INDEX
[The references are to the Pages.]
- Abel, see Elias.
- ‘aedificia,’ special meaning of, in Asser, 46, 47.
- Ælfheah, bishop of Winchester (934-51), 56 n.
- Ælfheah, bishop of Winchester, and archbishop of Canterbury, St. Neot said to have been a friend of (!), 56.
- Ælfric, the homilist, not the author of the Anglo-Saxon life of St. Neot, 55, 56 n.;
- his views on the state of English learning, 82 n.;
- cites the Anglo-Saxon Bede as Alfred’s, but not the Dialogues, 167.
- Æthelbald, king of the Mercians, 14.
- Æthelbald, king of the West Saxons, 39 n.;
- matter relating to, in Asser, 14;
- alleged rebellion of, 16, 76 n., 78, 79, 91;
- alleged incestuous marriage of, 17, 52, 76 n., 80, 87;
- governs Wessex in his father’s absence, 75, 79;
- obscurity of his reign, 86, 87;
- his death, 86;
- his share of his father’s property, 90, 91.
- Æthelberht, king of Kent, father of Eadbald, 80.
- Æthelberht, king of the West Saxons, 39 n.;
- made under-king of Kent, 73-5, 79, 86;
- retains Kent on his succession to Wessex, 86;
- his struggle against the Danes, 79, 87;
- his death, 88;
- Alfred’s succession possibly arranged under, 89 n.;
- his share in his father’s property, 90, 91.
- Æthelflæd, lady of the Mercians, daughter of Alfred, and wife of Æthelred of Mercia, 35;
- translates St. Oswald’s body to Gloucester, 35;
- fortifies Worcester, 111;
- attends the conference of Chelsea, 111;
- military policy of, 111.
- Æthelhelm, ealdorman of Wilts., co-operates against the Danes, 116.
- Æthelnoth, ealdorman of Somerset, services of, against the Danes, 106, 116;
- attacks the Danes at York, 117 n.
- Æthelred, king of the West Saxons, 39 n.;
- matter relating to, in Asser, 14;
- his conduct at Ashdown, 16, 93, 94;
- Alfred secundarius under, 40, 88-91;
- confused with Alfred, and with Aldfrid, 65;
- abstains from claiming Kent, 75, 86;
- succeeds Æthelberht, 88;
- relations of Alfred with, 88;
- Burgred asks help of, 88;
- marches to Nottingham, 88;
- appoints Æthelred to Canterbury, 88 n.;
- his share of his father’s property, 90, 91;
- his children, 91;
- campaign of, against the Danes, 92-5;
- his death, 92, 95;
- his character, 95, 96;
- interred at Wimborne, 98;
- regarded as a martyr, 98 n.
- Æthelred, archbishop of Canterbury, 127;
- appointed by Æthelred and Alfred jointly, 88 n.;
- letter of John VIII to, 127;
- said to have advised the summoning of Grimbald, 138.
- Æthelred, ealdorman of the Mercians, Witenagemóts held by, 13, 14;
- husband of Æthelflæd, 35;
- translates St. Oswald’s body to Gloucester, 35;
- his pressure on the Welsh, 42;
- his semi-royal position, 42;
- London entrusted to, 109;
- fortifies Worcester, 111;
- attends the conference of Chelsea, 111;
- acts as sponsor to one of Hæsten’s sons, 113;
- co-operates with Edward, Æthelnoth, and Æthelhelm against the Danes, 115-6.
- Æthelred II, king of the English, Edgar’s reign regarded as a golden age under, 67.
- Æthelweard, son of Alfred, said to have studied at Oxford, 63.
- Æthelwold, bishop of Winchester, St. Neot said to have been a friend of (!), 56.
- Æthelwulf, king of the West Saxons, 39 n.;
- Athelstan, king of Kent, probably brother of, 6 n.;
- said to have been in holy orders before his accession, 7;
- matter relating to, in Asser, 14;
- Burgred of Mercia asks help of, 85, 88;
- his second marriage with Judith, 17, 78, 80 n.;
- stays at the Court of Charles the Bald, 17, 76, 78;
- has a Frankish secretary, 17, 18;
- Lupus of Ferrières corresponds with, 18 n., 71 n.;
- his liberality, 18 n., 71 n.;
- reduces Wales under Burgred, 37, 85;
- has a shrine made for relics of St. Aldhelm, 47;
- his will, 86, 90, 91, 126;
- St. Neot made son of, 6, 55, 57;
- letter of Leo IV to, 70, 72;
- his visit to Rome, 74-6, 84, 86;
- letter of, to Louis the Pious, 74;
- divides his dominions, 75, 86;
- restores the Schola Saxonum, 76;
- his return to England, 78;
- alleged rebellion against, see Æthelbald;
- his death, 79, 84;
- character of his reign, 85;
- compared with Louis the Pious, 79, 80;
- did not divorce Osburh, 84;
- made under-king of Kent by Egbert, 85;
- Ealhswith, daughter of, 88;
- naval engagement under, 120.
- Æthelwulf, ealdorman of Berkshire, defeats Danes at Englefield, 93;
- slain, 93.
- Alamanni, Charles the Fat, king of, 41.
- Alcuin, letter of, to Offa, 136;
- services of, to Frankish education, 137.
- Aldfrid, king of the Northumbrians, confused with Æthelred, 65.
- Aldhelm, St., bishop of Sherborne, Æthelwulf has a shrine made for the relics of, 47;
- Alfred’s admiration for the Saxon poems of, 141.
