1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:04,600 Speaker 1: Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm 2 00:00:04,640 --> 00:00:10,360 Speaker 1: and Mild from Aaron Manky listener Discretion advised. The latter 3 00:00:10,400 --> 00:00:14,400 Speaker 1: half of the ninth century was a chaotic time in England, 4 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:17,759 Speaker 1: which was at that time divided into a number of 5 00:00:17,880 --> 00:00:23,000 Speaker 1: smaller kingdoms. In eight hundred and sixty seven, Vikings from 6 00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: Denmark landed in Mercia, a kingdom that comprised much of 7 00:00:27,640 --> 00:00:32,680 Speaker 1: the English Midlands. The Vikings conquered the eastern parts of 8 00:00:32,800 --> 00:00:37,440 Speaker 1: Mercia and soon invaded the rest of the territory, dividing 9 00:00:37,479 --> 00:00:41,639 Speaker 1: the area into two parts, displacing the current ruler and 10 00:00:41,760 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 1: installing a puppet king. But the puppet king didn't last 11 00:00:46,360 --> 00:00:49,680 Speaker 1: long on the throne. Just a few years later, in 12 00:00:49,800 --> 00:00:54,000 Speaker 1: eight hundred and seventy nine, he disappeared. In the face 13 00:00:54,080 --> 00:00:58,880 Speaker 1: of that power vacuum, a high ranking English military official 14 00:00:59,400 --> 00:01:05,040 Speaker 1: named Fulred took over. Very little is known about Ethelred 15 00:01:05,160 --> 00:01:09,119 Speaker 1: before he reached the throne, and it's sort of unclear 16 00:01:09,280 --> 00:01:13,319 Speaker 1: how exactly he got the job. It doesn't seem like 17 00:01:13,440 --> 00:01:17,560 Speaker 1: he had any noble lineage. He appeared in the written 18 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:21,360 Speaker 1: record at around eight hundred and eighty three, after he 19 00:01:21,480 --> 00:01:25,440 Speaker 1: was said to have taken power. But it wasn't just 20 00:01:25,760 --> 00:01:30,360 Speaker 1: Mercia that was under attack by the Vikings. Wessex, another 21 00:01:30,520 --> 00:01:34,480 Speaker 1: kingdom that included much of England's south coast at that time, 22 00:01:35,040 --> 00:01:40,040 Speaker 1: was also dealing with Viking invasions. Wessex was led by 23 00:01:40,120 --> 00:01:44,479 Speaker 1: a man named Alfred, and throughout eight hundred and seventy 24 00:01:44,520 --> 00:01:48,160 Speaker 1: and eight seventy one, Alfred had been fighting off the 25 00:01:48,240 --> 00:01:53,640 Speaker 1: Vikings with mixed results, winning some battles but having trouble 26 00:01:54,000 --> 00:01:57,360 Speaker 1: keeping the invading forces at bay in the long term. 27 00:01:57,520 --> 00:02:01,840 Speaker 1: So soon after Ethelred took over in Mercia, he and 28 00:02:02,000 --> 00:02:06,560 Speaker 1: Alfred decided to team up, and in eight hundred eighty nine, 29 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:11,919 Speaker 1: the pair sealed their alliance by having Athelred Mary Alfred's 30 00:02:12,080 --> 00:02:17,160 Speaker 1: oldest daughter, athel Flood. Athel Flood was born around eight 31 00:02:17,240 --> 00:02:21,000 Speaker 1: hundred and seventy, right when the Viking invasions were picking 32 00:02:21,080 --> 00:02:25,720 Speaker 1: up steam, making her much younger than her husband. While 33 00:02:25,919 --> 00:02:30,680 Speaker 1: there's almost no historical record of athel Flood's early life, 34 00:02:31,280 --> 00:02:35,160 Speaker 1: one can imagine that her youth had been defined by 35 00:02:35,440 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 1: instability and violence, following her father to various skirmishes with invaders. 36 00:02:42,880 --> 00:02:48,040 Speaker 1: She likely knew Athelred from childhood, encountering him in her 37 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:53,240 Speaker 1: father's entourage or visiting his palaces in Mercia. No one 38 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:57,280 Speaker 1: would have expected Athel Flood to become an even more 39 00:02:57,440 --> 00:03:02,280 Speaker 1: important political figure than her head husband. Athel Flood would 40 00:03:02,320 --> 00:03:06,800 Speaker 1: become the most powerful person in the Kingdom, ruling over 41 00:03:06,880 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: Mercia independently starting in nine hundred and eleven, one of 42 00:03:11,639 --> 00:03:16,400 Speaker 1: only two women recorded as doing so before the Norman 43 00:03:16,480 --> 00:03:22,440 Speaker 1: conquest of England. I'm Danish sports and this is noble blood. 