'Æthelweard' (also spelled 'Ethelward'),
Anglo-Saxon historian, was the great-great-grandson of
Æthelred of Wessex (who was the brother of
Alfred the Great), and was ealdorman or earl of the western provinces (i.e. probably of the whole of
Wessex).
He first signs as ''dux'' or ''ealdorman'' in
973, and continues to sign until
998, about which time his death must have taken place. In the year
991 he was associated with
archbishop Sigeric in the conclusion of a peace with the victorious Danes from Maldon, and in 994 he was sent with Bishop
Ælfheah of Winchester to make peace with
Olaf at
Andover.
Æthelweard was the author of a ''Latin Chronicle'' extending to the year
975. Up to the year 892 he is largely dependent on the ''
Saxon Chronicle'', with a few details of his own; later he is largely independent of it. Æthelweard gave himself the bombastic title "''Patricius Consul Quaestor Ethelwerdus''," and unfortunately this title is only too characteristic of the man. His narrative is highly rhetorical, and as he at the same time attempts more than
Tacitean brevity his narrative is often very obscure. Æthelweard was the friend and patron of
Ælfric of Eynsham.
New scientific research found the reason for Æthelweard's obscure Latin. He wrote his work on request of his relative Mathilde, abbess of
Essen monastery and granddaughter of emperor
Otto I and
Eadgyth of Wessex, to help her in the duty of keeping the remembrance of the dead relatives. Mathilde was not able to understand Æthelweard's preferred old English, therefore he had to write in Latin. Most likely Mathilde rewarded him with a copy of
Vegetius' work
De Re Militari which was written in Essen and survived in England.
See also
★
House of Wessex family tree
Literature
Elisabeth van Houts: ''Woman and the writing of history in the early Middle Ages: the case of Abbess Mathilda of Essen and Aethelweard'' in: ''Early Medieval Europe'', 1992, p. 53ff.