- Alfred the Great, king of the West Saxons, uncritical statements relating to, 5-9;
- not the inventor of shires, 6, cf. 121;
- or of chapter-headings, 7;
- not brother of St. Neot, 6, 56, 57;
- probably nephew of Athelstan, king of Kent, 6;
- historical authorities for reign of, 10-68;
- laws of, 121-6;
- preface to, 11;
- relation of, to Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 11, 146-7, 173;
- reticence of Chronicle as to, 11, 12;
- panegyrics of Ethelwerd and Florence on, 12, 197-8;
- not fully appreciated in his own day, 13;
- his reign poor in charters, 13;
- and in saints’ lives, 53;
- will of, 14, 90-1, 126;
- life of, by Asser, see Asser;
- skill of, in hunting, 16, 81, 83;
- book of prayers, &c., always carried by, 16, 140;
- Eadburh, maternal grandmother of, 16;
- mysterious illness of, 16, 25-8, 215;
- corresponds with Elias III, patriarch of Jerusalem, 16, 33, 34, 132;
- educates a young Dane at Athelney, 16;
- relates the story of Eadburh, 16;
- imports Grimbald and John the Old Saxon from the Continent, 17, 137;
- question of grant of Exeter to Asser by, 18-20, 215;
- recovers Exeter from the Danes, 19, 101-2;
- Asser enters service of, 19, 36-7, 42, 137;
- his protection desired for St. Davids, 19, 42;
- Welsh princes commend themselves to, 20, 36, 42, 43;
- sends to Asser, 21;
- born at Wantage, 22, 70;
- legends relating to, 24, 56-9, 62-8, 73 n.;
- foreign relations of, 33, 131-5;
- his fondness for Saxon poems, 38, 82, 83;
- called ‘king of the Anglo-Saxons’ in Asser, 39;
- part of Mercia acquired by, 39;
- power of, exaggerated by later writers, 39, 129 n.;
- occupation of London by, 39, 40;
- his title of ‘secundarius,’ 40, 88-91;
- Anaraut of N. Wales submits and becomes godson to, 42;
- his interest in craftsmanship, 46, 47, 130-1;
- ideal description of Court of, in Asser, 53, 130;
- Danes try to seize, at Chippenham, 59, 102, 162;
- withdrawal of, to Athelney, 57-9, 102;
- confused with Æthelred, 65;
- said to have sent alms to Jerusalem, 65;
- false pedigree of, 65;
- his alleged division of his time and revenues, 65 n., 130;
- his fame obscured by Edgar, 67, 129;
- date of birth of, 69, 70;
- taken to Rome in 853, 70;
- again in 855, 75, 76;
- his confirmation and unction by Leo IV, 71-4, 76;
- story of his learning to read, 81-4;
- abstains from claiming Kent, 75, 86, 89;
- relations of, with Æthelred, 88;
- marches to Nottingham, 88;
- joins in appointing Æthelred to Canterbury, 88 n.;
- marriage of, 91;
- his year of battles, 92-5;
- his accession and his task, 95-7;
- question of his election, 91 n., 97-8;
- his unwillingness to assume power, 97;
- sends alms and missions to Rome, 12, 99, 134-5;
- and India, 99, 134;
- success of, against the Danes at London, 99, 100;
- against a Danish fleet, 100;
- fortifies Athelney, 102;
- his successful campaign of Edington, 102-5, cf. 149, 162;
- Guthrum submits and becomes godson to, 103;
- importance of his victory, 105;
- causes of success of, 105-7;
- relieves Rochester, 107, 108;
- sends a fleet against the East Anglian Danes, 64, 108;
- gains possession of London, 108, 109;
- the second founder of London, 109;
- military reforms of, 110-2, 121;
- holds a conference at Chelsea, 111;
- exacts oaths from the Northumbrian and East Anglian Danes, 113;
- watches and negotiates with the Danes in Kent, 113, cf. 163;
- acts as sponsor to one of Hæsten’s sons, 113;
- relieves Exeter, 114-5;
- restores Hæsten’s wife and sons, 115;
- watches, and blockades the Danes on the Lea, 118;
- his new ships, 118, 119;
- his claim to be the founder of the English navy, 119, 120, cf. 163;
- his administration of justice, 124-6;
- relations of, to the Witenagemót, 126-7;
- to the Church, 127-8;
- attempts to revive monasticism, 128-9;
- provides for foundation of the New Minster, Winchester, 129;
- liberality of, to foreign monasteries, 129;
- three ‘Scots’ come to, 131;
- educational measures of, 135-40;
- writes the Preface to the translation of Gregory’s Dialogues, 142-3;
- character of his religious thought, 143-5;
- body of scribes maintained by, 146 n.;
- said to have translated part of the Psalter, 147-9;
- and the whole of the Bible, 150-1;
- other works ascribed to, 151;
- his intercourse with strangers, 160;
- called ‘England’s darling,’ 161, 210;
- his fondness for similes, 182-3;
- chronology of his literary works, 137-8, 196;
- invests his grandson Athelstan, 196;
- death of, 11, 197-8;
- buried at Winchester, 198;
- lessons of life of, 198-200;
- Henry VI applies for canonisation of, 199 n.;
- comparison of, with other sovereigns, 200-2, 210;
- no deductions to be made from fame of, 202-3;
- his translations valuable as authorities, 10, 11, 155, 164, 174, 181-5;
- their educational purpose, 139, 140, 165;
- their origin, 140;
- the Handbook, 140-1.
- See Augustine, Bede, Boethius, Gregory, Orosius.
- Alfred Jewel, the, 7, 47.
- Aller, Somerset, Guthrum baptised at, 103.
- Amazons, organisation of, 110, 163.
- Anaraut, son of Rotri Mawr, king of N. Wales, submits to Alfred and becomes his godson, 42, 71.
- Anglia, use of term in Book of Llandaff, 39 n.
- Anglo-Saxons, Alfred called ‘king’ of, 39.
- Annals of Asser, or St. Neot, see Neot, St.
- Appledore, Kent, Danes entrench themselves at, 112.
- Aquitaine, kings of, see Carloman, Louis the Pious.
- Arnulf, Emperor, deposes Charles the Fat, 17, 41 n.;
- king of the Eastern Kingdom, 41 n.;
- defeats the Danes on the Dyle, 112.
- Arthur, King, Alfred compared with, 104, 210.
- Ashdown, Berks., solitary thorn marks the site of, 16, 94;
- battle of, and Æthelred’s conduct at, 16, 93, 94.
- Asser, bishop of Sherborne, 20, 127;
- said to have brought Grimbald to England, 18, 139;
- question of his appointment as bishop at Exeter, 18-20;
- his reason for entering Alfred’s service, 19, 36;
- date of his consecration as bishop uncertain, 19, 20;
- called bishop of St. Davids, 20;
- mentioned in the Preface to the Pastoral Care, 20, 52, 138, 143 n.;
- question of his illness, 21;
- returns to St. Davids, 21;
- Alfred sends to, 21;
- his agreement with Alfred, 37, 137;
- expelled from St. Davids by Hemeid, 42;
- suggests the composition of the Handbook, 140;
- said to have helped Alfred with the Boethius translation, 188-9.
- Asser, life of Alfred attributed to, its composite character, 14, 15;
- relation of Simeon of Durham to, 23, 31, 32, 34, 64;
- relation of, to Chronicle, 14, 48-51, 93 n.;
- relation of Florence to, 15, 22, 23, 25, 28, 34, 49, 60, 64;
- excessive self-assertion off, 15-17;
- Frankish element in, 17, 18;
- date of, 19, 29-33, 51, 52;
- corruption of text of, 21-30;
- MSS. of, 22, 32, 33;
- Wise’s edition of, 22;
- relation of Annals of Asser to, 22;
- emendation of text of, 33-5;
- Celtic characteristics of, 35-42;
- knowledge of South Welsh affairs shown in, 35, 42-4;
- does not exaggerate Alfred’s position, 39;
- terminology of, in regard to the Carolingian Empire, 40, 41;
- probably the work of a single hand, 44-8;
- curious meaning of ‘aedificia’ in, 46, 47;
- style of, 47, 48;
- abrupt termination of, 51, 52;
- probably genuine, but to be used with caution, 52, 214;
- idealised description of Alfred’s Court in, 53, 130;
- used by William of Malmesbury, 62.
