BBC History Magazine

The forgotten kingdom

William of Normandy sailed across the Channel and conquered England in 1066 – or at least that’s how the story goes. Here, Sophie Thérèse Ambler and James Morris reveal how one northern stronghold remained untouched for another 26 years

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The Bayeux Tapestry depicts T one of the best-known episodes in English history: the Norman Conquest of 1066. The cavalry of William, Duke of Normandy, ride into battle at Hastings against the army of King Harold Godwinson, bodies littering the ground. “Here King Harold has been killed,” proclaims the Tapestry’s text, and next: “The English have turned to flight.” Thus, Duke William became William the Conqueror, seized the kingdom, and imposed long-lasting Norman rule.

We all know the Normans conquered England in 1066 – but this is not entirely true. In fact, William only seized the polity ruled by Harold: the Anglo-Saxon kingdom, whose royal heartlands lay in Wessex and London. But beyond the limits of Harold’s rule lay the Kingdom of Cumbria. This realm was not conquered by William in 1066, and it mostly maintained its independen­ce for another generation. Only in 1092 did William’s son, William II – better known as William Rufus – annex the southern part of the kingdom to the English state, extending Norman rule in the north-west to Hadrian’s Wall.

Fractured by conquest

So why has the Kingdom of Cumbria been largely forgotten by history? The answer, perhaps, lies in its lack of longevity. Only emerging in the ninth century AD, the kingdom’s lands had originally been part of the mighty Kingdom of Northumbri­a, which in its heyday stretched from the Mersey to the Humber estuary in the south, and from Ayrshire to the Firth of Forth in the north. Famously, the Northumbri­an kingdom cradled Christiani­ty at Lindisfarn­e, the community founded by Saint Aidan and Saint Oswald and celebrated by its own great historian, Bede.

In the 860s, Northumbri­a was fractured

by Viking conquest, with the Norse invaders establishi­ng a kingdom south of the Tees, the English rulers at Bamburgh taking the northeast from the Tyne to the Firth of Forth, and the Kingdom of Strathclyd­e – based around Glasgow – seizing the chance to expand southwards into the Lake District. In the process, the Kingdom of Cumbria was forged west of the Pennines, breaching Hadrian’s Wall and reaching from southern Scotland into what is now the modern county of Cumbria. By the time Rufus annexed the kingdom, it had only been in existence for around 200 years.

Another reason for its obscurity lies in the relative lack of documentar­y evidence, compared to other kingdoms. When it comes to studying the Anglo-Saxon state conquered by William I, historians have a phenomenal source: Domesday Book. Compiled in 1086, the survey encompasse­s every settlement under the king’s rule, reporting landholder­s and households, cultivatio­n, industry and buildings. With this monumental record, historians can reconstruc­t the society of Anglo-Saxon England and the process of Norman regime-building: from the slaughter or ejection of the existing aristocrac­y and their replacemen­t by William’s friends, to the ravaging of Yorkshire now known as the ‘Harrying of the North’.

Yet, the Kingdom of Cumbria was not part of this story, so does not appear in Domesday Book. Nor can Cumbria boast the other written evidence abounding for Anglo-Saxon England – namely the charters recording grants of land and privileges.

In fact, the written evidence generated in Cumbria is limited to a solitary document: a writ issued in the mid or late 11th century by a man named Gospatric, who was possibly the Earl of Northumbri­a. In the text, Gospatric addresses his officers “and all men, free and dreng [a tenant by agricultur­al service], that dwell on all the lands that were Cumbrian”, granting his peace to a man

By the time Rufus annexed the Kingdom of Cumbria it had only been in existence for 200 years

named Thorfynn mac Thore. Moreover, the writ only survives in a flawed, 13th-century copy and is written mostly in Old English, making it a rather enigmatic source.

The kingdom’s archaeolog­ical record is also relatively sparse. Cumbria today is famous for its Neolithic Langdale axes, Bronze Age stone circles, brooding Roman fortificat­ions, and late medieval remains of border conflict. But whereas these have all been widely studied, little energy has been dedicated to sites from the early Middle Ages.

A blending of cultures

Fortunatel­y, the focus is now changing, and recent investigat­ions reveal that Roman settlement­s – once thought to have been abandoned – were occupied during the Kingdom of Cumbria’s existence. At the forts of Maryport and Papcastle, for instance, archaeolog­ists have found evidence of large timber buildings, dating to the early Middle Ages and developed over multiple generation­s. Similarly, at Stainton, just north of Carlisle, recent work has uncovered a small settlement consisting of five structures that dates to the period between the eighth and tenth centuries. This is one of few sites seemingly establishe­d for the first time in the early Middle Ages, suggesting that the Kingdom of Cumbria was built atop Roman foundation­s.

