Edward I's Conquest of Wales
By Sean Davies
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About this ebook
Edward I’s conquest of Wales has not been the subject of a scholarly book for over a century. Research has advanced since then, changing our perception of the medieval military mind and shining fresh light on the key characters involved in the conquest. That is why Sean Davies’s absorbing new study is so timely and important.
Taking a balanced approach, he gives both the Welsh and English perspectives on the war and on the brutal, mistrustful, and ruthless personal motives that drove events. His account is set in the context of Welsh warfare and society from the end of Rome to the time of Edward’s opening campaign in the late thirteenth century. The narrative describes in vivid detail the military history of the conflict; the sequence of campaigns; Welsh resistance; Edward’s castle building and English colonization; the cost of the struggle to the Welsh and the English; and the uneasy peace that followed.
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Edward I's Conquest of Wales - Sean Davies
Chapter 1
The Red and the White Dragons
On a blustery day in 1056, King Edward the Confessor of England stared west across the river Severn, awaiting a meeting with his troublesome neighbour Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, King of Wales:
Ambassadors were sent from both sides and then they negotiated from opposite banks of the Severn, Edward being at Aust Cliff, Gruffudd at Beachley. The nobles went to and fro between them in boats, and after many exchanges of messages, the question was long debated which of them ought to cross over to the other. It was a difficult crossing owing to the roughness of the water, but that was not the ground of the dispute. Gruffudd alleged his precedence, Edward his equality: Gruffudd took the ground that his people had gained all England, with Cornwall, Scotland, and Wales, from the giants, and affirmed himself to be their heir in a direct line: Edward argued that his ancestors had got the land from its conquerors. After a great deal of quarrelsome contention Edward got in a boat and set off to Gruffudd. At that point the Severn is a mile broad. Gruffudd seeing him and recognising him cast off his state mantle – for he had prepared himself for a public appearance – went into the water up to his breast and throwing his arms lovingly about the boat, said: ‘Wisest of kings, your modesty has vanquished my pride, your wisdom has triumphed over my foolishness. The neck which I foolishly stiffened against you you shall mount and so enter the territory which your mildness has today made your own.’ And taking him on his shoulders he seated him upon his mantle, and then with joined hands did him homage. This was an admirable beginning of peace, but, after the Welsh manner, it was only kept till they felt able to do mischief.¹
The apparently irreconcilable perceptions of rights of precedence between Wales and England, the red dragon and the white, were already centuries old in 1056, dating back to the innumerable skirmishes, raids, battles and conquests that accompanied the slow death of Roman Britain in the fifth century and beyond. They remained evident in the 1270s and 1280s when they were at the heart of the conflicts between King Edward I and Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, clashes that would lead to the ultimate conquest of Wales. One of the clearest expressions of the Welsh position at that time was made by the prince: ‘The king knows well that the rights of [Llywelyn’s] principality are totally separate from the rights of his kingdom, although Llywelyn holds his principality under his royal power.’²
To trace the origins of the differing interpretations of English and Welsh regal rights, we need to take ourselves back to the fifth-century world of the British elite, nobles who saw themselves as the successors of Roman civilisation and the Roman right to rule. Their ability to exercise such rule was challenged by the influx of various peoples and tribes, most famously the Angles and Saxons; their British rivals would cut through any tribal distinctions by referring to the Germanic newcomers as Saeson (‘Saxons’). An early ninth-century Gwynedd source, the Historia Brittonum, gives one of the more florid accounts of the rivalries between the two peoples. The source describes the supposed actions of a fifth-century British leader, Vortigern, as he struggled to deal with the Anglo-Saxons. At one point he attempted to construct a citadel in Snowdonia, but whenever work was started it collapsed and disappeared overnight. A boy – here the son of a Roman consul called Ambrosius, but who became Merlin in later historical traditions – was brought to the spot to be offered as a blood sacrifice by Vortigern’s ‘wise men’. Instead, he explained why the construction problems occurred:
‘There is,’ said he, ‘a pool; come and dig:’ they did so, and found the pool. ‘Now,’ continued he, ‘tell me what is in it;’ but they were ashamed, and made no reply. ‘I,’ said the boy, ‘can discover it to you: there are two vases in the pool;’ they examined, and found it so: continuing his questions, ‘What is in the vases?’ they were silent: ‘There is a tent in them,’ said the boy; ‘separate them, and you shall find it so;’ this being done by the king’s command, there was found in them a folded tent. The boy, going on with his questions, asked the wise men what was in it? But they not knowing what to reply, ‘There are,’ said he, ‘two serpents, one white and the other red; unfold the tent;’ they obeyed, and two sleeping serpents were discovered; ‘consider attentively,’ said the boy, ‘what they are doing.’ The serpents began to struggle with each other; and the white one, raising himself up, threw down the other into the middle of the tent and sometimes drove him to the edge of it; and this was repeated thrice. At length the red one, apparently the weaker of the two, recovering his strength, expelled the white one from the tent; and the latter being pursued through the pool by the red one, disappeared. Then the boy, asking the wise men what was signified by this wonderful omen, and they expressing their ignorance, he said to the king, ‘I will now unfold to you the meaning of this mystery. The pool is the emblem of this world, and the tent that of your kingdom: the two serpents are two dragons; the red serpent is your dragon, but the white serpent is the dragon of the people who occupy several provinces and districts of Britain, even almost from sea to sea: at length, however, our people shall rise and drive away the Saxon race from beyond the sea, whence they originally came.³
While the fact that the clashes between the peoples were often bitter and brutal is beyond dispute, modern DNA studies have established that this was not a war of racial extermination. The movement of people from continental Europe to Britain was limited, the Anglo-Saxon conquest of the island being very much the victory of a military and cultural elite. The cultural victory proved wholescale, though, through the effects of imitation of that elite and the desire of the native population to win patronage; the scale of this imperial triumph is indicated by the mere handful of Brythonic (‘Welsh’) words that have survived in the English language. The connection between political mastery and cultural control is clearly revealed by Bede’s enormously influential Ecclesiastical History of the English People, a great ‘national’ history telling the story of the successes of God’s chosen people following their conversion to Christianity. For the author, it was an inconvenient truth that many of the Anglo-Saxons’ British opponents were already Christians, including Cadwallon of Gwynedd who came close to eradicating the ruling dynasty of Bede’s Northumbria. Cadwallon’s eventual death at the hands of Oswald at the battle of Heavenfield (c.633) is depicted as a great victory for the English people and the Christian faith, but the reality of shifting political alliances was far more complex. The platform for Cadwallon’s campaign that took him to the shadow of Hadrian’s Wall had been laid by his alliance with Penda, an Anglo-Saxon, pagan leader of Mercia with a curiously Brythonic-sounding name (‘Pen-da’ translates as ‘good leader’). Meanwhile, Oswald’s campaign had started from his adopted home, the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata in Argyll. He enjoyed backing from King Domnall Brecc and the clerical community of Iona, as well as from the Brythonic kingdom of Rheged, the heart of which was in the region of Carlisle.