- Asser, Annals of, see Neot, St.
- Athelney, Somerset, unapproachable position of, 35;
- Alfred’s withdrawal to, 57-9, 102, 105, 106;
- Alfred fortifies, 102;
- Alfred moves out of, 102, cf. 162;
- monastery of, founded by Alfred, 68, 128;
- disorders in, 129, 137;
- young Dane educated by Alfred in, 16;
- abbot of, see John the Old Saxon.
- Athelstan, under-king of Kent, 73;
- not identical with St. Neot, 6;
- probably Alfred’s uncle, 6;
- fights a naval battle, 120 n.
- Athelstan, Mercian priest, chaplain to Alfred, 136.
- Athelstan, bishop of Hereford, 137 n.
- Athelstan, king of the West Saxons, panegyrics on, in Chronicle and Laws, 12;
- William of Malmesbury’s special sources for reign of, 62;
- investiture of, by Alfred, 196.
- Augustine, St., bishop of Hippo, his Soliloquies, 194;
- Alfred’s translation of, 10, 11, 128, 191-6;
- relation of, to the Boethius translation, 194-5;
- not identical with Alfred’s Handbook, 141, 192;
- his De Ciuitate Dei, 157;
- used by Alfred, 191;
- a favourite book with Charles the Great, 191-2;
- his De Videndo Deo, used by Alfred, 191.
- Augustine, archbishop of Canterbury, complaints of, in regard to Welsh baptisms, 42.
- Bardney, Lincs, St. Oswald’s body removed from, 35.
- Basing, Hants, battle of, 93, 95.
- Bede, the Venerable, his Eccl. Hist., 8, 157;
- style of, influenced by Gregory’s Dialogues, 170 n.;
- his bitterness on the Easter Controversy, 173;
- Anglo-Saxon translation of, 8, 166-75;
- relation of, to the Orosius translation, 156-9;
- to the translation of the Dialogues, 169, 170.
- Bel, see Elias.
- Benfleet, Essex, Danes fortify themselves at, 113-4;
- captured by the English, 115.
- Beorhtric, king of the West Saxons, 39 n.;
- Eadburh, wife of, 16, 17;
- dies, 802, 17 n.
- Beornred, king of the Mercians, annexes monastic property, 66.
- Bergues, dép. Nord, France, St. Winnoc’s body translated to, 35.
- Berhtwulf, king of the Mercians, 109.
- Berkshire, ealdorman of, see Æthelwulf.
- Bernard, Frankish monk, pilgrimage of, to Jerusalem, 132-4.
- Bernard of Morlaix, his rhythm De Contemptu Mundi, 178 n.
- Berry, Jehan, duc de, former owner of the Latin-Saxon psalter, 148.
- Birinus, bishop of the West Saxons, baptises Cuthred of Wessex, 72.
- Boccaccio, his treatise De Casibus illustrium uirorum, 178 n.
- Boethius, his treatment by Theodoric, 178-9;
- his Christianity superficial, 180;
- his De Consolatione Philosophiae, 8, 177-80;
- Alfred’s translation of, 8, 10, 135, 177, 180-5;
- its relation to the Orosius translation, 159;
- to the Soliloquies, 194-5;
- wrongly assigned to Werferth, 185 n.;
- mentioned by Ethelwerd, 185;
- question as to Alfred’s authorship of the verse translation of the Metra in, 185-91, 194 n.
- Boniface, St., the apostle of Germany, 137.
- Boulogne, dép. Pas-de-Calais, Danes embark at, 112.
- Brecheiniog, South Welsh kingdom, nearly identical with Brecknockshire; kings of, see Helised, Teudyr.
- Bridgenorth, Shropshire, Danes winter at, 118.
- Bristol Channel, not a barrier between the Welsh and Cornishmen, 19;
- ravaged by Danes, 103.
- Britannia, ambiguous use of term by Asser, 36, 37.
- Brixton Deverill, Wilts., Alfred musters his forces at, 102.
- Brochmail, son of Mouric, joint king of Gwent, submits to Alfred, 42, 44.
- Burgred, king of the Mercians, grants land to Cered, 13;
- Æthelwulf reduces Wales under, 37, 85, 88;
- brother-in-law of Alfred, 53, 88;
- asks help of Æthelred and Alfred, 88;
- expelled by Danes, 53, 100;
- dies at Rome, 98 n., 100, cf. 199;
- reason for his failure to help Wessex, 99;
- imposes taxes to buy off the Danes, 100.
- Burgs, construction of, by Alfred, 110, 111.
- Burgundy, king of, see Carloman;
- count of Upper, see Rudolf.
- Buttington, Montgomery, Danes blockaded at, 116.
- Cambridge, Danes winter at, 100.
- Camden, William, his connexion with the Oxford interpolation in Asser, 24.
- Canterbury, archbishops of, see Ælfheah, Æthelred, Augustine,
Dunstan, Parker, Matthew,
Plegmund.
- Canute, king of England, called ‘king of Germania,’ 41;
- reconciled with the English at Oxford, 67;
- one of the creators of England’s greatness, 200 n.
- Carl, see Carloman.
- Carloman, king of Aquitaine and Burgundy, name correct in Asser, 17;
- called ‘Carl’ in Chron., 17;
- called ‘king of the Western Franks’ in Asser, 40, 41.
- Ceolwulf, king of the Mercians, set up by the Danes, 66, 88, 100;
- exactions of, 66;
- stripped of part of Mercia, 102.
- Cered, receives land from Burgred of Mercia, 13;
- Werthryth, widow of, 13;
- Cuthwulf, kinsman of, 13.
- Charles the Great, Emperor, Eadburh offends, 17;
- Liutgarde, wife of, 17 n.;
- Pippin and Charles, sons of, 17;
- his fondness for ancient poetry, 38 n.;
- begins a Frankish grammar, 38 n.;
- called ‘king of the Franks’ by Asser, 40;
- crowns Louis the Pious, 80 n.;
- divides his dominions, 85;
- Frisians serve in navy of, 120 n.;
- his administration of justice, 125;
- his legislation, 126 n.;
- his liberality to foreign Christians, 129 n.;
- king of Persia sends a clock to, 131 n.;
- relations of, with Irish princes, 131 n.;
- Pippin, father of, 131;
- founds a hospice and library at Jerusalem, 133;
- Court school of, 135;
- his intercourse with strangers, 160;
- his fondness for the De Ciuitate Dei, 191-2;
- comparison of, with Alfred, 200-1;
- Einhard’s life of, see Einhard.
- Charles, son of Charles the Great, unmarried, 17 n.
