Everything about Old Saxony totally explained
Old Saxony is the original homeland of the
Saxons and the place from which their raids and later colonisations of
Britannia were mounted. The region is in the northwest corner of modern Germany and abuts the penninsula of
Jutland, which is believed to be the homeland of the related Germanic tribes known now as the
Angles and
Jutes. The Saxons were loosely associated with the
Merovingian Kingdom but practically remained independent until they were subdued by
Charlemagne in the Saxon Wars (772–804) giving rise to the early Medieval
stem duchy, the
Duchy of Saxony. (
Not to be confused with the much later Medieval duchy of the same name, which is usually called the Electorate of Saxony to avoid the ambiguity.)
The Anglo-Saxon writer,
Bede, claimed in his work
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum (
731) that Old Saxony was the area between the
Elbe,
Weser and the
Eider in the north and north west of modern
Germany and was a territory beyond the borders of the
Roman Empire. At a later date, the Saxons were a thorn in the side of the new Frankish kingdoms who came to power and the Emperor
Charlemange himself. In the next century after Bede, the Saxons were at odds with the early
Holy Roman Empire even after the conquest, and eventually were incorporated (pacified) by a combination of conversion to Christianity and suppression of local unrest towards the end of the
Early Middle Ages.
Saxon "pirates" had been raiding the eastern seaboard of Britannia from here during the 3rd and 4th Centuries (prompting the construction of maritime defences in eastern
Britannia called the
Saxon Shore) and it's thought that following the collapse of the
Roman defences at the
Rhine in
407 pressure from population movements in the east forced the
Saxons and their neighbouring tribes the
Angles and the
Jutes to migrate westwards by sea and invade the fertile lowland areas of
Britannia. The traditional date for this invasion is
449 and is known as the
Adventus Saxonum. This began a vicious 400-year war of occupation and led to the creation of various
Saxon kingdoms in
Britannia including that of the
South Saxons (
Sussex), the
West Saxons (
Wessex) and the
East Saxons (
Essex) alongside others established by the
Angles and the
Jutes and are the foundations of the modern
English nation.
In
690, two priests called
Ewald the Black and
Ewald the Fair set out from
Northumbria to convert their distant kin in Old Saxony to
Christianity. It is recorded that at this time Old Saxony was divided into the ancient dioceses of
Münster,
Osnabrück, and
Paderborn. However, by
695 the pagan Saxons had become extremely hostile to the
Christian priests and missionaries in their midst and began to suspect that their aim was to convert their over-lord and destroy their temples and religion, which was probably true.
Ewald the Fair was quickly murdered, but
Ewald the Black they subjected to torture and was torn limb from limb. After which the two bodies were cast into the Rhine. This is understood to have happened on 3 October
695 at a place called
Aplerbeck, where a chapel still stands. The two Ewalds are now celebrated in
Westphalia as saints.
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