Cadwallon’s defeat was symbolic of the retreat and decline of Brythonic political power, and the independence of Brythonic leaders in the island would eventually be restricted to the lands that would become Wales. Offa’s Dyke helped give that retreat physical form, although it should be stressed that we know very little about the date or purpose of the earthwork that runs along much of the length of Wales’ eastern border and that has traditionally been attributed to the late eighth-century Mercian leader Offa. The kings to the west of that dyke faced pressure from both Anglo-Saxon and Hiberno-Scandinavian rivals in the succeeding centuries, external forces that impacted on the potential development of a single kingdom of Wales. A long tradition began of the submission of less powerful Welsh kings to more imposing Anglo-Saxon kings from Mercia and Wessex, as particularly seen under King Athelstan (d. 939). According to the twelfth-century writer William of Malmesbury, c. 930 Athelstan summoned nearly all the kings of Wales to gather at his court in Hereford, the border city itself a great symbolic location in the wars between the peoples. There Athelstan is said to have imposed humiliating terms on them, including an enormous annual tribute of 20lbs of gold, 300lbs of silver, 25,000 oxen and large numbers of hounds and hawks. In the years that followed, the mighty Anglo-Saxon king repeatedly underlined his authority by compelling the Welsh kings to attend his courts and witness his charters. This state of affairs has been seen as the catalyst for the composition of the famous Welsh poem Armes Prydein, a song of defiance that envisaged a grand alliance against Athelstan made up of the Welsh, Scots, Irish, the Danes of Dublin and the Britons of Strathclyde, Brittany and Cornwall.⁴
The kings of the Britons
Many in England may have seen the situation under Athelstan as the natural order of things. It is possible that many in Wales also acknowledged this, but the existence of Armes Prydein shows that an alternative narrative existed and it is also clear that there were kings to the west of Offa’s Dyke with far greater ambitions. Such men did not then call themselves ‘kings of Wales’; the label ‘Welsh’ came from the language of the Anglo-Saxons where it meant ‘foreigner’ or ‘outsider’. While the old Brythonic population at times referred to themselves as the Cymry – which could be translated as ‘compatriots’ or ‘people of the same region’ – their most powerful and successful leaders were called in the native chronicles ‘kings of the Britons’. The first man known to receive such an epithet was Anarawd ap Rhodri Mawr (d. 916) and the title was also accorded to Hywel Dda (d. 950), Maredudd ab Owain (d. 999), Llywelyn ap Seisyll (d. 1023), Gruffudd ap Llywelyn (d. 1063) and Bleddyn ap Cynfyn (d. 1075).⁵ The title itself implies a connection to the history and mythology that saw the kings of the Britons as the descendants of the Trojans; as the rightful rulers of the whole island following their conquest of it from the giants, they were superior to any Anglo-Saxon overlord. These leaders used propaganda associated with such mythology to fuel their own rise to superiority over the other, less powerful ‘kings’ of Wales.
The man who would bring this policy to fruition was the remarkable Gruffudd ap Llywelyn. Not only was he the first, last and only native king to rule all the lands that comprise modern Wales, he took things further, reversing the trend of the westward expansion of English control and reclaiming ‘Welsh’ land to the east of Offa’s Dyke that had been in Anglo-Saxon hands for centuries. Such reconquered land ran almost the entire length of Wales’ eastern border and contained many inhabitants who would have considered themselves ‘Welsh’ by language, culture and inclination. The resurgence in Welsh power since the days of Athelstan was remarkable and had been helped by divisions in the Anglo-Saxon state, partly caused by the impact of the Vikings. The key to Gruffudd’s success was an unshakeable alliance with the leaders of Anglo-Saxon Mercia, who were prepared to suffer territorial losses in the west in return for the support of the Welsh against their rivals from Wessex: Harold and the rest of the Godwine dynasty.
Gruffudd’s 1056 meeting with Edward the Confessor, described at the beginning of this chapter, was preceded by two years of border warfare that started with the exile of Earl Ælfgar, the heir to Mercia, at the instigation of the Godwines. Ælfgar gathered a Hiberno-Scandinavian fleet which he brought to the mouth of the Wye for a rendezvous with his ally, Gruffudd. In the course of these events, Gruffudd killed his last remaining native rival, the king of south-east Wales, before the allies embarked on an attack up the Wye valley that ended with the destruction of the strategically and symbolically key town of Hereford. After more border skirmishing, Ælfgar was returned to his earldom and, eventually, Gruffudd was able to win recognition of his position as King of Wales from the English state. While the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle merely noted that ‘Gruffudd swore oaths that he would be a loyal and faithful under-king to King Edward’, from the nature of their agreement it is clear that any submission made by Gruffudd was nominal; he offered no dues, gave no hostages and would not perform any military service for the Anglo-Saxon king, while the deal was accompanied by major territorial gains in favour of the Welsh king. The fact that Gruffudd is said to have done homage is, of course, significant, but his loosely defined position as an under-king within the British Isles is more akin to the nature of the relationship that would develop between the kings of England and Scotland than to the more subservient relationship between the kings of Wales and Athelstan. Within Wales itself, Gruffudd was described in almost imperial terms. The Welsh chronicle called him ‘the foremost of the Britons’ and the ‘head, shield and defender’ of his race. The Life of St Gwynllyw described him as ‘valiant king of all Wales’, while in the Book of Llandaff he was called ‘King Gruffudd, sole and pre-eminent ruler of the British’. Perhaps even more significantly, his status was clearly acknowledged in external sources from England, Ireland and France, and even by the late eleventh-century German chronicler Adam of Bremen.