- Charles the Bald, king of the Franks, 40;
- receives Æthelwulf, 17, 76, 78;
- Judith, daughter of, 78;
- character of, 78;
- investiture of, by Louis the Pious, 196 n.
- Charles the Fat, king of the Franks, 40;
- deposed by Arnulf, 17, 41 n.;
- called ‘king of the Alamanni,’ 41;
- grants West Friesland to Guthfrith, 120 n.
- Charters, fewness of, belonging to Alfred’s reign, 13;
- destruction of, by Danes, 13;
- Frankish elements in, 18.
- Chaucer, his Monk’s Tale founded on Boccaccio, 178 n.
- Chelsea, Middlesex, conference at, 111.
- Chester, Danes fortify themselves at, but evacuate, 117.
- Chichester, Sussex, abortive Danish attack on, 117.
- Chippenham, Wilts., Danes try to seize Alfred at, 59, 61, 102, 162;
- captured by Alfred, 103.
- Chronicle, Anglo-Saxon, relation of Alfred to, 11, 145-6;
- value of, for reign of Alfred, 11-13;
- reticence of, as to Alfred, 12, 13;
- relation of, to Asser, 14, 48-51, 93 n.;
- to Ethelwerd, 51 n., 60;
- to Henry of Huntingdon, 60, 61;
- to William of Malmesbury, 62;
- to Anglo-Saxon translation of Orosius, 146, 157-8;
- chronological error in, 50, 104 n., 108, 110, 112.
- Cirencester, Glouc., Danes retire to, 104.
- Clovis, king of the Franks, receives consular insignia from Constantinople, 72, 73.
- Colne, R., Herts, Danes blockaded on, 114-5.
- Constantinople, Clovis receives consular insignia from, 72.
- Copenhagen, bombardment of, by Nelson, 163.
- Cornwall, episcopal supervision of, 18-20;
- kings of, 19 (see Dumgarth);
- St. Guerier and St. Neot buried in, 26;
- not included in Saxonia, 38;
- St. Neot settles in, 56.
- Corvey, Westphalia, John the Old Saxon, a monk of, 137.
- Croyland, Lincs, monastery of, 66, 67;
- abbot of, see Ingulf;
- monk of, see Tolius.
- Cuthbert, St., part played by, in the legends of Alfred, 62.
- Cuthred, joint king of the West Saxons, baptised by Birinus, 72.
- Cuthwulf, kinsman of Cered, 13;
- buys land of Cered’s widow, Werthryth, 13;
- charter granted to, 13.
- Cynwit, Devon, fort of, surveyed by Asser, 16;
- besieged by the Danes, 44;
- Danes defeated at, 104.
- Danes, generic name for Scandinavian invaders, 87 n.;
- movements of, 12, 49, 75, 87, 88, 92-5, 98-104, 107, 108, 112-8;
- destruction of documents by, 13;
- division of Mercia by, 24;
- Celts take part with, 43, 99;
- in Northumbria, 42;
- winter in Dyfed, and besiege Cynwit, 44, 51;
- monasteries ravaged by, 53, 66, 127, 129;
- Burgred expelled by, 53, 100;
- try to surprise Alfred at Chippenham, 57-9, 61;
- young Dane educated by Alfred at Athelney, 16;
- ravages of, 66, 77, 87 n., 121, 127, 129, 136, 138;
- winter in England, 74, 87;
- mobility of, 106, 107.
- Dante, his use of Boethius, 179;
- his theory of the Empire, 208-9.
- Danubium, see Denmark.
- David, comparison of Alfred with, 149.
- Denmark, called ‘Danubium’ by Asser, 41;
- Canute, king of, 41.
- Devon, men of, resist the Danes, 103, 104;
- ealdorman of, see Odda.
- Driffield, Yorks., Aldfrid of Northumbria dies at, 65.
- Dubslane, one of three ‘Scots’ who came to Alfred, 131.
- Duisburg, on the Rhine, Danes winter at, 40.
- Dumgarth, king of Cornwall, drowned in 875, 19.
- Dunstan, archbishop of Canterbury, St. Neot said to have been a monk under (!), 56.
- Durham, Simeon of, see Simeon.
- Dyfed, South Welsh kingdom, including Pembrokeshire and part of Carmarthenshire, Danes winter in, 44, 51, 103;
- king of, see Hemeid.
- Dyle, R., Belgium, Arnulf defeats the Danes on, 112.
- Eadbald, king of Kent, his incestuous marriage, 80.
- Eadburh, Alfred’s maternal grandmother, often seen by Asser, 16.
- Eadburh, daughter of Offa, and wife of Beorhtric of Wessex, her crimes, and subsequent misfortunes, 16, 17, 79 n.;
- offends Charles the Great, 17.
- Eafa, of Wessex, confused with Offa of Mercia, 66.
- Ealhswith, daughter of Æthelwulf, and wife of Burgred of Mercia, 88.
- Eanwulf, ealdorman of Somerset, alleged rebellion of, against Æthelwulf, 78, 79.
- East Anglia, not included in Saxonia, 38;
- Alfred sends fleet to, 64, 108;
- relation of, to Wessex, 85;
- occupied and conquered by the Danes, 87, 88, 92, 105;
- Danes retire to, 104;
- Danes of, rebel and are punished, 108, 109;
- Alfred exacts oaths and hostages from, 113;
- share of, in the campaigns of 893 ff., 113-5, 117-8;
- kings of, see Edmund, Guthrum, Sigbert.
- Ecgbryhtesstan, identifications of, 102 n.
- Edgar, king of the West Saxons, panegyrics on, in Chronicle and Laws, 12;
- eclipses the fame of Alfred, 67, 129;
- English and Danes reconciled on basis of law of, 67;
- made a Confessor, 67;
- called ‘darling of the English,’ 161 n.
- Edington, Wilts., battle of, 57, 61, 102, 103, 162.
- Edmund, St., king of the East Angles, martyred by the Danes, 88.
- Edmund, king of the West Saxons, panegyrics on, in Chronicle and Laws, 12.
- Edward, king of the West Saxons, son of Alfred, 96 n., 196;
- called ‘the Great,’ 96 n.;
- military policy of, 111;
- defeats the Danes at Farnham, 114;
- blockades them on the Colne, 114-5;
- captures Benfleet, 115;
- document addressed to, 125-6;
- carries out Alfred’s foundation of the New Minster, 129 n.
- Edward the Confessor, king of England, transference of See of Devon and Cornwall to Exeter by, 18, 19.
- Edward I, king of England, comparison of, with Alfred, 200-2;
- bases the constitution on popular representation, 210;
- one of the creators of England’s greatness, 200 n.
- Egbert, king of the West Saxons, Celts under, take part with the Danes, 43;
- advance of Wessex under, 85;
- reduces the Welsh, 85;
- makes Æthelwulf king of Kent, 85;
- his dominions divided at his death, 86;
- his sojourn on the Continent, 86;
- union of England under, 210.