Combining history and archaeolog­y with the evidence of language, place names and artefacts also offers a glimpse inside the Cumbrian kingdom. It looked, and sounded, very different to its Anglo-Saxon counterpar­t. Many of Cumbria’s people were Brittonic speakers, meaning their language was the ancestor of modern Welsh and Cornish. Among them lived settlers from Viking colonies in Ireland and Scotland and the Viking kingdom of York. Viking influence is also embedded in the Norse place names scattered across Cumbria – from Scafell to Skiddaw.

This blending of cultures is reflected in sculptures, too. Scandinavi­an-style ‘hogback’ tombstones preserved at Lowther, on the eastern border of the kingdom, and the Gosforth Cross on Cumbria’s western coast, are among the most notable examples: the latter displaying carved scenes of the Norse myth Ragnarok alongside images of Christ’s crucifixio­n. The varied peoples were embraced by their kingdom’s title: the word ‘Cumbria’ is derived from the Brittonic term ‘Cymry’, meaning ‘inhabitant­s of the same region’.

So – why was this distant, north-western kingdom suddenly so desirable to William Rufus, when his father had ignored it? The answer partly lies in the nature of the rivalries that were emerging in the late 11th century. Rufus had a contender for his throne in Edgar AEtheling, heir to the House of Wessex, who

A woman stands helpless, clutching her son’s hand, as Norman troops torch her homeland

was sheltering at the court of Máel Coluim III, King of Scots. Máel Coluim held sway in Cumbria, having swept through the kingdom in 1069–70 and installed a client ruler, Dolfin. Then, in 1091, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Scottish king “came from Scotland into England and ravaged a great part of it”. Rufus was able to force Máel Coluim into submission, but he needed a permanent solution. Thus, “[he] went north to Carlisle… drove out Dolfin” and establishe­d Norman rule.

But although Rufus was responding to circumstan­ce, his Cumbrian conquest fitted a wider pattern of Norman territoria­l expansion: Sicily in 1061, England in 1066, and later – in 1098–99 – Antioch, Jerusalem and their hinterland­s during the First Crusade. In fact, the Normans thrived on conquest. “When they intend to overrun a country, they are unbridled,” wrote the Byzantine historian Anna Comnena. “Whenever battle and war occur, there is a baying in their hearts.” Talking of Rufus, English historian William of Malmesbury remarked that he was “without peer

in our own times, had he not been overshadow­ed by his father’s greatness”. The Kingdom of Cumbria enabled Rufus not only to extend the reaches of his realm, but also to cement his reputation for years to come.

Rufus’s campaign brought the mighty Norman war machine to bear on Cumbria. The Bayeux Tapestry reveals what this probably looked like: the amassing of arms and armour, and horses to carry Norman knights. The cavalry was critical to the Norman way of war, which avoided risky pitched battles and aimed instead to force surrender by devastatin­g the target region. One of Rufus’s later campaigns was described by the chronicler Orderic Vitalis: the king “advanced rapidly… burning, plundering and taking prisoners, in this way destroying that fair region’s wealth”. The Bayeux Tapestry depicts such operations: under the heading “here a house is burned”, a woman stands helpless, clutching her son’s hand, as Norman troops torch her homestead.

Systematic destructio­n was also accompanie­d by the Norman trademark: castle building. The lone documentar­y record of Rufus’s Cumbrian campaign, in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, states that Rufus took Carlisle “and restored the city and built a castle. He drove out Dolfin, who had ruled the land there, then garrisoned the castle”. This was probably a simple wooden castle, with an earthen bank and ditch, erected rapidly by an unskilled workforce (Carlisle’s present-day stone castle was likely begun by Rufus’s successor, Henry I). The Tapestry portrays Odo, bishop of Bayeux, commanding the constructi­on of one such structure at Hastings, with labourers using picks and spades to build a mound with a wooden keep. Odo’s was a motte and bailey castle but, across the countrysid­e, the Normans also built simpler structures without an inner mound and keep, known as ringworks.

Statements of power

In Cumbria, new research is again uncovering what we think is one such site. At Lowther stand the remains of a partial ringwork castle: a monumental mound sited on the edge of a dramatic promontory, overlookin­g the river Lowther below. A panopticon, engineered to see and to be seen for miles, it would have been a glaring statement of Norman power. The mound – built using alternatin­g layers of earth and local stone – was likely surmounted by a timber palisade, with its entrancewa­y guarded by a gatehouse. Inside, a surface of small river pebbles formed an internal courtyard.

Lowther can also illuminate another key element of Cumbria’s annexation to the Norman realm. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that, “after coming back south he [Rufus] sent many farmers there with their women and livestock to live there and cultivate the land”. Indeed, in front of the entrance to Lowther’s ringwork castle are the remains of a village, seemingly establishe­d at the same time. They are linked by a trackway – a single layer of cobbles only two metres wide – and preliminar­y investigat­ions suggest the villagers lived in a handful of wooden longhouses, built on levelled rectangula­r platforms.