44 00:03:24,000 --> 00:03:27,120 Speaker 1: After the wedding, Ethel Flood had to move from her 45 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:31,440 Speaker 1: home in Wessex to her husband's palace in Mercia. This 46 00:03:31,880 --> 00:03:35,920 Speaker 1: wasn't a huge deal for Ethel Flood. Her mother was Mercian, 47 00:03:36,120 --> 00:03:39,440 Speaker 1: so she had family in the area, and her husband 48 00:03:39,560 --> 00:03:43,480 Speaker 1: preferred to stay in the southwest area of Mercia, around 49 00:03:43,520 --> 00:03:47,960 Speaker 1: the cities now named London and Gloucester, which wasn't too 50 00:03:48,120 --> 00:03:51,560 Speaker 1: far away from where she grew up. Still, she had 51 00:03:51,600 --> 00:03:57,040 Speaker 1: to adjust to married life. Athelred had seeded control over 52 00:03:57,160 --> 00:04:01,160 Speaker 1: Mercia to Alfred, his father and lie law, who called 53 00:04:01,200 --> 00:04:05,119 Speaker 1: himself the King of the Anglo Saxons. This is one 54 00:04:05,120 --> 00:04:09,440 Speaker 1: of the first times anyone had used the term Anglo Saxon, 55 00:04:09,880 --> 00:04:14,200 Speaker 1: and in doing so, Alfred sometimes also known as Alfred 56 00:04:14,320 --> 00:04:18,120 Speaker 1: the Great, asserted that he ruled over all of the 57 00:04:18,160 --> 00:04:22,120 Speaker 1: English Saxons by which he meant the Saxons who had 58 00:04:22,200 --> 00:04:27,000 Speaker 1: immigrated from what is now Germany to England around the 59 00:04:27,080 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 1: fourth century, except for the ones living in areas under 60 00:04:30,760 --> 00:04:36,159 Speaker 1: Viking control. So even though her husband wasn't technically a 61 00:04:36,240 --> 00:04:39,799 Speaker 1: king at this point, Athel Flood still needed to fulfill 62 00:04:39,920 --> 00:04:44,120 Speaker 1: the typical duties of a royal wife. A royal wife 63 00:04:44,279 --> 00:04:48,800 Speaker 1: was expected to be a peace weaver or frothweb in 64 00:04:48,960 --> 00:04:53,440 Speaker 1: Old English. The term was meant to encapsulate the feminine 65 00:04:53,600 --> 00:04:58,839 Speaker 1: art of political maneuvering, just like weaving fabric. A royal 66 00:04:58,920 --> 00:05:03,680 Speaker 1: wife was expected to weave bonds between her and her 67 00:05:03,760 --> 00:05:07,960 Speaker 1: husband's allies by hosting dinners in the feasting hall and 68 00:05:08,440 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: conducting herself well when visiting palaces throughout the kingdom. Usually, 69 00:05:14,520 --> 00:05:19,279 Speaker 1: a royal wife's duties would have ended there. English Saxon 70 00:05:19,480 --> 00:05:24,200 Speaker 1: wives were considered subordinate to their husbands and were largely 71 00:05:24,240 --> 00:05:28,880 Speaker 1: excluded from military and political life. That was certainly the 72 00:05:28,960 --> 00:05:34,000 Speaker 1: case in Wessex, where ethel Flood's mother was almost completely 73 00:05:34,120 --> 00:05:38,360 Speaker 1: shut out of governance. She wasn't even referred to as queen. 74 00:05:39,520 --> 00:05:44,920 Speaker 1: Historian Tim Clarkson described royal wives in Wessex as quote 75 00:05:45,360 --> 00:05:53,080 Speaker 1: low profile, nearly invisible, but unlike other parts of medieval England, 76 00:05:53,640 --> 00:05:59,520 Speaker 1: Murcia allowed more leeway and independence for its queens. Ethel 77 00:05:59,520 --> 00:06:03,720 Speaker 1: Flood was deeply involved in governing Mercia from the beginning 78 00:06:03,800 --> 00:06:08,400 Speaker 1: of her marriage. Arriving in Gloucester at around eight eighty, 79 00:06:08,960 --> 00:06:13,000 Speaker 1: the city was in shambles after battling with the Vikings, 80 00:06:13,520 --> 00:06:17,840 Speaker 1: with collapsed columns from the Roman era all over the city. 81 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:23,200 Speaker 1: So together the newlyweds got to work on building a burr, 82 00:06:23,600 --> 00:06:29,760 Speaker 1: or a multi purpose fortification that served as a defensive fortress, 83 00:06:29,800 --> 00:06:34,960 Speaker 1: an administrative center and a hub for trade, Using a 84 00:06:35,040 --> 00:06:40,279 Speaker 1: decrepit Roman fort as the structure's