryth has been translated into Elfrida. This gives you some idea. A lot of times in the female names the beginnings of the names are Aelf-, Ead-, God- and Aethel-. Aethel means prince. The endings vary from -thryth, -gifu, -giva, -flaed, etc. Godgifu became Godiva as in Lady Godiva.

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