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BOOK protract to the times of Arthur.

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465.

At length another adventurer appeared on the island. The success of Hengist made a new species of enterprise familiar to the Saxon states. To combine to obtain riches, cultivated lands, and slaves to tend them, was more inviting than to risk the tempest for uncertain plunder. Hence it is not wonderful, that while some were diffusing themselves over Germany, the success of Hengist attracted the maritime part of the Saxon confederation; and assisted to convert it from naval piracy to views of regular conquest in Britain.

HENGIST was succeeded in Kent by his son Esc, who reigned twenty-four years. No subsequent event of importance is recorded of this little kingdom, till the reign of Ethelbyrhte, who acceded in 560", and enjoyed the sceptre for above half a century.

52

clares, "Non cessabant civilia bella," p. 311. And see the Lives of the Welsh Saints, MSS. Vesp. A. 14.

51 Sax. Ch. p. 20.

52 Flor. Wig. dates his accession 561, and gives fifty-six years as the duration of his reign, p. 221. The names by which Alfred translates the title of duces, which Bede gives to Hengist and Horsa, are Latteowas and Heretogan, p. 483. The British king, whom Jeffery calls Vortigernus, and the Welsh writings Gwrtheyrn, Alfred names Wyrtgeorn, p. 482.

CHAP. II.

ELLA arrives in SUSSEX, and founds a Kingdom there.-CERDIC invades the South Part of the Island, and establishes the Kingdom of WESSEX. Battles of his Successors with the BRITONS.

ELLA

was the next Saxon chieftain, or king, CHAP who, twenty-eight years after the first arrival

II.

477.

Arrival of

of Hengist, invaded Britain. He landed with
three sons in Sussex'; and drove the Britons into Ella.
the great wood, which stretched from the south of
Kent into Sussex and Hampshire. Although they
came with but three ships, they succeeded in gain-
ing a settlement. Hence we may infer, that they
were resisted only by the petty British sovereign of
the district. By slow degrees they enlarged their
conquests on the coast. In the eighth year of
their arrival they attempted to penetrate into the
interior; a dubious but wasteful battle on the river
Mercread checked their progress. Recruited by
new arrivals from the Continent, they ventured to
besiege Andredes Ceaster, a city strongly fortified
according to the usages of the age. The Britons
defended this with some skill. Taking advantage
of the adjoining forest, while the Saxons attempted

1 Saxon Chron. 14. Flor. Wigorn. 203. Ethelwerd, 834.
2 The weald of Kent was anciently 120 miles long towards
the west, and 30 broad from north to south. On the edge of
the wood, in Sussex, stood Andredes Ceaster. Lambard's
Perambulation of Kent, 167, 168. This vast wood was a wil-
derness, not inhabited by men, but by deer and hogs.

490.

490.

3

BOOK to scale the walls, a division of the Britons attacked III. them from the woods behind: to repel them the Saxons were compelled to desist from their assault on the city. The Britons retired from the pressure of their attack into the woods, sallying out again when the Saxons again advanced to the city. This plan was successfully repeated with great loss to the assailants, till Ella conceived the idea of dividing his Saxons into two bodies; one to storm, the other to cover the attack. This measure succeeded, and the Saxons burst into the city; but, irritated by their loss, disgraced their conquest by one of those barbarous actions which history ought never to mention without horror, and which no events or reasons can justify: the inhabitants were put to the sword. This was a conquest not far distant from the shore; so that this Saxon kingdom was rather permitted by the Britons to exist than extorted from their national opposition. Ella's settlement was probably considered as a colonisation, that would have no important consequences to the British people. It became the kingdom of Sussex.

As this state was never formidable to the others, nor is much mentioned afterwards, there is no reason to imagine that Ella made any great progress ;

3 Hen. Hunt. p. 312: He adds, that the city was never rebuilt, but remained apparently in his times in a state of ruin, which showed to the passenger how noble a place it had been.

4 Sax. Chron. 15. "Ne wearth thær forthon an Bryt to lafe." Our ancient chroniclers make often small differences in their chronologies. Thus the Sax. Chron. dates this event in 490, Flor. Wig. 491, and Ethelwerd, 492.

II.

490.

but Ella is commemorated as the preponderant C HA P. Saxon chief at that time in England: his conquests were therefore superior to those of Hengist and his son, who were his contemporaries. This is another circumstance, which shows the mistake of attributing such extensive desolation and triumphs to Hengist. Both he and Ella appear to have been satisfied with the possession of the provinces they invaded. It was the next warrior who spread consternation through Britain, resisted the genius of Ambrosius and Arthur, and by his successes ensured safety to the intruders in Kent and Sussex.

6

EIGHTEEN years after Ella, another powerful colony of Saxons arrived in the island, under the auspices of Cerdic, who also derived his genealogy from Woden. The first essay was made with five ships; but the battles and conquests of its leaders display either abilities of the most superior kind, or an accumulation of force far beyond that which had assailed the other parts of the island. The place of his primary descent is by no means clear. The modern name, which would correspond with the ancient appellation of Cerdices Ora, has not been preserved. Both Yarmouth

5 Sax. Chron. 71. Bede, lib. ii. c. 5.

7

6 Sax. Chron. 15. Flor. Wig. 205. Cerdic was the ninth descendant from Woden by his son Boldæg, and his great grandson Freothogar. Allowing thirty years for a generation, this would place the existence of Odin about 225, which is near the time when the Francs accomplished their voyage from the Euxine.

7 Yet Higden, in his Polychronicon, makes Cerdicesore that quæ nunc dicitur Gernemouth, p. 224., which (if we could rely upon it) would decide that Yarmouth was the spot. Camden mentions a striking fact in favour of the claims of Yarmouth,

495.

Invasion

of Cerdic.

III.

BOOK and Southampton have had their advocates; out a remarkable passage in the Saxon Chronicle, which indicates that he attacked West Saexnaland six years after his arrival, induces a belief that his first attempt was on some other part of the

4.5.

501.

island.

In the same year that Cerdic assaulted the district afterwards denominated Wessex, a band of his allies, under Porta, effected a landing with the companies of two ships at Portsmouth, and defeated the Britons.10 Others came, thirteen years afterwards, under Stuf and Wihtgar.

It was in the battles with Cerdic that the strength of the Britons and Saxons seem to have been first opposed to each other with a national magnitude, and for many years with varying success. It was not till twenty-four years after his arrival that Cerdic and his son are noticed to have established the kingdom of "Wessex. Of the conflicts which

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"The place is called by the inhabitants at this day, Cerdicksand." Britan. 390. Gib.

8 This position is thought to be warranted by comparing the Saxon Chron. p. 18., which mentions the arrival of the nepotes of Cerdic at Cerdicesora, in 514, and Matt. West., who states their arrival in occidentali parte Britanniæ, p. 184.; but this is not conclusive evidence. Mr. Whitaker thinks, that all Cerdic's operations were confined to Hampshire, vol. ii. p. 61.

9 Sax. Chron. p. 15. So Ethelwerd, 834. Sexto etiam anno adventus eorum occidentalem circumierunt Britanniæ partem quæ Westsexe nuncupatur.

10 Sax. Chron. p. 17. Flor. Wig. 205. Ethelw. 834.

11 Thus the Sax. Chron. 519. "Her Cerdic and Cynric WestSaexna rice onfengun," p. 18. Flor. Wig. "regnare cæperunt," p. 208. Ethelwerd, "in ipso anno facietenus cæperunt regnare," p. 834. So Huntingdon to the same date, "Regnum West Sexe incipit," p. 313.

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