foundation, They kept on 85 00:06:40,560 --> 00:06:46,200 Speaker 1: building burrs throughout Mercia over the next decade. Meanwhile, Ethel 86 00:06:46,200 --> 00:06:51,640 Speaker 1: Flood worked with her husband to reallocate land, offer privileges 87 00:06:51,680 --> 00:06:56,080 Speaker 1: to churches, and confer grants across the region you know, 88 00:06:56,360 --> 00:07:02,760 Speaker 1: general governance. Their campaign fit in neatly with Alfred's attempt 89 00:07:02,960 --> 00:07:07,240 Speaker 1: to shore up the defenses of Wessex. He also built 90 00:07:07,240 --> 00:07:11,240 Speaker 1: a number of brahs and forts across the kingdom, ensuring 91 00:07:11,440 --> 00:07:14,920 Speaker 1: that no one in Wessex was more than a day's 92 00:07:15,160 --> 00:07:20,240 Speaker 1: ride from a place of safety. Meanwhile, Afflflood gave birth 93 00:07:20,320 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 1: to a daughter and named her Alfwyn or elf Friend. 94 00:07:26,160 --> 00:07:30,240 Speaker 1: This ended up being her only child, which is a 95 00:07:30,240 --> 00:07:34,000 Speaker 1: bit strange given that there was probably pressure to produce 96 00:07:34,040 --> 00:07:38,120 Speaker 1: a male heir and secure the line of succession. We 97 00:07:38,240 --> 00:07:43,080 Speaker 1: can speculate that it's possible she suffered miscarriages or couldn't 98 00:07:43,160 --> 00:07:48,920 Speaker 1: get pregnant again. William of Malmsbury, an early Anglo Norman historian, 99 00:07:49,360 --> 00:07:54,040 Speaker 1: proposed a different theory, that Alfwin's birth was such a 100 00:07:54,160 --> 00:07:59,440 Speaker 1: horrific experience that Affelflood pledged celibacy for the rest of 101 00:07:59,480 --> 00:08:04,040 Speaker 1: her life. In ten ninety nine, William of Malmsbury wrote, 102 00:08:04,240 --> 00:08:08,200 Speaker 1: quote from the difficulty experienced in her first or rather 103 00:08:08,400 --> 00:08:13,280 Speaker 1: only labor. Athel Flood, ever after, refused the embraces of 104 00:08:13,360 --> 00:08:17,760 Speaker 1: her husband, protesting that it was unbecoming for the daughter 105 00:08:17,880 --> 00:08:21,080 Speaker 1: of a king to give way to a delight which 106 00:08:21,160 --> 00:08:27,480 Speaker 1: in time produced such painful consequences. Now, William of Malmsbury 107 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:30,760 Speaker 1: didn't give any sources for this from the period, so 108 00:08:30,960 --> 00:08:37,320 Speaker 1: athel Flood's celibacy is likely apocryphal. Contemporary historians imagine that 109 00:08:37,800 --> 00:08:40,559 Speaker 1: he might have made it up in order to emphasize 110 00:08:40,880 --> 00:08:45,640 Speaker 1: athel Flood's moral purity. That said William was a monk 111 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:50,680 Speaker 1: at Malmsbury Abbey, a monastery in Wessex with historic ties 112 00:08:50,760 --> 00:08:54,160 Speaker 1: to the royal family, and it's possible that this story 113 00:08:54,320 --> 00:08:58,160 Speaker 1: was passed down to him and it was truthful fact 114 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:03,000 Speaker 1: or fiction. This Anna represents a rare example of a 115 00:09:03,120 --> 00:09:07,439 Speaker 1: medieval queen putting her foot down and deciding for herself 116 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:12,640 Speaker 1: what her reproductive future might look like. After a decade 117 00:09:12,640 --> 00:09:17,600 Speaker 1: of strengthening Mercia's defenses, athel Flood was ready for battle. 118 00:09:18,200 --> 00:09:22,200 Speaker 1: When the Vikings descended on eastern England in eight hundred 119 00:09:22,320 --> 00:09:26,440 Speaker 1: ninety two, it was clear that her preparation paid off. 120 00:09:27,080 --> 00:09:31,360 Speaker 1: After a few years of fighting, Alfred afa Flood and 121 00:09:31,520 --> 00:09:37,400 Speaker 1: Athelred successfully repelled the invaders with minimal losses. The Viking 122 00:09:37,520 --> 00:09:41,679 Speaker 1: army disbanded in eight hundred and ninety six, and Athlflood 123 00:09:41,880 --> 00:09:45,439 Speaker 1: was finally able to enjoy a period of peace in 124 00:09:45,480 --> 00:09:51,280 Speaker 1: Wessex and Mercia. But this period of peace didn't last long. 125 00:09:51,960 --> 00:09:56,520 Speaker 1: In October of eight hundred and ninety nine, King Alfred died. 126 00:09:57,240 --> 00:10:00,680 Speaker 1: Though this was a huge blow both