- Egbert, king of part of Northumbria, set up by the Danes, 88.
- Einhard, his life of Charles the Great modelled on Suetonius’ life of Augustus, 10.
- Elfred, see Æthelred.
- Elias III, patriarch of Jerusalem, Alfred corresponds with, 16, 33, 34, 132;
- miscalled Abel, and Bel, 33-4.
- Elised, see Helised.
- Elizabeth, queen of England, ecclesiastical policy of, 211.
- Ely, Cambridgeshire, Hereward’s defence of, 59.
- England, English, kings of, see Æthelred II, Canute,
Edward the Confessor, Edward I, George III,
Henry II, Henry VI, Henry VIII, John,
Richard I, William I;
- queens of, see Elizabeth, Victoria.
- Englefield, near Reading, Berks., Danes defeated at, 93.
- Essex ceded to the Danes, 105.
- Ethandun, identifications of, 102-3 n.
- Ethelwerd, the Chronicler, corruption of text of, 21, 60;
- terminology of, 37 n.;
- relation of, to the Chron., 51 n., 60;
- obscurity of, 60;
- his panegyric on Alfred, 12, 198;
- exaggerates Alfred’s position, 63 n.;
- mentions Alfred’s Boethius, 185.
- Eugenius IV, Pope, Henry VI applies to, for Alfred’s canonisation, 199 n.
- Exe. R., Devon, Alfred blockades mouth of, 101.
- Exeter, Devon, question of grant to Asser of See at, 18-20;
- transference of bishopric to, under Edward the Conf., 18-20;
- Danes steal away to, 49, 107;
- Danes occupy, 101;
- recovered from the Danes by Alfred, 19, 102;
- besieged by the Danes, but relieved by Alfred, 115, cf. 117.
- Faremoûtier-en-Brie (Fara), Lupus and Felix at monastery of, 18 n.
- Farnham, Surrey, Edward defeats the Danes at, 114.
- Felix, Frankish secretary of Æthelwulf, Lupus of Ferrières corresponds with, 17, 18 n.;
- previously at Faremoûtier, 17, 18 n.
- Fernmail, son of Mouric, joint king of Gwent, submits to Alfred, 42, 44.
- Ferrières, dép. Loiret, abbot of, see Lupus.
- Florence of Worcester, relation of, to Asser, 15, 22, 23, 25, 28, 34, 49, 60, 64;
- his panegyric on Alfred, 12, 60, 197.
- France, king of, see Louis, St.
- Francia, term applied to the Carolingian Empire, 41.
- Frankish element in Asser, 17, 18.
- Franks, kings of, see Carloman, Charles the Great,
Charles the Bald, Charles the Fat, Clovis,
Louis the Stammerer, Louis of Northern France;
- Felix, a Frank, 18 n.
- Frisia, wiking settlements in, 119, 120.
- Frisians, serve in Alfred’s navy, 119;
- and in that of Charles the Great, 120 n.;
- language of, akin to English, 119 n.;
- settle in England, 120.
- Fulham, Middlesex, Danes evacuate, 104.
- Fulk, abp. of Rheims, letter of, to Abp. Plegmund, 128;
- doubtful letter of, to Alfred, 138-9;
- abbot of St. Bertin’s, 137-8;
- murder of, 138 n.
- Fyrd, the native militia of the English, reorganised by Alfred, 110.
- Galli, term applied to inhabitants of the Western Kingdom, 41.
- Gallia, term applied to the Western Kingdom, 41.
- George III, king of England, influence of character of, 211.
- Germania, name given by Welsh writers to Norway, 40, 41;
- Bede’s and Alfred’s uses of the term, 40 n., 160.
- Glastonbury, Somerset, St. Neot said to have been a monk at, 56;
- Alfred gives fragment of the True Cross to, 58 n.
- Glewissig, South Welsh kingdom, including the district between lower Usk and Towy, 44;
- king of, see Howel.
- Gloucester, Mercian Witenagemót held at, 13;
- St. Oswald’s body translated to, 35.
- Gregory the Great, Pope, soul of Trajan granted to prayers of, 209;
- his Moralia used by Alfred, 191;
- his Dialogues, 8, 143-4;
- used by Alfred in the ‘Blostman,’ 143-4;
- Bede’s style influenced by, 170 n.;
- Anglo-Saxon translation of, 8, 141, 171;
- two recensions of, 145-6, 169;
- mentioned in Asser, 52, 141;
- cited by Ælfric, 167;
- ascribed to Werferth, 142, 169;
- Alfred writes the preface to, 142-3;
- relation of, to Bede translation, 169, 170;
- his Pastoral Care, 8, 151-2;
- cited in Asser, 52;
- Alfred’s translation of, 8, 10, 152-5;
- Preface to, 11, 20, 52, 136, 139, 140, 143, 193, 196, 199.
- Grimbald, a monk of St. Bertin’s, 137;
- brought to England by Alfred, 17, 137;
- said to have been escorted to England by Asser, 18, 139;
- chronology of his life, 137-8;
- letter of Fulk of Rheims respecting, 138-9;
- made abbot of the New Minster, 139;
- dies, 139;
- helps Alfred with the Pastoral Care, 137, 143 n.
- Gualia, Wales, use of term, 37 n.
- Guerier, St., alleged visit of Alfred to shrine of, in Cornwall, 26, 29.
- Guthfrith, wiking chief, receives a grant of West Friesland, 120 n.
- Guthrum, Danish king of East Anglia, invasion of, 57-9;
- his submission and baptism, 42, 46, 68, 71, 103;
- death of, 109, 110.
- Gwent, South Welsh kingdom, including parts of Monmouthshire and Herefordshire, kings of, see Brochmail, Fernmail, Mouric.
- Hadrian I, Pope, crowns Louis the Pious as king of Aquitaine, 74.
- Hæsten, Danish chief, his military movements, and treacherous negotiations, 113, 115.
- Halfdene, Danish chief, 104.
- Hampshire, men of, rally to Alfred, 102.
- Harold Hardrada, king of Norway, called king of Germania, 41.
- Heahmund, bishop of Sherborne, killed at Marton, 92.
- Helised ap Teudyr, king of Brecheiniog, submits to Alfred, 42, 44.
- Hemeid, king of Dyfed, commends himself to Alfred, 20, 42;
- persecutes St. Davids, 42;
- dies, 43.
- Henry de Ferrers, owns Ashdown Manor in Domesday, 94.
- Henry II, king of England, character of, by Stubbs, 2;
- comparison of, with Alfred, 200;
- English administrative system due to, 210.
- Henry VI, king of England, applies to the Pope for Alfred’s canonisation, 199 n.
