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In Episode 8 Pete and Chris tackle the slippery, dramatic story of the teenager who became king in 975: Edward the Martyr. We cover his sudden elevation after his predecessor’s death, the uneasy relationship with the dowager queen Ælfthryth and the rival faction that favoured the young Æthelred (later known as Æthelred II).
Expect a clear rundown of the contemporary record (especially the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and surviving charters), the contested accounts of the king’s death in 978, why later writers styled him a martyr and saint at Shaftesbury Abbey, and how the short reign shaped the messy politics of the coming decades. We also discuss where the evidence is solid — and where medieval storytellers, monks and later chroniclers probably embroidered the tale. The tone is friendly, lightly humorous, and respectful to listeners who love accurate history.
Reign: 975–978.
Accession: acclaimed king after his predecessor’s death in 975; a young ruler with limited time to build support.
Death: murdered in 978 (circumstances disputed in the sources).
Afterlife: venerated as a martyr at Shaftesbury; his cult affected political memory and later chronicling.
Key sources: contemporary annals and charters, later hagiography and monastic chronicles.
Recommended further reading & resources
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle — contemporary annal entries (various versions / translations).
Oxford DNB entry on the king — concise scholarly summary (subscription).
Editions/analyses of the late tenth-century charters and monastic narratives about Shaftesbury.
Accessible overviews: reputable university pages, British Library introductions, and museum resources for coinage and burial archaeology.
Edward the Martyr, king 975–978, Anglo-Saxon succession, murder of 978, Shaftesbury cult, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, early medieval England podcast, royal martyrdom, 20 Minute Monarch
#EdwardTheMartyr #Shaftesbury #AngloSaxonEngland #RoyalMartyr #MedievalHistory #HistoryPodcast #LearnHistory #DidYouKnow #BritishHistory #HistoryBuff #PodcastRecommendations
By Audacious AudioIn Episode 8 Pete and Chris tackle the slippery, dramatic story of the teenager who became king in 975: Edward the Martyr. We cover his sudden elevation after his predecessor’s death, the uneasy relationship with the dowager queen Ælfthryth and the rival faction that favoured the young Æthelred (later known as Æthelred II).
Expect a clear rundown of the contemporary record (especially the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and surviving charters), the contested accounts of the king’s death in 978, why later writers styled him a martyr and saint at Shaftesbury Abbey, and how the short reign shaped the messy politics of the coming decades. We also discuss where the evidence is solid — and where medieval storytellers, monks and later chroniclers probably embroidered the tale. The tone is friendly, lightly humorous, and respectful to listeners who love accurate history.
Reign: 975–978.
Accession: acclaimed king after his predecessor’s death in 975; a young ruler with limited time to build support.
Death: murdered in 978 (circumstances disputed in the sources).
Afterlife: venerated as a martyr at Shaftesbury; his cult affected political memory and later chronicling.
Key sources: contemporary annals and charters, later hagiography and monastic chronicles.
Recommended further reading & resources
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle — contemporary annal entries (various versions / translations).
Oxford DNB entry on the king — concise scholarly summary (subscription).
Editions/analyses of the late tenth-century charters and monastic narratives about Shaftesbury.
Accessible overviews: reputable university pages, British Library introductions, and museum resources for coinage and burial archaeology.
Edward the Martyr, king 975–978, Anglo-Saxon succession, murder of 978, Shaftesbury cult, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, early medieval England podcast, royal martyrdom, 20 Minute Monarch
#EdwardTheMartyr #Shaftesbury #AngloSaxonEngland #RoyalMartyr #MedievalHistory #HistoryPodcast #LearnHistory #DidYouKnow #BritishHistory #HistoryBuff #PodcastRecommendations