to Athel Flood 127 00:10:00,760 --> 00:10:04,679 Speaker 1: his daughter, and Athelred, his son in law and closest 128 00:10:04,800 --> 00:10:10,240 Speaker 1: military Ally, they were perhaps relieved to find that, unlike 129 00:10:10,400 --> 00:10:15,120 Speaker 1: many medieval kings living through long periods of war, he 130 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:19,960 Speaker 1: survived decades of battle and had lived long enough to 131 00:10:20,080 --> 00:10:24,120 Speaker 1: die of disease in his own bed. In his will, 132 00:10:24,320 --> 00:10:29,120 Speaker 1: he commemorated Athelred by leaving him a sword worth one 133 00:10:29,320 --> 00:10:36,760 Speaker 1: hundred Byzantine gold coins. Alfred's oldest son, athel Flood's brother Edward, 134 00:10:37,200 --> 00:10:41,400 Speaker 1: succeeded to the throne of Wessex, becoming King of the 135 00:10:41,440 --> 00:10:46,240 Speaker 1: Anglo Saxons, adopting the title his father invented. It was 136 00:10:46,440 --> 00:10:51,760 Speaker 1: unclear exactly what this meant for Athelred and ethel Flood, or, 137 00:10:51,920 --> 00:10:54,120 Speaker 1: as I'll call them by their made up couple name 138 00:10:54,200 --> 00:10:59,720 Speaker 1: with absolutely no historical accuracy, the Athols. Some historians believe 139 00:10:59,840 --> 00:11:04,240 Speaker 1: that Alfred preferred his son in law Athelred to his 140 00:11:04,360 --> 00:11:08,920 Speaker 1: actual son Edward, since the court produced records of the 141 00:11:09,120 --> 00:11:12,480 Speaker 1: Viking battles in the eight hundred and nineties don't mention 142 00:11:12,679 --> 00:11:17,800 Speaker 1: any of Edward's military successes. Out of loyalty to Alfred, 143 00:11:18,280 --> 00:11:23,000 Speaker 1: Athelred was willing to accept a subordinate title and treat 144 00:11:23,200 --> 00:11:27,640 Speaker 1: Mercia as a part of the English Saxon Kingdom rather 145 00:11:27,760 --> 00:11:33,360 Speaker 1: than as an independent state, but Athelred seemed to distance 146 00:11:33,440 --> 00:11:38,760 Speaker 1: himself from Wessex after Alfred's death. In documents from the 147 00:11:38,800 --> 00:11:45,720 Speaker 1: Wessex Court, Athelred and athel Flood officially recognized Edward's authority. However, 148 00:11:45,920 --> 00:11:51,840 Speaker 1: within Mercia, many charters never mentioned Edward at all, leading 149 00:11:52,040 --> 00:11:57,319 Speaker 1: some historians to suggest that Ethelred operated Mercia more or 150 00:11:57,440 --> 00:12:02,000 Speaker 1: less as an independent kingdom. It seems that the Athols 151 00:12:02,160 --> 00:12:06,680 Speaker 1: wanted to have it both ways, maintaining a close alliance 152 00:12:06,800 --> 00:12:14,160 Speaker 1: between Wessex and Mercia without seeding too much of their power. Meanwhile, 153 00:12:14,280 --> 00:12:18,880 Speaker 1: Athelred's health began to fail, leaving athel Flood to deal 154 00:12:19,040 --> 00:12:23,880 Speaker 1: with governing Mercia largely on her own. There's no record 155 00:12:24,000 --> 00:12:27,120 Speaker 1: of what his illness might have been or when it began, 156 00:12:27,800 --> 00:12:30,920 Speaker 1: but the first record of his declining health was in 157 00:12:31,080 --> 00:12:34,920 Speaker 1: nine hundred and two, when athel Flood had to administer 158 00:12:35,040 --> 00:12:39,360 Speaker 1: a land grant without her husband. The last record of 159 00:12:39,400 --> 00:12:44,120 Speaker 1: Athelred's involvement in politics comes two years later, in nine 160 00:12:44,200 --> 00:12:47,440 Speaker 1: hundred and four. In nine hundred and two, there were 161 00:12:47,480 --> 00:12:51,959 Speaker 1: more invasions into England. This time by Norwegians rather than 162 00:12:52,000 --> 00:12:56,320 Speaker 1: the Danish Vikings who were giving the English Saxon's trouble. 163 00:12:56,440 --> 00:13:00,720 Speaker 1: In the ninth century, the Norwegians sailed for from Scotland 164 00:13:00,840 --> 00:13:04,960 Speaker 1: and Ireland to the west coast of Mercia. They approached 165 00:13:05,000 --> 00:13:08,360 Speaker 1: Ethel Flood for a settlement in the world, near what 166 00:13:08,520 --> 00:13:14,760 Speaker 1: is now Liverpool. Athel Flood hesitantly agreed, but imagined that 167 00:13:15,000 --> 00:13:20,600 Speaker 1: long term peace would be impossible. She fortified a nearby burr, 168 00:13:20,760 --> 00:13:26,240 Speaker 1: Chester and stationed her army there, eventually kicking out the Norse. 