- Henry of Huntingdon, his mistakes, 7;
- relation of, to Chron., 60, 61;
- his treatise De Contemptu Mundi, 178 n.
- Henry VIII, king of England, ecclesiastical policy of, 211.
- Hereford, bishop of, see Athelstan.
- Hereward, his defence of the isle of Ely, 59 n.
- Hierosolyma, see Jerusalem.
- Howel, son of Rhys, king of Glewissig, dies at Rome in 885, 19, 44;
- his crime, 19, 44;
- submits to Alfred, 42.
- Hubert, St., forged pedigree of, 57.
- Huntingdonshire, translation of St. Neot’s relics to, 29.
- Iglea, identifications of, 102 n.
- India, Alfred sends alms to, 65, 66, 99, 134;
- first recorded instance of relations between England and, 134.
- Ingulf, abbot of Croyland, Chronicle of, a forgery, but contains genuine traditions, 66, 99.
- Ingwar, Danish chief, 104.
- Ireland, Alfred said to have been sent to, 62;
- a good country for hunting, 83 n.;
- relations of Alfred with, 129, 131-2;
- love of pilgrimage in Church of, 131-2;
- relations of Charles the Great with, 131 n.
- Jacopone, his poem De Contemptu Mundi, 178.
- Jehan de Meun, two French translations of Boethius’ Consolatio ascribed to, 190.
- Jerusalem, Alfred said to have sent alms to, 65;
- three ‘Scots’ go to, 132;
- account of pilgrimages to, 132-4;
- Charles the Great founds a hospice and library at, 133;
- patriarchs of, see Elias, Theodosius.
- Joan of Arc, Alfred compared with, 107.
- John, king of England, character of, by Stubbs, 2.
- John the Old Saxon, abbot of Athelney, 66 n., 137;
- John Scotus Erigena confused with, 7;
- military skill of, 16, 66 n.;
- brought to England by Alfred, 17, 137;
- two of his monks try to murder, 129, 137;
- helps Alfred with the Pastoral Care, 138, 143 n.
- John VIII, Pope, letter of, to Abp. Æthelred, 127-8.
- John Scotus Erigena, commonly confused with John the Old Saxon, 7.
- Joinville, his biography of St. Louis, 202.
- Judith, second wife of Louis the Pious, 80.
- Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald, marriage with Æthelwulf, 17, 78, 80 n.;
- alleged marriage with Æthelbald, 17, 52, 76 n., 80.
- Kenny Castle, see Cynwit.
- Kent, kings of, see Æthelberht, Eadbald;
- under-kings of, see Æthelberht, Æthelwulf, Athelstan;
- was Alfred ever under-king of? 74;
- makes a separate agreement with the Danes, 87.
- Langtoft, confusions of, 65.
- Latin, the sole vehicle of Western mediaeval culture, 81, 82, 136;
- decline of, in England, 82, 139, 140;
- influence of, on early vernacular prose, 171.
- Law, character of Anglo-Saxon, 121-2.
- Lea, R., Danes fortify themselves on, but are forced to retire from, 117-8.
- Leicester, confused with Chester, 9 n.;
- bishop of, see Werebert.
- Leigh, near Westbury, Wilts., Alfred advances to, 102.
- Leo IV, Pope, letter of, to Æthelwulf, 70, 72;
- confirms and anoints Alfred, 71-4, 76;
- fortifies the Leonine suburb, 77;
- his death, 76.
- Liutgarde, wife of Charles the Great, dies 800, 17 n.
- Llandaff, Book of, cited, 37, 39 n., 43, 44.
- Llunwerth, bishop of St. Davids, succeeds Nobis, 20, 44.
- Llwmbert, see Llunwerth.
- London, captured by the Danes in 851, 109;
- Danes winter at, 99, 100, 109;
- retain possession of, under treaty of Wedmore, 105, 109;
- acquired by Alfred, 108, 109;
- Alfred the second founder of, 109;
- committed to the care of ealdorman Æthelred, 109;
- conference on fortifications of, 111;
- reinforcements raised from, 115;
- captured Danish ships brought to, 115;
- garrison of, fail to storm Danish lines, 117.
- Long Dean, Wilts., Witenagemót held at, 126.
- Lothair I, Emperor, assists Leo IV to fortify the papal suburb, 77.
- Louis the Pious, Emperor, refuses to read the old heathen poems, 38 n.;
- crowned king of Aquitaine, at the age of three, 74;
- letter of Æthelwulf to, 74;
- his sons rebel against, 79;
- compared with Æthelwulf, 79;
- crowned by Charles the Great, 80 n.;
- investiture of Charles the Bald by, 196 n.
- Louis the Stammerer, king of the Franks, 40.
- Louis, king of Northern France, called king of the Franks, 40.
- Louis, St., king of France, comparison of, with Titus, 161 n.;
- with Alfred, 200, 202.
- Lupus, abbot of Ferrières, corresponds with Æthelwulf and Felix, 17, 18 n., 71 n.;
- previously at Faremoûtier, 18 n.
- Lymne, R., Kent, Danes enter mouth of, 112.
- Macbeth, one of three ‘Scots’ who come to Alfred, 131.
- Maelduin, the Voyage of, 132.
- Maelinmain, one of three ‘Scots’ who came to Alfred, 131.
- Malmesbury, Wilts., William of, see William.
- Marcus Aurelius, Roman Emperor, comparison of, with Alfred, 200.
- Marinus, Pope, St. Neot said to have visited, 56-8;
- grants privileges to English School at Rome, 58;
- said to have sent a fragment of the True Cross to Alfred, 58.
- Martia, legendary British Queen, 63.
- Marton, Wilts., battle of, 92, 93, 95.
- Mercia, Witenagemóts of, 13, 14;
- division of, by the Danes, 24, 102;
- not included in Saxonia, 38;
- Alfred acquires part of, 39;
- relation of, to Wessex, 85;
- Danes invade, 88, 99, 100;
- Welsh invade, 99;
- western part of, cleared of the Danes, 104;
- shire system introduced into, 121;
- supplies Alfred with teachers, 136, cf. 139 n., 169;
- kings of, see Æthelbald, Beornred,
Berhtwulf, Burgred, Ceolwulf,
Offa, Penda;
- lady of, see Æthelflæd;
- ealdorman of, see Aethelred.
- Meretun, see Marton.
- Mersea, Essex, Danes retire to, 117.
- Milton (King’s), Kent, Danes fortify themselves at, 113;
- negotiations of Alfred with Danes at, 113, cf. 163.
- Milus, Eastern Saint, 34.
- Modus tenendi Parliamenti, unhistorical character of, 130 n.
- Modwenna, St., Alfred said to have been cured by, 63.
- More, Sir Thomas, Hallam’s character of, 13;
- imitates Boethius’ Consolatio, 179.
- Mouric, king of Gwent, father of Brochmail and Fernmail, 42, 44.
