The Vita Haroldi (English: Life of Harold) is an anonymous Latin work, written around the year 1205, which claims to relate the life of king Harold Godwinson. It asserts that Harold was not killed at the Battle of Hastings but survived for many years, first journeying on the continent of Europe and then living as a hermit in various parts of England and Wales. It survives in only one manuscript, copied in Waltham Abbey, and it may have been composed there. Harold was certainly a patron of Waltham Abbey and was in all likelihood buried there. [1]
In the Prologue, the writer accepts from his ecclesiastical sponsors the commission to write about Harold, a devotee, like them, of the Holy Cross. The Vita proper begins with some account of Harold's father, Earl Godwin, in particular detailing a mission to Denmark in which he escapes a treacherous attempt to kill him and marries the King of Denmark's sister. It then moves on to Harold and his Welsh wars, in the course of which he contracts a paralytic illness which baffles doctors. He is miraculously healed by the Holy Cross of Waltham, gratefully builds a new church there to house it, and endows it with many treasures. It is later refounded by Henry II. Harold is raised by God to the throne of England and defeats Norwegian invaders, but is struck down by his Norman enemies. The writer of the Vita names his authority for much of the foregoing as Sebricht, a former servant of Harold who subsequently became a most holy pilgrim and hermit.
Harold is left for dead by the Normans, but is healed by a Saracen woman in Winchester as he lies concealed there for two years. He then visits Saxony and Denmark, but finds no help for his cause. Seeing at last that God has turned against him, he adopts a life of humility and devotion and becomes a pilgrim, just as he had in former days, before he ascended the throne, made a perilous pilgrimage to Rome. The writer praises Harold's piety, then discusses the oath Harold swore to support William of Normandy's claim to the English throne. Some condemn him as a perjurer, citing the fact that God stripped the oak under which he swore the oath of all its bark. Others, including the writer, justify his perjury on the grounds that his oath was given under duress and that complying with it would have been disastrous for the English people. God, the writer argues at length, showed his approval of Harold's decision by this same miracle, by giving him victory over the Norwegians, and by another miracle in which the figure of Christ on the Holy Cross bowed to him.
Returning home after many years abroad, Harold adopts the name of Christian, becomes a hermit in a cave near Dover and lives there for ten years. Then he journeys to Wales and lives incognito there, tormented by the brutal natives but returning good for evil until he has won them over. In his old age he moves to a hermitage at St John's Church in Chester, still concealing his identity.
Here the writer breaks off to consider other accounts of Harold's end, censuring William of Malmesbury for writing that he had died at the Battle of Hastings, but commending Aelred of Rievaulx for allowing the possibility that he survived it. Waltham Abbey's claim that Harold was buried there is mistaken, another body on the battlefield at Hastings having been misidentified as Harold's. This fact was confirmed by Harold's brother, Gyrth, when he met the Abbot of Waltham during the reign of Henry II. The writer takes issue with his source, a hermit, as to the motives of Harold's actions, before quoting at length that hermit's account of Harold's life after the Battle of Hastings, which recapitulates the events summarised above.
The writer ends with a brief account of Harold's last days, during which he reveals his real identity to his confessor and at last dies.
The Vita Haroldi survives in a single manuscript, British Library Harley MS 3776, which was copied some time between 1345 and c. 1370 [2] by a scribe apparently little acquainted with Latin. The Vita forms the first article in this manuscript, being followed immediately by the De Inventione Crucis de Waltham [On the Finding of the Cross of Waltham] and then by several other works, some relating to Waltham Abbey and its Holy Cross. [3]
The manuscript was kept at Waltham Abbey until its dissolution in 1540. It then came into the hands of the Dukes of Norfolk, being kept by them at Naworth Castle. [4] In 1720 it was in the possession of the antiquary and herald John Warburton, and was sold by him then to Humfrey Wanley, librarian to Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford, whose collection was later sold to the British Museum. [5]
The Vita Haroldi is believed to have been written around the year 1205. [6] The name of the its author is not known. It has been surmised that he was a canon at Waltham Abbey; [7] or, since it contradicts that abbey's claim to have the grave of Harold, a canon who had been expelled from it; [8] or perhaps someone associated with Chester rather than Waltham. [9] A suggestion that he was the hagiographer Jocelyn of Furness has not found favour. [10]
The Vita Haroldi has since the 19th century been dismissed by historians as a mere romance, [11] and indeed it does have features in common with the chivalric romances of the time, dealing as it does with the adventures of a swashbuckling warrior favoured by God. [12] [2] But it also has all of the typical characteristics of a saint's life apart from a list of his miracles and a specified burial site. His life is shown as being Christlike in that he endures injury and humiliation from lesser people and transcends these sufferings to reach final redemption. [13]