169 00:13:26,760 --> 00:13:30,000 Speaker 1: The Norse tried to fight back and retake the city 170 00:13:30,360 --> 00:13:34,760 Speaker 1: by teaming up with the Danes. Ethel Floed defended Chester, 171 00:13:35,320 --> 00:13:38,920 Speaker 1: leading her army from the ramparts of her bur In 172 00:13:39,040 --> 00:13:43,160 Speaker 1: nine hundred and seven, she successfully turned away the Norse 173 00:13:43,559 --> 00:13:48,760 Speaker 1: and the Danes, representing a huge military victory. And again 174 00:13:49,120 --> 00:13:52,040 Speaker 1: this is ethel Flood on her own while her husband 175 00:13:52,200 --> 00:13:58,040 Speaker 1: is ill and incapacitated. But athel Flood's triumph was tempered 176 00:13:58,240 --> 00:14:04,080 Speaker 1: by her ailing husband, convalescing still in Mercia, whose health 177 00:14:04,240 --> 00:14:08,560 Speaker 1: was only worsening by the day. Finally, in nine hundred 178 00:14:08,559 --> 00:14:13,720 Speaker 1: and eleven, Athelred died. He was buried at Saint Oswald's 179 00:14:13,800 --> 00:14:17,080 Speaker 1: Church in Gloucester, which he and his wife had founded 180 00:14:17,280 --> 00:14:24,200 Speaker 1: right after their wedding. This left Athel Flood at a crossroads. Traditionally, 181 00:14:24,440 --> 00:14:29,240 Speaker 1: noble widows retired from their rules in government, however limited, 182 00:14:29,280 --> 00:14:33,440 Speaker 1: those rules were to become abbesses or to live out 183 00:14:33,480 --> 00:14:37,120 Speaker 1: the rest of their lives at a peaceful estate. But 184 00:14:37,360 --> 00:14:41,440 Speaker 1: on the heels of her military victory in Chester, ethel 185 00:14:41,480 --> 00:14:45,600 Speaker 1: Flood had larger ambitions. She had put so much effort 186 00:14:45,720 --> 00:14:50,440 Speaker 1: into ruling over Mercia and was essentially functioning as its 187 00:14:50,800 --> 00:14:54,040 Speaker 1: de facto ruler in the years before her husband's death, 188 00:14:54,600 --> 00:14:59,080 Speaker 1: and so she would decide to succeed her husband as 189 00:14:59,160 --> 00:15:06,120 Speaker 1: the Lady of Mercia and lead the kingdom independently. While 190 00:15:06,280 --> 00:15:11,040 Speaker 1: ethel Flood's decision to rule over Mercia was merely unprecedented, 191 00:15:11,360 --> 00:15:14,960 Speaker 1: there hadn't been an independent female ruler over an English 192 00:15:15,040 --> 00:15:19,640 Speaker 1: kingdom since the seventh century, it didn't seem that controversial. 193 00:15:20,120 --> 00:15:23,880 Speaker 1: Her subjects supported her rule, and some of them even 194 00:15:23,960 --> 00:15:27,520 Speaker 1: called her their queen. Even though she was considered the 195 00:15:27,760 --> 00:15:32,400 Speaker 1: quote Lady of Mercia, It's unclear whether or not she 196 00:15:32,680 --> 00:15:36,600 Speaker 1: chose that title for herself, but being the Lady of 197 00:15:36,680 --> 00:15:41,200 Speaker 1: Mercia instead of the queen was strategic, It placed her 198 00:15:41,280 --> 00:15:44,880 Speaker 1: on a lower rung than her brother Edward, who was 199 00:15:44,920 --> 00:15:48,800 Speaker 1: the king of the Anglo Saxons, and it mirrored her 200 00:15:48,920 --> 00:15:53,360 Speaker 1: late husband, who was considered the Lord of Mercia, all 201 00:15:53,440 --> 00:15:58,400 Speaker 1: of which suggested that ethel Flood intelligently wouldn't upset the 202 00:15:58,440 --> 00:16:03,920 Speaker 1: status quo. The Mercian nobility also accepted athel Flood's succession 203 00:16:04,360 --> 00:16:10,080 Speaker 1: without a single recorded objection. There weren't any obvious alternatives. 204 00:16:10,640 --> 00:16:15,280 Speaker 1: None of the Mercian royal family's eligible heirs seemed interested 205 00:16:15,360 --> 00:16:20,280 Speaker 1: in the role, and Edward's son, ethel Flood's nephew, who 206 00:16:20,360 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 1: was raised in Mercia with athel Flood, was too young 207 00:16:23,920 --> 00:16:27,880 Speaker 1: to take over the throne. An assembly of noblemen and 208 00:16:28,040 --> 00:16:32,240 Speaker 1: other members of the elite convened to ratify ethel Flood's rule, 209 00:16:32,760 --> 00:16:37,280 Speaker 1: so she seemed to have their support. Edward tacitly gave 210 00:16:37,360 --> 00:16:41,880 Speaker 1: his blessing for his sister's succession, perhaps assuming that ethel 211 00:16:41,920 --> 00:16:45,920 Speaker 1: Flood would be a loyal ally. Edward and his sister 212 00:16:46,040 --> 00:16:49,280 Speaker 1: athel Flood would have to work together to take on 213 00:16:49,520 --> 00:16:55,200 Speaker 1: their most intense military engagement. Yet, while the Danes and 214 00:16:55,440 --> 00:16:59,480 Speaker 1: the Norse had agreed to peace with Mercia and Wessex. 