Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- The writing and pronunciation of Old English
- I Teaching and learning
- II Keeping a record
- 7 Laws of the Anglo-Saxon Kings
- 8 England under Attack (from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: annals for 981–93, 995–8 and 1002–3)
- 9 Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People
- 10 The Battle of Brunanburh
- 11 The Will of Ælfgifu
- 12 The Fonthill Letter
- III Spreading the Word
- IV Example and Exhortation
- V Telling Tales
- VI Reflection and lament
- Manuscripts and textual emendations
- Reference Grammar of Old English
- Glossary
- Guide to terms
- Index
11 - The Will of Ælfgifu
from II - Keeping a record
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- The writing and pronunciation of Old English
- I Teaching and learning
- II Keeping a record
- 7 Laws of the Anglo-Saxon Kings
- 8 England under Attack (from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: annals for 981–93, 995–8 and 1002–3)
- 9 Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People
- 10 The Battle of Brunanburh
- 11 The Will of Ælfgifu
- 12 The Fonthill Letter
- III Spreading the Word
- IV Example and Exhortation
- V Telling Tales
- VI Reflection and lament
- Manuscripts and textual emendations
- Reference Grammar of Old English
- Glossary
- Guide to terms
- Index
Summary
There are some sixty vernacular documents of varying length which may loosely be described as Anglo-Saxon ‘wills’. They were made by kings and ecclesiastics as well as laymen and laywomen. The beneficiaries may be family and friends when personal effects are involved, but in the case of land, it is the church or monastery which usually benefits. Because such institutions needed to maintain a record of dispositions, to guard against possible litigation over their property, many wills survive only as copies in ‘cartularies’ – volumes of charters kept by the churches. The ‘CodexWintoniensis’ (now London, British Library, Additional 15350) is the cartulary of St Swithun's, Winchester, written in the first half of the twelfth century. Among the items there is the will of Ælfgifu. This woman has not been positively identified, but she was probably of royal descent and it has been conjectured that she was married to (but then divorced from) King Eadwig (957–9). Her will can be dated between 966 and 975 for two main reasons. First, she makes a bequest to Romsey Abbey in Hampshire, and this is likely to have been after the old foundation was re-established by King Edgar in 967. Second, the Liber Eliensis – ‘Book of Ely’, a twelfth-century compilation treating the history of Ely Abbey in Cambridgeshire – tells us that Edgar gave to Ely the estate at Meassewyrthe, which Ælfgifu, as she says (lines 13–15), left to him at her death; in other words, she must have died before Edgar.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Old English Reader , pp. 92 - 95Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004