The whole of the Vita Haroldi’s account of its hero's life after Hastings is universally agreed to be fictional, [14] but it was not all invented by the Vita’s author. Medieval legends of English and British kings surviving their supposed deaths are not uncommon, Edward II, Richard II, and of course King Arthur being examples. [15] In Harold's case, two 12th-century works, Aelred of Rievaulx's Life of St Edward (c. 1163) and Gerald of Wales's Journey Through Wales (1191), report rumours of his survival, Gerald specifying that he is supposed to have ended as an anchorite in Chester. After the Vita Haroldi was written similar stories appeared in the works of Gervase of Tilbury, Ralph of Coggeshall (who reports that Harold was still alive in 1189!), Ranulf Higden, John Brompton, and Henry Knighton. It is also referred to in at least two Icelandic works, Játvarðar Saga and Hemings þáttr Áslákssonar . [16] [17]
Similarities have been detected between the Vita Haroldi and works in which Harold does not figure. One Latin version of Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar gives an account of the supposed life of its hero, Olaf Tryggvason, after the Battle of Svolder which has many points of resemblance with the Vita, but it is not clear whether the saga's author, Oddr Snorrason, drew on the Vita or on traditional lore which could perhaps also have influenced the Vita. [18] One episode in the Vita tells how Harold's father, Godwin, is sent by king Canute to Denmark bearing messages which, when Godwin reads them en route, prove to be instructions to their Danish addressees to kill him; Godwin rewrites them to the effect that he should be welcomed and given the king's sister in marriage, and this ruse succeeds. There are very similar stories to this one in the early 13th-century Danish chronicle of Saxo Grammaticus (and in Shakespeare's Hamlet , which drew on Saxo), in Hemings þáttr Áslákssonar, and in a number of Classical and Eastern sources. [19] There are more general parallels with the Middle English poem Sir Orfeo , which also deals with a king's prolonged exile in his own former kingdom after a dreadful personal loss. [20] Also with the Anglo-Norman romances of Gui de Warewic , the story of an English warrior who becomes first a pilgrim and then a hermit, and Boeve de Haumtone , which features a Saracen woman aiding another English knight. [12] Among English hagiographies, Reginald of Durham's Vita et miracula Sancti Godrici and John of Ford's Vita Wulfrici anchoretae Haselbergiae have been singled out as showing particular similarities to the Vita Haroldi. All three concentrate not so much on the moment of conversion as on the progressive deepening of religious conviction; they also all feature the wearing of armour for penitential reasons. [21]
The Vita Haroldi was the inspiration for at least one modern work of literature, Rudyard Kipling's tale "The Tree of Justice", collected in his Rewards and Fairies (1910). Harold, a supposedly "witless man" constantly on pilgrimage in England, is discovered by Henry I's jester, Rahere, and brought before the king. He dies at the moment his identity is recognised and his royal status honoured by king and courtiers. [22]
Ealdred was Abbot of Tavistock, Bishop of Worcester, and Archbishop of York in early medieval England. He was related to a number of other ecclesiastics of the period. After becoming a monk at the monastery at Winchester, he was appointed Abbot of Tavistock Abbey in around 1027. In 1046 he was named to the Bishopric of Worcester. Ealdred, besides his episcopal duties, served Edward the Confessor, the King of England, as a diplomat and as a military leader. He worked to bring one of the king's relatives, Edward the Exile, back to England from Hungary to secure an heir for the childless king.
Harold Godwinson, also called Harold II, was the last crowned Anglo-Saxon English king. Harold reigned from 6 January 1066 until his death at the Battle of Hastings on 14 October 1066, the decisive battle of the Norman Conquest. Harold's death marked the end of Anglo-Saxon rule over England. He was succeeded by William the Conqueror.
Emma of Normandy was a Norman-born noblewoman who became the English, Danish, and Norwegian queen through her marriages to the Anglo-Saxon king Æthelred the Unready and the Danish king Cnut the Great. A daughter of the Norman ruler Richard the Fearless and Gunnor, she was Queen of the English during her marriage to King Æthelred from 1002 to 1016, except during a brief interruption in 1013–14 when the Danish king Sweyn Forkbeard occupied the English throne. Æthelred died in 1016, and Emma married Sweyn's son Cnut. As Cnut's wife, she was Queen of England from their marriage in 1017, Queen of Denmark from 1018, and Queen of Norway from 1028 until Cnut died in 1035.
Edward the Confessor was an Anglo-Saxon English king and saint. Usually considered the last king of the House of Wessex, he ruled from 1042 until his death in 1066.
The Battle of Hastings was fought on 14 October 1066 between the Norman-French army of William, Duke of Normandy, and an English army under the Anglo-Saxon King Harold Godwinson, beginning the Norman Conquest of England. It took place approximately 7 mi (11 km) northwest of Hastings, close to the present-day town of Battle, East Sussex, and was a decisive Norman victory.
The Norman Conquest was the 11th-century invasion and occupation of England by an army made up of thousands of Norman, French, Flemish, and Breton troops, all led by the Duke of Normandy, later styled William the Conqueror.
Lyfing of Winchester was an Anglo-Saxon prelate who served as Bishop of Worcester, Bishop of Crediton and Bishop of Cornwall.
