The Sisters of Anglo-Saxon King Aethelstan

Map of the Holy Roman Empire in 1000 AD
Map of the Holy Roman Empire in 1000 AD

King Edward the Elder, son and successor of Alfred the Great of England, had many children. There were three women in his life that may or may not have been his wives. With these women, he had five sons and eight or nine daughters. Before Edward died, he began a concerted effort to marry his daughters to leaders on the continent. This program would be continued under Edward’s son and successor Aethelstan when he became king.

The best information we have on Edward’s daughters is from the twelfth century chronicler William of Malmesbury. We have no order of birth or birth dates and in some cases no names or confusing names for these women. Malmesbury does say Edward’s daughters in their childhood gave their whole attention to literature.

The first woman in Edward’s life was named Ecgwynn. There is no record of a marriage between Ecgwynn and Edward. This doesn’t mean they weren’t married. It’s possible there just is no record or they married in secret. It’s also possible they weren’t married as this wasn’t unusual at the time. However, it appears Ecgwynn lived at court with Edward. They had two children: a son Aethelstan and a daughter whose name we do not know. Aethelstan was a favorite of his grandfather, King Alfred, who gave him many royal gifts.

One of the first things Aethelstan did following his coronation in September of 925 was arrange a marriage for his full sister. In January of 926, he went to Tamworth to have a meeting with Sihtric, the Norse king of York. As part of the truce, Sihtric married this unnamed sister in an effort to secure the northern border of the kingdom of Mercia and to ease the threat of a Viking attack from Dublin. Unfortunately, Sihtric died within about six months of the marriage. The sister, now a childless widow, most likely went into a nunnery and lived there the rest of her life.

By the time King Alfred died and Edward the Elder became king, he had a new wife. Presumably, Ecgwynn died, was set aside or went into a nunnery. By 901, Edward had taken a wife named Aelflaed, the daughter of Aethelhelm, ealdorman of Wiltshire. They had at the very least eight children, two sons and six daughters. Edward and Aethelstan made brilliant continental matches for some of these girls.

Sometime between 917 and 919, Edward arranged the first match between his daughter Eadgifu and Charles III the Simple, King of the Franks and a great-great grandson of Charlemagne. They had two sons; Louis d’Outremer and Charles. In June of 922, King Charles was deposed and a new king named in his place. The new king’s reign was short lived but Charles failed to regain his throne and was thrown in prison. Eadgifu may or may not have returned to Wessex but her son Louis definitely did. King Aethelstan brought up Louis as a foster son at his court. Louis remained there until 936 when an embassy was sent to Aethelstan requesting the return of Louis to assume the throne. Aethelstan gave Louis some aid in regaining his throne. After King Charles died, Eadgifu married Herbert, Count of Vermandois and another descendant of Charlemagne. The marriage produced no children.

In 926, Hugh, count of Paris had recently taken the title of Duke of the Franks. He sent an embassy to King Aethelstan asking for an alliance and one of his sisters in marriage. He supposedly sent lavish gifts including saint’s relics which Aethelstan was famous for collecting. After many negotiations and more gift exchanges, Aethelstan chose his half-sister Eadhild to marry Hugh. They apparently had no children and Eadhild most likely died c. 938.

Henry the Fowler of Germany, known as King of the Eastern Franks, ruled a portion of the eastern half of Charlemagne’s empire. In 928, he sent an embassy to King Aethelstan asking for one of his sisters as a bride for his son Otto. Aethelstan actually sent two sisters to Quedlinburg in Saxony. The elder sister was named Eadgyth or Edith. The chroniclers are not sure of the name of the second sister.

Historians state Otto chose Eadgyth and that is was a love match. The wedding took place either in 929 or 930 after a Saxon victory over the Slavs. The match brought great prestige to Henry and would lead to a close relationship between Germany and England for many years. As a marriage present, Otto gave Eadgyth the town of Magdeburg and she came to love the place, making it a royal residence. At first she was the Duchess of Saxony and when Henry died, she became Queen of the Eastern Franks. She is mentioned as interceding for petitioners and helped her husband found the St. Maurice monastery in Magdeburg.

Eadgyth had a son Luidolf c. 930 who became Duke of Swabia and died in 957. Eadgyth also had a daughter named Luitgarde c. 931. Luitgarde married Konrad of Franconia, Duke of Lorraine. Her great-grandson Konrad II became Holy Roman Emperor and founded the Franconian (Salian) dynasty. Otto would be elected as Holy Roman Emperor in 962 and would be known as Otto the Great. Eadgyth died c. 946 and they buried her at St. Maurice. Otto asked to be buried next to her. In 2008, during some excavation work at St. Maurice, researchers found a tomb and a marker with Eadgyth’s name. The bones were thoroughly tested and it is with some certainty they are Eadgyth’s. The remains were reburied in the same tomb.