215 00:17:00,120 --> 00:17:03,800 Speaker 1: Edward and ethel Flood wanted to shore up their defenses 216 00:17:04,320 --> 00:17:09,080 Speaker 1: to guard against future attacks. Edward built a series of 217 00:17:09,200 --> 00:17:13,400 Speaker 1: forts throughout Wessex, while ethel Flood did the same in Mercia. 218 00:17:13,840 --> 00:17:18,439 Speaker 1: Athel Flood put special attention on establishing her rule on 219 00:17:18,560 --> 00:17:22,119 Speaker 1: western Mercia, much of which had been seized by the 220 00:17:22,200 --> 00:17:26,000 Speaker 1: Vikings in the eight seventies or settled by the Norse 221 00:17:26,040 --> 00:17:29,800 Speaker 1: coming from Ireland. After building a few birds in the 222 00:17:29,840 --> 00:17:34,159 Speaker 1: west in nine hundred twelve and thirteen, she focused on 223 00:17:34,440 --> 00:17:38,399 Speaker 1: protecting Mercia from the Danish, who had settled in the east. 224 00:17:39,000 --> 00:17:43,640 Speaker 1: Edward had already repurposed his rule on a few areas 225 00:17:43,680 --> 00:17:47,960 Speaker 1: in the southeast, taking over some Viking strongholds in Essex, 226 00:17:48,320 --> 00:17:54,160 Speaker 1: which raised the Danes alarm bells. Finally, that long simmering 227 00:17:54,280 --> 00:17:59,040 Speaker 1: tension between the Danes and the Saxons over boiled in 228 00:17:59,160 --> 00:18:02,760 Speaker 1: nine hundred and n seventeen in the face of Edward 229 00:18:02,840 --> 00:18:07,760 Speaker 1: and ethel Flood's military expansion. The Danes tried to fight back, 230 00:18:08,240 --> 00:18:12,600 Speaker 1: attacking a few of Edward's forts in southeast Wessex, but 231 00:18:12,680 --> 00:18:17,480 Speaker 1: they failed. Athel Fled took the opportunity to invade Derby, 232 00:18:17,800 --> 00:18:20,720 Speaker 1: which had been ruled by the Danes since she was born. 233 00:18:21,600 --> 00:18:24,760 Speaker 1: This wouldn't be easy because it had been ruled by 234 00:18:24,800 --> 00:18:28,760 Speaker 1: the Danes so long. Many of Derby's residents had been 235 00:18:28,960 --> 00:18:32,359 Speaker 1: born and raised under Danish rule and would want to 236 00:18:32,440 --> 00:18:37,600 Speaker 1: fight for their hometown the way they knew it. That said, 237 00:18:38,000 --> 00:18:43,040 Speaker 1: athel Flood succeeded in recapturing the city. The Viking armies 238 00:18:43,080 --> 00:18:48,600 Speaker 1: were reported to be scattered and uncoordinated, vastly outnumbered by 239 00:18:48,600 --> 00:18:54,280 Speaker 1: athol Flood's army. Conquering Derby was a massive feat given 240 00:18:54,359 --> 00:18:58,320 Speaker 1: that it was such a central Danish stronghold. Not only 241 00:18:58,440 --> 00:19:03,080 Speaker 1: did athel Flood conquered Derby itself, but the regions around it, 242 00:19:03,520 --> 00:19:08,040 Speaker 1: adding a large swath of land to her territory. Danish 243 00:19:08,200 --> 00:19:12,920 Speaker 1: Mercia had five main towns called the Five Boroughs, and 244 00:19:12,960 --> 00:19:16,640 Speaker 1: she had captured one of them. Soon she would take 245 00:19:16,680 --> 00:19:22,080 Speaker 1: over another. In nine hundred eighteen, she invaded Leicester, which 246 00:19:22,200 --> 00:19:26,520 Speaker 1: yielded to athel Flood's authority without a fight, suggesting she 247 00:19:26,600 --> 00:19:31,200 Speaker 1: had a pretty fearsome reputation by this point. Edward, fighting 248 00:19:31,240 --> 00:19:35,439 Speaker 1: the Danes in the southeast, managed to capture another of 249 00:19:35,480 --> 00:19:39,720 Speaker 1: the Five Boroughs, Stamford, but he struggled a little more 250 00:19:39,760 --> 00:19:44,520 Speaker 1: than his sister. Unlike athel Flood, whose reputation had allowed 251 00:19:44,520 --> 00:19:48,720 Speaker 1: her to take control of Leicester without any bloodshed, Edward 252 00:19:48,880 --> 00:19:53,480 Speaker 1: had to blockade the Danish fortresses at Stamford for six 253 00:19:53,680 --> 00:19:59,119 Speaker 1: weeks before they folded. Similarly, the Danish colony of York 254 00:19:59,640 --> 00:20:04,080 Speaker 1: offered to pledge their loyalty to athel Flood, but completely 255 00:20:04,200 --> 00:20:09,520 Speaker 1: ignored Edward. An Irish