This enhancement of Welsh power and prestige is unlikely to have ever sat comfortably with Harold Godwine and he had a further, more pressing, reason for breaking the power of Wales; fracturing Gruffudd’s alliance with his Mercian rivals was the only way to open a path towards the English throne. The death of Ælfgar, which is thought to have occurred in late 1062, gave Harold his opportunity; he launched a lightning strike on Gruffudd’s Christmas court at Rhuddlan, then set about planning a major spring and summer campaign that would crush the fledgling kingdom of Wales. Harold’s plan would, in many ways, serve as a blueprint for any future English leader seeking to reduce the native Welsh. He sowed dissension and won native support by nurturing members of the rival dynasties that Gruffudd had humbled and displaced in his rise to the kingship. Harold gathered a fleet in Bristol which he used to effect landings at key coastal locations, quickly winning over the leading men in the various localities whose allegiance to the north Walian Gruffudd was brittle. Meanwhile, Harold’s brother Tostig, the earl of Northumbria, led a mounted force along the north Wales coast, the invasion route to this part of the country having been opened by the disruption in Mercia that followed Ælfgar’s death. The Godwine brothers would eventually join forces, catching Gruffudd in a pincer movement. In the meantime, however, our sources indicate that the Welsh king mounted a vigorous resistance, retreating to the wildest parts of his lands – most probably a reference to Snowdonia – and engaging the invaders in guerrilla warfare. But Harold and Tostig were outstanding commanders, capable of handling the tough opposition and challenging conditions. Their methodical, relentless campaign ground down the Welsh in a manner that left a lasting impression on future generations. The twelfth-century writer John of Salisbury said that:
When [Harold] perceived the mobility of the foreigners, he selected for the mission soldiers who fought in the same way, since he resolved that they were to engage in battle practice in light armament, assaulting in rawhide boots, chests covered by hardened straps and hides, throwing up small light shields against the missiles, and at one time hurling javelins, at another employing swords against the enemy. His troops would stick close to the enemy’s fleeing footsteps in order that they might hold fast ‘foot to foot and spear to spear’ and might repulse shield with shield. And so he devastated everything along the way to Snowdon and . . . he captured their kings and presented their heads to the king who had sent him. And killing every male he could find, all the way to pitiful little children, he pacified the province with the edge of a sword.⁶
John’s contemporary Gerald of Wales included in his book the Description of Wales an outline of the way a potential conqueror should approach the reduction of the country. It included a description of methods undertaken by some of the most successful Anglo-Saxon leaders in Wales that concluded with Harold’s final campaign against Gruffudd:
Then, last of all, and by far the greatest, came Harold. He advanced into Wales on foot, at the head of his lightly clad infantry, lived on the country, and marched up and down and round and about the whole of Wales with such energy that he ‘left not one that pisseth against a wall’. In commemoration of his success, and to his own undying memory, you will find a great number of inscribed stones put up in Wales to mark the many places where he won a victory. This was the old custom. The stones bear the inscription: HIC FUIT VICTOR HAROLDUS. It is to these recent victories of the English over the Welsh, in which so much blood was spilt, that the first three kings of the Normans owe the fact that in their lifetime they have held Wales in peace and subjection.⁷
When faced with such overwhelming, relentless opposition, Gruffudd’s key supporters deserted him and he was eventually betrayed and murdered by his own closest associates, who delivered his head to Harold.