The second sister who went with Eadgyth to Saxony has a confusing history but the most likely scenario is she was the full sister of Eadgyth, possibly named Eadgifu or Aelfgifu. A chronicle mentions she was sent to be married to a certain Duke of the Alps, most likely a prince of Burgundy.

Edward and Aelflaed had two more daughters named Eadflaed and Aethelhild. Around 919-920, Edward put aside Aelflaed and she joined the community of Wilton as a nun. Eadflaed also joined Wilton as a nun and Aethelhild joined as a lay sister. It appears all three women were buried at Wilton.

Edward put aside Aelflaed to marry Eadgifu, daughter of Sigehelm, ealdorman of Kent. She was about twenty years old and would live another forty years as a widow after Edward died in 924. She remained an active presence during the reigns of her sons Edmund and Eadred and also into the reign of her grandson Edgar the Peaceable. Eadgifu also had a daughter named Eadburh or Edburga.

At an early age, Eadburh showed signs of being pious and her father probably handed her over the Nunnaminster at Winchester at a young age. She became a nun and possibly an abbess. They canonized her as a saint in 972 and some of her remains were transferred to Pershore Abbey in Worcestershire. In the twelfth century, Osbert de Clare, prior of Westminster, wrote a Latin “Life” of Eadburh. Eadgifu may have had another daughter, also named Eadgifu, who married a prince of Aquitaine.

Edward and Aethelstan were very successful in promoting these matches. The number of continental matches of princesses from Wessex during their reigns was unprecedented. They also safeguarded the spiritual afterlife of their family by giving a few women to the church.

Further reading: “Aethelstan: The First King of England” by Sarah Foot, “The Warrior Kings of Saxon England” by Ralph Whitlock, “The Fall of Saxon England” by Richard Humble, “The Bone Chests: Unlocking the Secrets of the Anglo-Saxons” by Cat Jarman

I’d like to express my gratitude to my friend Rania M. for her genealogical work and assistance with this post.

8 thoughts on “The Sisters of Anglo-Saxon King Aethelstan

  1. I hope the princess who found herself married to the Prince in the Alps after being rejected in favor of her sister found happiness. She was the most isolated from her family.

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  2. I too am wondering if my ancestress Eschyna de Molle was related to the Saxon monarchs. I have sent for a book by Barrow which I think may enlighten this question. But even before hearing that part of the story, it is interesting to learn of Eschyna, who “founded” three Scots families with three husbands. Husband #1 was Sir Robert Croce (12th century Renfrewshire), one of the knights who settled Renfrewshire at the call of King David. Her daughter by this marriage, Isabel, is my ancestor through a marriage to their neighbor Robert Pollock. Then, when Sir Robert Croce died, Eschyna married Walter Fitzallen, the first high Steward, and founded the Stewart line in Scotland. When Walter died, she married a man who was either a cousin or who took her name of de Molle because she was an heiress of a lot of land. With this husband, Henry de Molle, she had several daughters, one of whom, Avisa, married the first “Scott” who took the name Scott, and was an ancestress of the Douglas family.
    I have sent for a book by Professor Barrow, who seems to think that Eschyna’s ancestors Utrecht and Liulf de Molle, or possibly Eschyna’s father Thomas de Londonis, was married somewhat secretly to Margaret, a little known daughter of Edgar Aetheling.

    I have an increased appreciation, now, of my grandma from Dundee, who named a daughter Ethelwyn Margaret. The Ethels have a history I didn’t know about when I was young. I got into this research because I have the Stewart-line defect called Porphyria.

    If you have any information related to this, would appreciate having it.

    Mariel

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  3. Hi, interesting article! I am particularly interested in this period because I have traced my ancestry back to Olaf Cuaran, son of Sihtric of York, and according to the chronicler John of Wallingford, the daughter of Edward the Elder. According to a tradition first written down at Bury St Edmund’s, this is St Edith of Polesworth, who after her husband died, founded a convent and later became abbess. Anyways, this is the version I am going with because it allows me to trace my ancestry back to Alfred the Great (and far beyond!).

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  4. Thanks Jo. I do wish the chroniclers were more detailed in the names of the women but it is still a great story. 🙂

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  5. This is fascinating – I had no idea that the early Saxon kings married their daughters to foreign kings and nobles in this way. I love Eadgyth’s story, and the fact that a very unpromising start turned into a love match. There are so many similar-sounding names in that period, and the lack of consistent chronicling must make it a nightmare to research!

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