source alleged that Ethel Flood had 256 00:20:09,560 --> 00:20:13,199 Speaker 1: even managed to ally with Elba, a kingdom in what 257 00:20:13,440 --> 00:20:18,360 Speaker 1: is now Scotland, and Strathclyde, a kingdom in northern England, 258 00:20:18,640 --> 00:20:23,760 Speaker 1: against the Norse, even further expanding her military might and 259 00:20:23,880 --> 00:20:27,920 Speaker 1: indicating that she was both an incredible warrior and also 260 00:20:28,040 --> 00:20:33,199 Speaker 1: a diplomat. But her power would be short lived. On 261 00:20:33,400 --> 00:20:38,080 Speaker 1: June twelfth, nine hundred eighteen, Athel Flood died in her 262 00:20:38,119 --> 00:20:43,159 Speaker 1: palace at Tamworth. She was around fifty years old and 263 00:20:43,280 --> 00:20:48,800 Speaker 1: appeared to have died unexpectedly of natural causes. Her body 264 00:20:48,920 --> 00:20:51,960 Speaker 1: was taken to Gloucester to be buried next to her husband. 265 00:20:52,720 --> 00:20:56,280 Speaker 1: After Athel Flood had put decades of her life into 266 00:20:56,359 --> 00:21:01,600 Speaker 1: expanding and protecting Mercian territory. With no obvious heir to 267 00:21:01,640 --> 00:21:08,639 Speaker 1: the throne, Mercia was under threat yet again. News of 268 00:21:08,720 --> 00:21:13,119 Speaker 1: ethel Flood's death spread throughout Mercia and Wessex, and also 269 00:21:13,200 --> 00:21:16,840 Speaker 1: made its way to Ireland and Wales. The Annals of 270 00:21:16,920 --> 00:21:21,320 Speaker 1: Ulster in Ireland described her in an obituary as quote 271 00:21:21,640 --> 00:21:25,160 Speaker 1: the most famous queen of the Saxons, and did not 272 00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:29,679 Speaker 1: report her brother or her father's death. Welsh chronicles also 273 00:21:29,800 --> 00:21:34,520 Speaker 1: noted her death but ignored edwards, suggesting that she had 274 00:21:34,560 --> 00:21:38,400 Speaker 1: made an impression far beyond her kingdom, more so than 275 00:21:38,640 --> 00:21:42,640 Speaker 1: some of the men in her family. Curiously, ethel Flood's 276 00:21:42,720 --> 00:21:48,400 Speaker 1: death was almost entirely ignored by chroniclers in Wessex, aside 277 00:21:48,440 --> 00:21:51,479 Speaker 1: from a brief mention, even though it was where she 278 00:21:51,640 --> 00:21:56,120 Speaker 1: was born. The Anglo Saxon Chronicle, the court produced record 279 00:21:56,200 --> 00:22:00,000 Speaker 1: of events in Wessex, never referred to her military victory 280 00:22:00,320 --> 00:22:03,600 Speaker 1: in Derby or Lester, even though they were crucial in 281 00:22:03,720 --> 00:22:08,520 Speaker 1: consolidating the English Saxon kingdoms fifty years after her death. 282 00:22:09,200 --> 00:22:13,040 Speaker 1: It seemed that ethel Flood's death brought to light some 283 00:22:13,320 --> 00:22:18,520 Speaker 1: underlying tensions between Wessex and Mercia. While the two kingdoms 284 00:22:18,600 --> 00:22:23,760 Speaker 1: were united in fighting against the Danes. Mercia's rising power 285 00:22:23,840 --> 00:22:28,960 Speaker 1: and independence could have made the kingdom less subordinate to Wessex. 286 00:22:29,720 --> 00:22:33,520 Speaker 1: This could be why ethel Flood was omitted from the 287 00:22:33,560 --> 00:22:38,399 Speaker 1: Anglo Saxon Chronicle, allowing Edward to take credit for fighting 288 00:22:38,400 --> 00:22:43,320 Speaker 1: off the Danes instead of his sister. After ethel Flood's 289 00:22:43,359 --> 00:22:46,879 Speaker 1: death in June of nine hundred and nineteen, her daughter 290 00:22:46,960 --> 00:22:50,800 Speaker 1: alfwyn took over as the Lady of Mercia, the only 291 00:22:50,920 --> 00:22:55,000 Speaker 1: example in early medieval England of a woman inheriting the 292 00:22:55,040 --> 00:22:58,800 Speaker 1: throne from her mother, But only a few months later 293 00:23:00,200 --> 00:23:05,320 Speaker 1: deposed Alfwynn and took her to Wessex, gaining control of Mercia. 