Æthelhelm

Æthelhelm or Æþelhelm (fl. 880s) was the elder of two known sons of Æthelred I,[1] King of Wessex from 865 to 871.

Will of Alfred the Great, AD 873–888, granting land to Æthelhelm (11th-century copy, British Library Stowe MS 944, ff. 29v–33r)[2]
For other men of the same name, see Æthelhelm (disambiguation)
Æthelhelm
Diedc. 890
HouseHouse of Wessex
FatherÆthelred of Wessex
MotherWulfthryth

Æthelred's sons were too young to become king when their father died in 871, and the throne passed to their uncle, Alfred.[3] The only certain record of Æthelhelm is as a beneficiary in Alfred's will in the mid 880s,[4][5] and he probably died at some time in the next decade.[6]

Æthelhelm's mother was probably Wulfthryth.[7]

Some historians have suggested identifying him with the Æthelhelm who served as Ealdorman of Wiltshire, the probable father of Ælfflæd,[8] who became Edward the Elder's second wife about 899. However, Barbara Yorke rejected this idea, arguing that it does not appear to have been the practice for æthelings (princes of the royal dynasty who were eligible to be king) to become ealdormen,[9] that a grant from Alfred to Ealdorman Æthelhelm makes no reference to kinship between them, and that the hostile reception to King Eadwig's marriage to Ælfgifu, his third cousin once removed, shows that a marriage between Edward and his first cousin once removed would have been forbidden as incestuous.[10]

On Alfred's death in 899 Æthelhelm's younger brother Æthelwold unsuccessfully contested the succession. He died in 902 at the Battle of the Holme.

The historian Æthelweard (died c. 998) claimed descent from King Æthelred I and may therefore be a descendant of Æthelhelm. Some genealogists have suggested that the Godwins descended from Æthelred I through Æthelhelm, but almost all historians dismiss this idea.

See also

  • House of Wessex family tree

References

  1. He may have had an older brother called Oswald or Osweald (David Dumville, The ætheling: a study in Anglo-Saxon constitutional history, Anglo-Saxon England, 8, 1979, p. 11).
  2. Charter S 1507 at the Electronic Sawyer
  3. Barbara Yorke, 'Edward as Ætheling', in N. J. Higham & D. H. Hill eds, Edward the Elder 899–924, Routledge, 2001, p. 30
  4. King Alfred's Will in Simon Keynes & Michael Lapidge, translation & notes, Alfred the Great: Asser's Life of King Alfred and Other Contemporary Sources, Penguin, 1983, pp. 177, 321, n. 66.
  5. "Æthelhelm 4 (Male)". Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  6. Yorke, op. cit., p. 31.
  7. N. J. Higham, D. H. Hill, Edward the Elder: 899-924 (2013), p. 35
  8. Pauline Stafford, Queen Emma and Queen Edith, Blackwell, 2001, pp. 324–325; PASE s.v. Æthelhelm 7
  9. Æthelwulf's son Æthelbald may have been an exception. According to Sean Miller, he was appointed an ealdorman in 850 (Sean Miller, Æthelbald, Oxford Online Dictionary of National Biography, 2004), but Simon Keynes suggests that the ætheling and the ealdorman were probably different people (Simon Keynes, Atlas of Attestations, Table XXI, S 301)
  10. Yorke, op. cit., pp. 33–34. Keynes and Lapidge also treat the two Æthelhelms as different people, although they are more cautious in rejecting the identification, saying that they are "probably" not the same, p. 321, n. 66
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