So far, excavation­s have yielded little pottery or metal artefacts, fitting with Rufus’s transplant­ation to Cumbria of low-status farmers with few possession­s. While the castle presided over the surroundin­g landscape, its gatehouse overlooked the village, providing Lowther’s lord visual dominion over his tenants. The village was bounded to the north by a church, completing the classic configurat­ion for a medieval manor.

With these small plantation settlement­s, Norman royal rule took root slowly in Cumbria. The next written evidence comes in 1130, courtesy of England’s first surviving Exchequer record. This reveals the Norman formation of Cumberland and Westmorlan­d out of the old Cumbrian kingdom. But these were not shires proper, and were overseen by an administra­tor rather than fully fledged sheriffs.

The evidence mounts for the 12th and 13th centuries, revealing how society across the far north retained longstandi­ng ties with Scotland. While the King of Scots, David I (died 1153), absorbed the northern part of the old Cumbrian kingdom into Scotland, the borderland lords intermarri­ed with the Scottish aristocrac­y. Even as the Anglo-Scottish border crystallis­ed in the 13th century, monasterie­s on both sides led the veneration of saints of the ancient Kingdom of Northumbri­a: Aidan, Oswald and Bede. This was the cultural nexus historians have dubbed ‘Middle Britain’ – a cross-border community, straddling both England and Scotland. Yet this too would be ripped asunder by conflict, in the Anglo-Scottish wars.

The shade of the Cumbrian kingdom was summoned in 1974, when the Norman shires of Cumberland and Westmorlan­d were abolished, and County Cumbria created. The modern county reaches beyond the old kingdom’s borders, southward into Lancashire North of the Sands, and incorporat­ing the West Riding of Yorkshire. The lands north of Hadrian’s Wall are resolutely severed, and Cumbria’s heart has migrated, now nestled in the wild beauty of the Lake District: a reminder that political geographie­s are forever shifting, kingdoms and states ebbing and flowing with the historical tide.

Sophie Thérèse Ambler is a reader in medieval history at Lancaster University James Morris is a senior lecturer in archaeolog­y at the University of Central Lancashire

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 ?? ?? The other conqueror William gg – also known as William pufus – annexed the southern part of the Kingdom of Cumbria in 1092. Only the portion north of Hadrian’s Wall would remain out of lorman hands
The other conqueror William gg – also known as William pufus – annexed the southern part of the Kingdom of Cumbria in 1092. Only the portion north of Hadrian’s Wall would remain out of lorman hands
 ?? ?? What’s in a name? A view of Wast Water, Cumbria, with a snow-topped Scafell Pike visible on the right. ‘Scafell’ is Norse in origin, hinting at the presence of Viking settlers in the area when it formed part of the Kingdom of Cumbria
Lost kingdom The approximat­e location, shown shaded in green, of the Kingdom of Cumbria prior to Rufus’s invasion of 1092
What’s in a name? A view of Wast Water, Cumbria, with a snow-topped Scafell Pike visible on the right. ‘Scafell’ is Norse in origin, hinting at the presence of Viking settlers in the area when it formed part of the Kingdom of Cumbria Lost kingdom The approximat­e location, shown shaded in green, of the Kingdom of Cumbria prior to Rufus’s invasion of 1092
 ?? ?? /KZGF OGUUCIGU The Gosforth Cross – which stands outside St Mary’s Church in Gosforth, Cumbria – features a combinatio­n of Christian and Norse imagery, highlighti­ng the diversity of the people who once lived in the region
/KZGF OGUUCIGU The Gosforth Cross – which stands outside St Mary’s Church in Gosforth, Cumbria – features a combinatio­n of Christian and Norse imagery, highlighti­ng the diversity of the people who once lived in the region
 ?? ?? 7PGCTVJKPI ENuGU Recent excavation­s at Lowther, just south of Penrith, have uncovered the remains of what appears to be a ringwork castle constructe­d following Rufus’s invasion of 1092
/GP CV YQTM A scene from the Bayeux Tapestry depicts the constructi­on of a castle at Hastings following the Norman invasion of 1066. Such images offer clues as to how similar structures may have been built in Cumbria
7PGCTVJKPI ENuGU Recent excavation­s at Lowther, just south of Penrith, have uncovered the remains of what appears to be a ringwork castle constructe­d following Rufus’s invasion of 1092 /GP CV YQTM A scene from the Bayeux Tapestry depicts the constructi­on of a castle at Hastings following the Norman invasion of 1066. Such images offer clues as to how similar structures may have been built in Cumbria

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