The Abbey Church of Waltham Holy Cross and St Lawrence, also known as Waltham Abbey or Waltham Abbey Church, is the parish church of the town of Waltham Abbey, Essex, England. It has been a place of worship since the 7th century. The present building dates mainly from the early 12th century and is an example of Norman architecture. To the east of the existing church are traces of an enormous eastward enlargement of the building, begun following the re-foundation of the abbey in 1177. In the Late Middle Ages, Waltham was one of the largest church buildings in England and a major site of pilgrimage; in 1540 it was the last religious community to be closed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. It is still an active parish church for the town, and is a grade I listed building.
Stigand was an Anglo-Saxon churchman in pre-Norman Conquest England who became Archbishop of Canterbury. His birth date is unknown, but by 1020 he was serving as a royal chaplain and advisor. He was named Bishop of Elmham in 1043, and was later Bishop of Winchester and Archbishop of Canterbury. Stigand was an advisor to several members of the Anglo-Saxon and Norman English royal dynasties, serving six successive kings. Excommunicated by several popes for his pluralism in holding the two sees, or bishoprics, of Winchester and Canterbury concurrently, he was finally deposed in 1070, and his estates and personal wealth were confiscated by William the Conqueror. Stigand was imprisoned at Winchester, where he died.
Robert of Jumièges was the first Norman Archbishop of Canterbury. He had previously served as prior of the Abbey of St Ouen at Rouen in Normandy, before becoming abbot of Jumièges Abbey, near Rouen, in 1037. He was a good friend and adviser to the king of England, Edward the Confessor, who appointed him bishop of London in 1044, and then archbishop in 1051. Robert's time as archbishop lasted only about eighteen months. He had already come into conflict with the powerful Earl Godwin and, while archbishop, made attempts to recover lands lost to Godwin and his family. He also refused to consecrate Spearhafoc, Edward's choice to succeed Robert as Bishop of London. The rift between Robert and Godwin culminated in Robert's deposition and exile in 1052.
The Battle of Fulford was fought on the outskirts of the village of Fulfordjust south of York in England, on 20 September 1066, when King Harald III of Norway, also known as Harald Hardrada, a claimant to the English throne and Tostig Godwinson, his English ally, fought and defeated the Northern Earls Edwin and Morcar.
Gytha Thorkelsdóttir, also called Githa, was a Danish noblewoman. She was the wife of Godwin, Earl of Wessex, and the mother of King Harold Godwinson and Edith of Wessex, the latter of whom was the queen consort of King Edward the Confessor.
Edith of Wessex was Queen of England through her marriage to Edward the Confessor from 1045 until Edward's death in 1066. Unlike most English queens in the 10th and 11th centuries, she was crowned. The principal source on her life is a work she herself commissioned, the Vita Ædwardi Regis or the Life of King Edward who rests at Westminster, which is inevitably biased.
The siege of Exeter occurred early in 1068 when King William I of England marched a combined army of Normans and loyal Englishmen westwards to force the submission of the city of Exeter in Devon, a stronghold of Anglo-Saxon resistance against Norman rule following the Norman conquest of England. After a siege lasting eighteen days, the city surrendered to William under generous terms and allowed the Normans to consolidate their hold over the West Country.
The Liber Eliensis is a 12th-century English chronicle and history, written in Latin. Composed in three books, it was written at Ely Abbey on the island of Ely in the fenlands of eastern Cambridgeshire. Ely Abbey became the cathedral of a newly formed bishopric in 1109. Traditionally the author of the anonymous work has been given as Richard or Thomas, two monks at Ely, one of whom, Richard, has been identified with an official of the monastery, but some historians hold that neither Richard nor Thomas was the author.
De Iniusta Vexacione Willelmi Episcopi Primi is a late 11th-century historical work detailing the trial of William de St-Calais, a medieval Norman Bishop of Durham from 1081 to 1096. It is the first surviving detailed account of an English trial before the king, and as such is an important source for historians.
The Vita Ædwardi Regis qui apud Westmonasterium Requiescit or simply Vita Ædwardi Regis is a Latin biography of King Edward the Confessor completed by an anonymous author c. 1067 and suspected of having been commissioned by Queen Edith, Edward's wife. It survives in one manuscript, dated c. 1100, now in the British Library. The author is unknown, but was a servant of the queen and probably a Fleming. The most likely candidates are Goscelin and Folcard, monks of St Bertin Abbey in St Omer.
Tovi the Proud, fl. 1018–1043, was a rich and powerful 11th-century Danish thegn who held a number of estates in various parts of southern England. A translation of the legend of Waltham Abbey cites the Lord of Waltham as 'Tovi le Prude', "totius Angliae post regnem primus". He was staller to King Cnut the Great.
Fictional accounts based on the events surrounding Harold Godwinson's brief reign as king of England have been published.
Gunhild of Wessex was a younger daughter of Harold Godwinson and his first wife, Edyth Swannesha, who was most likely the wealthy magnate Edyth the Fair from the Domesday Book.
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