- Nachededorn, see Naked-thorn.
- Naked-thorn, name of a Berkshire Hundred and Manor in Domesday, 94.
- Nelson, Lord, anecdote of, 163.
- Neot, St., not identical with Athelstan, king of Kent, 6;
- buried in Cornwall, 26, 29;
- translated to Huntingdonshire, 29;
- lives of, 24, 53-9, 67;
- the source of baseless legends about Alfred, 24, 27, 28, 53, 54, 67;
- made a son of Æthelwulf, 55, 57;
- alleged devotion of Alfred to, 67, 68;
- Annals of, their relation to Asser, 22.
- Nero, Roman Emperor, Epistle to the Romans written under, 209.
- Newminster, Winchester, Alfred plans the foundation of, 68, 129;
- abbot of, see Grimbald.
- Nicholas I, Pope, dispatches pilgrims to the East, 132.
- Nobis, bishop of St. Davids, expelled by Hemeid of Dyfed, 42;
- dies in 873, 20;
- succeeded by Llunwerth, 20, 44.
- Northmen, use of the term, 87 n., see Danes.
- Northumbria, not included in Saxonia, 38;
- Danes in, 42;
- relation of, to Wessex, 85;
- conquered by the Danes, 88;
- their occupation of, recognised at Wedmore, 105;
- relations of Alfred with, 113;
- share of, in the campaigns of 893 ff., 113-5, 117-8;
- state of learning in, 139, 140 n.;
- kings of, see Aldfrid, Egbert, Oswald;
- earl of, see Siward.
- Norway, called Germania by Welsh writers, 40, 41;
- king of, see Harold Hardrada.
- Notker III, of St. Gallon, translates Boethius’ Consolatio into High German, 189.
- Nottingham, Danes winter at, 88;
- Æthelred and Alfred march against, 88.
- Novis, see Nobis.
- Odda, ealdorman of Devon, defeats the Danes, 103, 104, 106.
- Odo, count of Paris, king of the Western Kingdom, 41 n.
- Offa, king of the Mercians, Eadburh, daughter of, 16;
- his dyke, 37;
- code of, 63 n.;
- Alfred made descendant of, 65;
- his patronage of learning, 136.
- Ohthere, a Northman, voyage of, 160.
- Orosius, his universal history, 8, 157;
- Alfred’s translation of, 8, 10, 110, 159-65;
- relation of, to Chronicle, 146, 157-8;
- to the Bede translation, 156-9;
- to the Boethius translation, 159.
- Osburh, first wife of Æthelwulf, and mother of Alfred, 81, 83, 84, 123;
- not divorced by Æthelwulf, 84.
- Oswald, St., king of the Northumbrians, his body translated from Bardney to Gloucester, 34, 35.
- Oxford, interpolation in Asser relating to, 23, 24;
- legends relating to, 63, 68;
- English and Danes reconciled at, 67;
- University of, carries on Alfred’s work, 193;
- bishop of, see Stubbs, William.
- Paris, description of, by Asser, 18;
- count of, see Odo.
- Parker, Matthew, archbishop of Canterbury, interpolates the text of Asser, 24.
- Paul I, Pope, sends a horologe to Pippin the Short, 131.
- Pavia, Eadburh of Wessex, a mendicant at, 16.
- Penda, king of the Mercians, attacks the East Angles, 66.
- Persia, SS. Milus and Senneus martyred in, 34;
- king of, sends a clock to Charles the Great, 131 n.
- Petrarch, his treatise De Contemptu Mundi, 178 n.
- Philip, tetrarch of Ituraea, his accessibility to suitors, 125.
- Pilgrimages, passion for, in ninth century, 71.
- Pippin, father of Charles the Great, Paul I sends a horologe to, 131.
- Pippin, son of Charles the Great, unmarried, 17 n.
- Plegmund, archbishop of Canterbury, 127, 139;
- attends the conference of Chelsea, 111;
- letter of Fulk of Rheims to, 128;
- a Mercian, 136;
- helps Alfred with the Pastoral Care, 138, 143 n.
- Psalter, Alfred’s fondness for, 16, 140, 153;
- said to have translated part of, 147-9.
- Reading, Berks., battles of, 93, 98;
- Danes abandon, 99.
- Relics, passion for, in ninth century, 71, 144-5.
- Repton, Derbyshire, Danes winter at, and destroy monastery of, 100.
- Rheims, dép. Marne, archbishop of, see Fulk.
- Rhys, father of Howel, king of Glewissig, 19, 42, 44.
- Richard I, king of England, character of, by Stubbs, 2.
- Rochester, Kent, besieged by the Danes, and relieved by Alfred, 107, 108;
- captured Danish ships brought to, 115.
- Roger of Wendover, 25;
- uses a life of St. Neot, 54;
- his mistakes and confusions, 65, 76 n.
- Rome, Werthryth goes to, 13;
- Howel ap Rhys dies at, 19, 44;
- English School at, see Saxones;
- St. Neot visits, 56;
- visits of Alfred to, 70-6;
- Æthelwulf’s visit to, 74-6;
- intellectual poverty of, 71;
- pilgrimages to, 71;
- attacks of the Saracens on, 77;
- Leonine suburb of, 77;
- Burgred dies at, 98 n., 100, cf. 199;
- Alfred sends missions and alms to, 12, 99, 134-5;
- three ‘Scots’ go to, 132;
- dangers of a pilgrimage to, 134.
- Rotri Mawr, king of North Wales, slain in 877, 19, 43;
- sons of, 9, 42;
- Anaraut, son of, 42;
- avenged, 43.
- Roughthorn Farm, possibly marked the site of battle of Ashdown, 94.
- Rudolf, count of Upper Burgundy, king of the Middle Kingdom, 41 n.
- Rudolf, abbot of St. Bertin’s, 137.
- St. Bertin’s, Flanders, Grimbald, a monk of, 137;
- Fulk and Rudolf, abbots of, 137;
- attacks of Count Baldwin on, 137.
- St. Davids, Pembrokeshire, Alfred’s protection desired for, 19, 42;
- Asser returns to, 21;
- Hemeid persecutes, 42;
- bishops of, see Asser, Llunwerth, Nobis.
- St. Omer, dép. Pas-de-Calais, France, St. Winnoc’s body translated to, and from, 35 n.
- Saracens, ravages of, 77;
- power of, in Italy and the East, 132-4;
- good police of, 134.
- Saxones, use of term by Asser, 37-9;
- school of, at Rome, 39, 58;
- burnt, 76;
- restored by Æthelwulf, 76.
- Saxonia, meaning of, in Asser, 37, cf. 18, 85.
- Saxons, the Old or Continental, invaded by the Danes, 40;
- 4,500 of, massacred by Charles the Great, 201.
- Scots, see Ireland.