294 00:23:06,200 --> 00:23:10,600 Speaker 1: It's unclear what happened to alf Winn after her deposition, 295 00:23:11,320 --> 00:23:15,160 Speaker 1: and she too was ignored in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle. 296 00:23:15,600 --> 00:23:20,160 Speaker 1: Her brief rule wasn't even mentioned. Given that the Anglo 297 00:23:20,240 --> 00:23:24,760 Speaker 1: Saxon Chronicle is among the most important accounts of tenth 298 00:23:24,800 --> 00:23:31,000 Speaker 1: century English history, athel Flood and alfwin remained quote shadowy 299 00:23:31,080 --> 00:23:35,760 Speaker 1: figures according to historian Tim Clarkson, and were placed under 300 00:23:35,800 --> 00:23:42,359 Speaker 1: a conspiracy of silence. According to historian FT Wainwright, that 301 00:23:42,640 --> 00:23:47,720 Speaker 1: said Atha Flood shows up in Other early medieval sources 302 00:23:48,280 --> 00:23:52,560 Speaker 1: like the Mercian Register, chronicles of the Life of Alfred, 303 00:23:53,000 --> 00:23:56,439 Speaker 1: Annals of Ireland and Wales, and the charters that she 304 00:23:56,680 --> 00:24:01,680 Speaker 1: issued accounts of her ambitious rule were also probably passed 305 00:24:01,720 --> 00:24:05,800 Speaker 1: down orally before being put into writing in the eleventh 306 00:24:05,800 --> 00:24:10,720 Speaker 1: century by historians like William of Malmsbury mentioned earlier in 307 00:24:10,760 --> 00:24:16,800 Speaker 1: the episode. Another of these writers, Henry of Huntingdon, memorialized 308 00:24:16,920 --> 00:24:21,159 Speaker 1: Athol Flood in a poem that went heroic Athol Flood 309 00:24:21,320 --> 00:24:25,480 Speaker 1: great in marital fame, a man in valor woman, though 310 00:24:25,560 --> 00:24:31,159 Speaker 1: in name heroes before the Mercian heroine quailed Caesar himself 311 00:24:31,320 --> 00:24:38,639 Speaker 1: to win such glory failed quite a legacy. That's the 312 00:24:38,680 --> 00:24:42,560 Speaker 1: story of Athol Flood. But keep listening after a brief 313 00:24:42,680 --> 00:24:46,040 Speaker 1: sponsor break, to hear the story of how King Alfred 314 00:24:46,440 --> 00:24:50,919 Speaker 1: Athelflood's father made a small mistake that would be remembered 315 00:24:51,000 --> 00:24:59,639 Speaker 1: for centuries. After a skirmish with the Vikings in eight 316 00:24:59,720 --> 00:25:03,159 Speaker 1: hundred seventy eight, King Alfred fled a battle to the 317 00:25:03,200 --> 00:25:07,640 Speaker 1: Somerset Levels, a marshy area in southwest England. In order 318 00:25:07,680 --> 00:25:11,400 Speaker 1: to hide and recover, He turned up at a cottage 319 00:25:11,440 --> 00:25:15,040 Speaker 1: where a peasant woman took him in without recognizing that 320 00:25:15,160 --> 00:25:18,680 Speaker 1: he was the king. She was baking some wheatcakes by 321 00:25:18,720 --> 00:25:21,639 Speaker 1: the fire and asked Alfred to keep an eye on 322 00:25:21,680 --> 00:25:25,200 Speaker 1: them as she attended to some other chores. But Alfred, 323 00:25:25,280 --> 00:25:27,600 Speaker 1: with so much on his mind, given that he was 324 00:25:27,640 --> 00:25:31,679 Speaker 1: trying to protect Wessex from the Vikings, forgot about the 325 00:25:31,720 --> 00:25:35,959 Speaker 1: cakes and accidentally let them burn. When the woman returned 326 00:25:36,000 --> 00:25:40,280 Speaker 1: and discovered the burnt cakes, she scolded Alfred, who was 327 00:25:40,720 --> 00:25:46,080 Speaker 1: duly humiliated. The story is likely a legend, appearing in 328 00:25:46,119 --> 00:25:50,040 Speaker 1: the written record over a century after Alfred's death. It 329 00:25:50,119 --> 00:25:53,840 Speaker 1: seems to be a medieval English version of stars They're 330 00:25:53,920 --> 00:25:58,200 Speaker 1: just like us, reassuring the listener that even kings can 331 00:25:58,280 --> 00:26:03,800 Speaker 1: sometimes get distracted. The story became a staple of English folklore. 332 00:26:04,200 --> 00:26:08,960 Speaker 1: There's even a mushroom named King Alfred's Cakes because they're 333 00:26:09,040 --> 00:26:22,320 Speaker 1: chalky and black like burnt cakes. Noble Blood is a 334 00:26:22,359 --> 00:26:26,560 Speaker 1: production of iHeart Radio and Grim and Mild from Aaron Mankey. 335 00:26:27,160 --> 00:26:31,040 Speaker 1: Noble Blood is hosted by me Dana Schwartz, with additional 336 00:26:31,080 --> 00:26:35,760 Speaker 1: writing and research by Hannah Johnston, Hannahswick, Courtney Sender, Amy 337 00:26:35,840 --> 00:26:39,960 Speaker 1: Hit and Julia Melaney. The show is edited and produced 338 00:26:40,040 --> 00:26:45,199 Speaker 1: by Jesse Funk with supervising producer rima il KLi and 339 00:26:45,320 --> 00:26:49,800 Speaker 1: executive producers Aaron Manke, Trevor Young, and Matt Frederick. For 340 00:26:49,920 --> 00:26:55,320 Speaker 1: more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, 341 00:26:55,560 --> 00:27:01,399 Speaker 1: or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.