The Life and Achievements of King Canute

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Canute Essay Research Paper For the English

Canute Essay, Research Paper

For the English people, King Cnut’s reign from 1017 to 1035 was much like the month of March, “in like a lion and out like a lamb”. 1 Crowned in the turmoil of war and conquest, Cnut quickly established an era of peace and prosperity. England became so secure that Cnut could frequently leave the country to settle affairs elsewhere in his empire. It was especially important to a people weary from thirty years of war that all of the fighting during his reign was on foreign soil. By the time of his death in 1035, Cnut was recognized as an equal by the Holy Roman Emperor and had negotiated with the Pope as a Christian monarch.

Very little is known about Cnut’s life before 1013. He may have spent some time in Poland with his mother, Gunhild, after his father, King Svein, divorced her to marry the Swedish Queen Sigrid. 2 He may also have been the foster son of Thorkell the Tall at Jomburg 3

Cnut was in charge of the Danish army at Gainsborough, north of Lincoln, when Svein died suddenly on February 3, 1013. While the Danish army proclaimed Cnut king, the English Witan recalled King Ethelred from Normandy where he had gone into exile after his defeat in 1012. 4 Ethelred immediately led an army north, forcing Cnut to abandon England. On leaving, Cnut sailed along the coast south as far as Sandwich where he mutilated the hostages he held, put them ashore, and went to Denmark.

Cnut was well received in Denmark by his older brother Harald, whom Svein had installed as king before he left for England. Harald helped Cnut raise a large fleet for an invasion to regain the crown of England. Various sources have numbered this fleet between two hundred and one thousand ships. 5 The lowest estimate comes from the earliest source and is likely to be the most accurate, indicating an invasion force of over ten thousand men. 6 Cnut was joined by his Norwegian brother-in-law, Earl Erik of Lade, whose long experience in warfare and government made him an ideal advisor for the inexperienced young prince. 7 Just before leaving, they were joined by Thorkell who had abandoned Ethelred. 8

The invasion force landed in Wessex in the summer of 1015. Most likely, the landing was made in the south because Cnut’s earlier abandonment had alienated the people in the Danelaw. 9 Shortly after landing, the invasion force was joined by the English Earl Eadric Streona with forty ships. 10 Within four months, Cnut controlled Wessex and was operating north of the Thames. After Earl Uhtred of Northumbria surrendered and was killed by Cnut on the advice of Eadric, Erik of Lade became Cnut’s Earl in the north. 11

In April of 1016, Cnut brought his fleet into the Thames and besieged London. At this time, Ethelred died and his son, Edmund Ironside, was declared king by the people of London.

Edmund broke out of London before the siege was closed He collected an army which defeated the Danes in several skirmishes. At this point, the outlook for the Danes was black enough that Eadric deserted Cnut and joined Edmund’s forces. In October, Edmund’s army caught the Danes at Ashingdon in Essex. Early in this battle, Eadric and his forces fled from the Danes and the English were decisively defeated. Edmund survived and fled to Gloucestershire where he and Cnut met and accepted a peace settlement. They agreed that Cnut’s soldiers were to be paid a specified amount and the country would be divided between them. Edmund was given Wessex while Cnut received all of the country north of the Thames. 12 The potential for renewed hostilities was removed when Edmund died on November 30, 1016 and Cnut was accepted by the English as their king.

Cnut was still young when he became king of England, but he had either been well trained in statesmanship, or more likely, he listened to the advice of his more experienced counsellors. 13 Thorkell held a particularly important place in the kingdom in the early years of Cnut’s reign. He was listed first of the earls in charters that he witnessed and is the only earl addressed by name in Cnut’s letter to the English people of 1019-1020. 14

The pacification of England began immediately after Cnut was declared king. Cnut divided the country into four districts with military governors in each district. Eadric Streona was given his old Earldom of Mercia, Erik controlled Northumbria, Thorkell was put in charge of East Anglia and Cnut himself kept Wessex. During Cnut’s first year as king, several important Anglo-Saxon nobles were executed including Eadric, whose execution seems to have been popular with the English people as indicated by the comment in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, “very rightly”. 15 In addition to the executions, the young sons of Edmund were exiled, eventually finding a home in Hungary out of Cnut’s reach. Cnut married Ethelred’s widow, Emma of Normandy, probably to neutralize the presence of Ethelred’s sons, Alfred and Edward, who were in exile in Normandy. Cnut negotiated with Duke Richard of Normandy and agreed that any children by Emma would have precedence over his other children and over Emma’s sons by Ethelred. 16

With his kingdom free from attack from Normandy, Cnut felt secure enough to send most of his army home in 1018. The fleet was paid off with a huge Danegeld of 72,000 pounds of silver collected from throughout the country and an additional 10,500 pounds from London. Cnut retained forty ships for his personal body guard and to serve as the nucleus of a defense force. 17 In the same year, at a national assembly at Oxford, both the Danes and English in the kingdom agreed to accept the laws of King Edgar as the foundation of their legal relationships. These laws were later drafted into a legal code by Archbishop Wulfstan. At this point, Cnut’s reign as an English king effectively began. 18

Cnut was a Christian when he became king, but he retained the mentality of a Viking. 19 He openly acknowledged Elgifu of Northhampton as his consort and treated her as his northern queen. In other areas, Cnut cooperated fully with the English church which in turn granted him a legitimacy that would otherwise have been hard to win. This enabled him to gain the support of the Pope and the Emperor when he went on a pilgrimage to Rome in 1027 where he also attended the Emperor Conrad’s coronation. While in Rome Cnut sent a letter back to England reporting that he had negotiated a reduction in the fee paid by the English Archbishops to receive their pallium from the Pope and also arranged a reduction in the fees and tolls paid by English pilgrims and merchants on the road to Rome.

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When Cnut’s brother Harald died in 1019, England was secure enough that he could go to Denmark to assure his succession leaving Thorkell as regent. Thorkell’s ambitions apparently got the better of him because he was outlawed in 1021 after Cnut returned. They were reconciled on Cnut’s next trip to Denmark in 1023 when Thorkell was made regent there, but he died within a couple of years and Earl Ulf, who was married to Cnut’s sister Estrith, was made regent for Cnut’s son Hordacnut

In 1026 Cnut was in Denmark again to face a threat ...

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