The end of the kingdom of the Britons
It is only with hindsight that the seminal nature of the change that then took place in the country can be seen, and I have argued elsewhere that the events of these years marked the end of the kingdom of Wales and the beginning of what would become the principality of Wales.⁸ Harold installed in Gruffudd’s place the former king’s half-brothers, Bleddyn and Rhiwallon. Their ambition was to recreate the dominion enjoyed by Gruffudd, but the reality of their situation was very different. The brothers had lost the extended eastern borderlands that had been won by Gruffudd, including Tegeingl, the territory of modern-day north-east Wales between the Clwyd and Dee that had been at the heart of Gruffudd’s rule. Rival Welsh dynasties that Gruffudd had crushed or vanquished in south-east and south-west Wales were now back in control of their families’ traditional heartlands and the leaders of these dynasties were themselves called kings. If Gruffudd had used propaganda regarding the superiority of the ‘kings of the Britons’ to the Anglo-Saxons to advance his ‘imperial’ position within Wales, the nature of Bleddyn and Rhiwallon’s submission to Harold and Edward the Confessor would have hamstrung their ability to tap into such a source of soft power. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes their accession thus:
In autumn King Gruffudd was killed on 5 August by his own men because of the fight he fought against Earl Harold. He was king over all the Welsh, and his head was brought to Earl Harold, and Harold brought it to the king, and the figurehead of his ship and the ornaments with it. And King Edward entrusted the country to the two brothers of Gruffudd, Bleddyn and Rhiwallon, and they swore oaths and gave hostages to the king and the earl, promising that they would be faithful to him in everything, and be everywhere ready on water and on land, and likewise would pay such dues from that country as had been given before to any other king.⁹
The taking of hostages and the promise of unlimited military service is indicative of the nature of this submission, while the reference to the payment of ‘such dues as had been given to any other king’ may even hark back to the onerous settlement enforced by Athelstan in the tenth century. It is also notable that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle never describes Bleddyn or Rhiwallon as king, a fact that stands in stark contrast to the same source’s acknowledgement of Gruffudd’s exalted status.
Rhiwallon (d. 1069) and Bleddyn (d. 1075) would restore Gruffudd’s alliance with Mercia and follow policies aimed at throwing off the shackles of the 1063 agreement, but they would never come close to recreating the kingdom of Wales that had been ruled by their half-brother. The arrival of the Normans complicated matters, their restless, expansionist military presence adding another factor into the bloody dynastic politics that would tear Wales apart in the final quarter of the eleventh century, destroying any remaining vestige of a kingdom of Wales. By the 1090s, many of the most attractive, richest lowlands of the country had fallen permanently into Anglo-Norman hands, forming the so-called march of Wales, ruled by ambitious men whose lordships were geared for conflict and who had the legal backing of marcher custom to further extend their dominions by making war on the Welsh. Any future clash between England and Wales would not be a contest between nations; Wales was now a fractured, divided land made up of a bewildering array of semi-independent marcher lordships, English royal lands, and territories held by a variety of competing native Welsh dynasties.
The word ‘territories’ for the Welsh lands is deliberately chosen; to many of the Welsh themselves they would have been described as ‘kingdoms’, but such a term was becoming increasingly anachronistic. Bleddyn was the last native leader to be given the exalted title ‘King of the Britons’ in the native Welsh chronicle, although it was an epithet awarded to one other man: the king of England, William the Conqueror. When the king of Deheubarth (south-west Wales), Rhys ap Tewdwr, was killed in battle by the Normans in 1093, the Welsh chronicle bemoaned the fact that ‘then fell the kingdom of the Britons’, while John of Worcester stated that ‘from that day kings ceased to rule in Wales’. A century later Gerald of Wales would have no hesitation in telling the Pope that ‘Wales is a portion of the kingdom of England, and not a kingdom in itself’.