- Seals, use of, in England, 176 n.
- Secundarius, meaning of title, 40, 89-91.
- Seine, R., Danes retire to, 118.
- Senneus, Eastern saint, 34.
- Sergius II, Pope, ravages of Saracens under, 77.
- Severn, R., Danes march up, 116;
- march to, 118.
- Severus, wall of, 158-9, 161 n.
- Shaftesbury, Wilts., one of Alfred’s ‘burgs,’ 129 n.;
- monastery of, founded by Alfred, 68, 128.
- Sherborne, possible division of diocese of, 20, 21 n.;
- bishops of, see Aldhelm, Asser, Heahmund, Wulfsige.
- Shire-system, not invented by Alfred, 6, cf. 121.
- Shoebury, Essex, Danes fortify themselves at, 115, 117.
- Sicily, conquered by Saracens, 77.
- Sigbert, ex-king of the East Angles, leads his subjects against Penda, 66.
- Simeon of Durham, relation of, to Asser, 23, 31, 32, 34, 64;
- double recension of part of, 31, 32, 61, 62.
- Simon de Montfort, experiment of representation tried by, 210.
- Sithiu, see St. Omer.
- Siward, earl of Northumbria, anecdote of, 61.
- Somerset, men of, rally to Alfred, 102;
- ealdormen of, see Æthelnoth, Eanwulf.
- Southwick, Hants, priory of, formerly owned Cotton MS. Otho, B. xi, 168 n.
- Spain, ravages of Danes in, 77.
- Stour, R., Essex, wikings defeated at mouth of, 64, 108.
- Stubbs, William, Lord Bishop of Oxford, his character as an historian and view of history, 1-3;
- his hopefulness, 3;
- loss to the Church by his death, 3-4.
- Suetonius, his life of Augustus copied by Einhard, 10.
- Swale, R., Kent, Danes enter, 113.
- Swanage, Dorset, Danish fleet wrecked off, 101.
- Tanistry, institution of, 89.
- Teudyr ab Elised, king of Brecheiniog, father of Helised ap Teudyr, 42, 44.
- Thames, R., Danes driven across, 114;
- march up, 115, 116;
- draw their ships up, 117.
- Thanes, increase of, under Alfred, 111, 112.
- Thanet, Kent, Danes winter in, 87.
- Theodoric, the Ostrogoth, his treatment of Boethius, 178-9.
- Theodosius, patriarch of Jerusalem, 34 n., 133.
- Thomas, St., the Apostle, see India.
- Thorney, island on the Hertfordshire Colne, Danes blockaded in, 114-5.
- Titus, Roman Emperor, anecdote of, 161;
- St. Louis compared to, 161 n.
- Tolius, mythical monk of Croyland, 66.
- Torksey, Lincs, Danes winter at, 100.
- Trajan, Roman Emperor, mediaeval legend of, 209.
- Tyne, R., Egbert, king of district north of, 88;
- Danes winter on, 100.
- Ubba, Danish chief, defeated at Kenny Castle, 104.
- Verberie, France, dép. Oise, Æthelwulf marries Judith at, 78.
- Verden, Hanover, Charles the Great executes 4,500 Saxons at, 201 n.
- Victoria, queen of England, comparison of, with Alfred, 200, 210;
- funeral sermon on, 207-13.
- Wales, Danes retire to, 117;
- kings of North, see Anaraut, Rotri.
- Wallingford, Berks., Caesar fights a battle near, 158.
- Wanating, see Wantage.
- Wantage, Berks., Alfred born at, 22, 70.
- Wardour, Wilts., Alfred at, 125.
- Wareham, Dorset, Danes occupy, and evacuate, 100, 101.
- Wedmore, Somerset, Guthrum’s chrism-loosing at, 103.
- Welsh, act in concert with the Danes, 99, cf. 43;
- princes of, submit to Alfred, see Alfred;
- co-operate against the Danes, 116.
- Wendover, Bucks, Roger of, see Roger.
- Werebert, bishop of Leicester, 137 n.
- Werferth, bishop of Worcester, 127;
- robbed of woods at Woodchester, 14;
- his heroism, 53;
- called St. Werferth, 53, 67;
- friendship of, with Æthelnoth, 106;
- a Mercian, 136, 169;
- translation of Gregory’s Dialogues ascribed to, 142, 169;
- Boethius translation wrongly assigned to, 185 n.
- Werthryth, widow of Cered, 13;
- disposes of her land to Cuthwulf, 13;
- her title-deeds carried off by the Danes, 13.
- Werwulf, Mercian priest, chaplain to Alfred, 136.
- Wessex, relations of, to other kingdoms, 85;
- cleared of the Danes, 104;
- Danes ravage coasts of, 118;
- kings of, see Æthelbald, Æthelberht,
Æthelred, Æthelwulf, Alfred,
Athelstan, Beorhtric, Cuthred,
Edgar, Edmund, Edward, Egbert;
- bishop of, see Birinus.
- Wight, Isle of, naval engagement off, 119.
- William I, king of England, owns the site of the battle of Ashdown, 94;
- one of the creators of England’s greatness, 210.
- William of Malmesbury, his confusions and mistakes, 7;
- his account of Alfred, 62, 151;
- had special sources for Athelstan’s reign, 62;
- relation of, to Asser and Chron., 62;
- his assertion that Alfred translated part of the Psalter, 147-50;
- librarian of Malmesbury, 150;
- his account of Alfred’s Boethius translation, 188-9.
- Willibald, St., pilgrimage of, to Jerusalem, 134 n.
- Wilton, Wilts., battle of, 98, 99.
- Wilts., men of, rally to Alfred, 102;
- ealdorman of, see Æthelhelm.
- Wimborne, Dorset, Æthelred interred at, 98.
- Winchester, Æthelwulf said to have been bishop of, 7;
- Asser taken ill at, 21;
- captured by Danes, 79, 87;
- New Minster at, see Newminster;
- connexion of Chronicle with, 147, 151;
- and of Domesday with, 151;
- Alfred buried at, 198;
- bishops of, see Ælfheah, I and II, Æthelwold.
- Winnoc, St., his body translated from Wormhoult to St. Omer, and thence to Bergues, 35 n.
- Woodchester, Gloucestershire, bishop Werferth robbed of woods at, 14.
- Worcester, fortified by Æthelred and Æthelflæd, 111;
- bishop of, see Werferth;
- Florence of, see Florence.
- Wormhoult, dép. Nord, France, St. Winnoc’s body translated from, 35 n.
- Wrekin, the, Shropshire, Danes in the district of, 75.
- Wulfsige, bishop of Sherborne, a copy of the Pastoral Care addressed to, 20;
- succeeded by Asser, 20 n.
- Wulfstan, voyage of, 160.
- York, Danes at, 92;
- Æthelnoth attacks the Danes at, 117 n.