by Mike Demana
As Autumn of 816 A.D. arrived, many of the towns of Britain were shuddering to the hammering of invaders besieging their walls, or breaching them with torch and sword. September alone heard the cries of three towns taken by storm -- Northumbrian York, Mercian Warwick and Cirencastor. Two new strongholds were ringed by steel -- the Mercian border town of Wroexter and Dal Riatan Dunstaffgne. In the campaign, the kingdom controlling a province's capital at the start of October receives its income (the harvest). Thus, a common September sight in the area of besieged towns was dust clouds of marching armies. The Saxon axe that was poised to fall upon Mercia all Spring and Summer bit deeply in September. Losing Cirencastor to Wessex and Warwick to Kent/Sussex, cost Mercia the provinces of Hwicce and Chiltern. Now, the southern half of Mercia had fallen to the Saxon coalition, leaving only two of its original five provinces. Mercia's invasion of Essex was retreating also. A large Essex army chased it to the border. The Wessex siege of Wroexter, on the Welsh border, tightened the noose on King Coenwulf's kingdom more. Winter would be a grim one. Autumn brought both joy and sadness to Mercia's northern neighbors, the Angles of Northumbria. Eorl Mundar's command broke the siege of the Strathclyde army around Carlisle, saving the province of Rheged. The Britons were forced to be content with only Dumfries to show for this year's successes. Waves of shock rippled through the kingdom with the news of the fall of York, though. King Eanred had counted on the Roman walls of northern Britain's greatest city to hold out at least several months more. Whether it was Viking ferocity or fear of their rumored atrocities that caused its early fall, a pall of smoke hung over the city for a week afterwards. In the north, an ancient kingdom stomped the last, green shoots of a younger one. The Picts routed the depleted Scot army that had marched out to defend their capital. Two months later, Dunstaffgne surrendered. The last of the Dal Riatan immigrants from Hibernia now paid homage to the tattooed, Pictish King Circinn. Their own king, Fergus MacErc, fled hunted to the Hebrides. More Bretwalda Winter 815 A.D. Spring 816 A.D. Summer 816 A.D. Fall 816 A.D. Winter 816 A.D. Spring 817 A.D. Summer 817 A.D. Autumn 817 A.D. Winter 817-818 A.D. March and April 818 A.D. May and June 818 A.D. Who Won? Part 1 Who Won? Part 2 Who Won? Part 3 Back to The Herald 24 Table of Contents Back to The Herald List of Issues Back to MagWeb Master Magazine List © Copyright 1998 by HMGS-GL. This article appears in MagWeb.com (Magazine Web) on the Internet World Wide Web. Other articles from military history and related magazines are available at http://www.magweb.com |