The continued use of the term ‘king’ by Welsh leaders in the twelfth century became a fact that was used by the Anglo-Normans to mock them and their now-unrealistic ambitions. For example, the chronicler Jordan Fantosme (fl. 1170–80) said of a group of Henry II’s knights that there was not one of them who ‘did not consider himself less than a Welsh king’. As well as the obvious limitations of such ‘kings’ in terms of political and military power, this mockery was related to a changing notion of what defined a barbarian in twelfth-century Europe. In the early middle ages, the term had been reserved for the pagan raiders and invaders of the lands of the old Roman Empire, but now it was being used to describe societies on the fringe of the continent’s dominant civilisations, including the Magyars, Slavs, Scandinavians, Scottish, Irish and Welsh. Some of the characteristics of the societies of such people were thought to include the predominance of pastoral over agriculture, little urban development, unsophisticated economies and little scope for fine art. Differences in military, religious and cultural practices added to the mix, meaning that these ‘fringe’ societies tended to be viewed with ‘condescension, suspicion, scorn and dread’.¹⁰ While some such differences can be acknowledged between lands in the heart of Europe and those on the edge, the highlighting of such otherness was also, of course, used to help justify conquest and related atrocities and oppressions.
Geoffrey of Monmouth
It was within this context that Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain was composed (c. 1136), the book that would prove the key work in the transmission of the legend of King Arthur to the wider European world. The author, a Welsh cleric in the service of the Anglo-Normans, wished to defend his compatriots’ heritage and culture, stressing their ancient claims to rule the land, having a story that stretched back to survivors from Troy, who conquered Britain from the giants. Geoffrey’s pseudohistory embraced the story of Roman Britain, plus Arthur and the other ‘kings of the Britons’ who ruled after the legions withdrew. These kings were seen as the champions of the Roman legacy as they battled the Germanic, ‘barbarian’ invaders – the future kings of England. Even so, Geoffrey had no truck with any nearcontemporary claims of Welsh leaders to be ‘kings of the Britons’; in his work, the last man to hold such a title was Cadwaladr the Blessed (d. 682), the grandson of the Cadwallon who fell at Heavenfield. According to Geoffrey, it was Cadwaladr’s death in the seventh century that led the ‘Britons’ to take on the name ‘Welsh’. While presenting this story of the historical ascendancy of ‘British’ kings, Geoffrey is also the first known source for the legend of the division of Britain between the sons of Brutus, Locrinus, Albanactus and Camber, with Locrinus – the eldest, who ruled ‘England’ – acknowledged as the superior king over the other two, who ruled ‘Scotland’ and ‘Wales’. This vision of three kings in Britain with the superior ruler in London would ultimately be accepted and promoted by Welsh princes in the thirteenth century. The Scots, though, would reject this tale that gave England supremacy, denying any Trojan heritage and promoting their own mythology that based their claims to the Scottish crown on Scota, the daughter of an Egyptian Pharaoh from the time of Moses.
The fact that the notion of Welsh supremacy, or even equality, could not be countenanced by Geoffrey is understandable in the aftermath of the reign of Henry I (1100–35). According to the Welsh chronicles he was ‘the man who had subdued under his authority all the island of Britain’ and the man ‘against whom no-one could be of avail save God himself’.¹¹ He dominated the Anglo-Normans and Welsh of south Wales, while overawing the other native rulers of the country by his influence and with two major royal expeditions, in 1114 and 1121. In 1114 the Welsh chronicles said that he intended ‘to exterminate all the Britons completely, so that the Britannic name should never more be remembered’.¹²
The princes of Wales
Throughout this time, Gruffudd ap Cynan (d. 1137) of Gwynedd proved to be the great survivor. The head of an ancient dynasty who returned to Wales from Irish exile after the death of Bleddyn, Gruffudd’s patient work of consolidation would pave the way for his descendants to prosper. The Anglo-Norman civil war that followed Henry I’s death was the catalyst for a substantial recovery of native Welsh power, focused on the competing dynasties that ruled in Gwynedd, Powys and Deheubarth. Each of those regions would enjoy periods as the most powerful of the native Welsh ‘kingdoms’, but the Gwynedd dynasty would eventually stake its claim to leadership of Wales, with