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Battle of Hatfield Chase
Saint King Edwin of Northumbria
Depiction of Edwin at St Mary, Sledmere, Yorkshire.
Date12 October 633 AD
LocationHatfield Chase, Yorkshire
Result Gwynedd-Mercian victory
Belligerents
Flag of GwyneddSaint Alban's cross
Gwynedd, Mercia
Flag of Northumbria
Deira and Bernicia
Commanders and leaders
Cadwallon ap Cadfan
Penda
Eowa ?
Edwin
Osfrith
Eadfrith (captured)


AC = "according to the Annales Cambriae".

The Battle of Hatfield Chase (Old English language: Hæðfeld; Old Welsh language: Meigen) was fought on 12 October 633[1] at Hatfield Chase near Doncaster (today part of South Yorkshire, England). It pitted the Northumbrians against an alliance of Gwynedd and Mercia. The Northumbrians were led by Edwin and the Gwynedd-Mercian alliance was led by Cadwallon ap Cadfan and Penda. The site was a marshy area about 8 miles northeast of Doncaster on the south bank of the River Don. It was a decisive victory for Gwynedd and the Mercians: Edwin was killed and his army defeated, leading to the temporary collapse of Northumbria.

Background[]

Edwin, the most powerful ruler in Britain at the time, had seemingly defeated Cadwallon a few years before the battle. Bede refers to Edwin establishing his rule over what he called the Mevanian islands, one of which was Anglesey,[2] and another source refers to Cadwallon being besieged on the island of Priestholm (AC: Glannauc),[3] which is off the coast of Anglesey. Later, Cadwallon defeated and drove the Northumbrians from his territories and then allied with Penda (Cadwallon being the stronger member of the alliance). Penda's status in Mercia at this time is uncertain—Bede suggests he was not yet king, but became king soon after Hatfield;[4] the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, however, says that he became king in 626.[5]

Results of the battle[]

The battle was a disaster for Northumbria. With both Edwin and his son Osfrith killed, and his other son Eadfrith captured by Penda (and later killed), the kingdom was divided between its constituent kingdoms of Bernicia and Deira. Eanfrith, a son of the former king Æthelfrith, returned from exile to take power in Bernicia, while Edwin's cousin Osric took over Deira. Cadwallon continued to wage a war of ruthless slaughter against the Northumbrians, and was not stopped until he was defeated by Oswald at the Battle of Heavenfield (also known as Deniseburna, AC : Cantscaul) a year after Hatfield near Cuckney Notts.[6]

The historian D. P. Kirby suggested that the defeat of Edwin was the outcome of a wide-ranging alliance of interests opposed to him, including the deposed Bernician line of Æthelfrith; but considering the subsequent hostility between Cadwallon and Æthelfrith's sons, such an alliance must not have survived the battle for long.[7]

Notes and references[]

  1. Bede gives the date as October 12 in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People (book II, chapter 20), but the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gives the date as October 14. Bede also gives the year as 633; however, a question about what Bede considered the starting point of the years as he used them has raised the possibility that the battle may have actually taken place in 632.
  2. H. E., book II, chapter 5; D. P. Kirby, The Earliest English Kings (1991, 2000), page 71.
  3. Annales Cambriae, year 629; Kirby, page 71.
  4. Bede, H. E., book II, chapter 20.
  5. ASC 626.
  6. Bede, H. E., book II, chapter 20; book III, chapter 1; book III, chapter 2.
  7. Kirby, page 73.
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