'Coenwulf' (or 'Cenwulf') (died
821) was
King of
Mercia from
796 to
821.

The Cenwulf 'mancus'

The Cenwulf 'mancus'
Coenwulf became king after the death of
Ecgfrith, in December 796. Coenwulf was a descendant of
Cenwalh of Wessex (d. 674), who had married and repudiated a sister of the kings
Penda and
Eowa 150 years earlier; thus Coenwulf was a member of a the Mercian royal line through female descent, which may demonstrate the thoroughness of
Offa's purge of the Mercian royal house.
The
Kingdom of Kent, which had been ruled as a Mercian territory since
785, rose in rebellion in 796. Coenwulf won the
Church's backing for a reconquest of Kent, in large part due to its dissatisfaction with the exile of the pro-Mercian
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Aethelheard, who fled in the face of the rebellion. In
798, Coenwulf invaded Kent, deposed and captured the rebel king
Eadberht III Præn, and made his own brother
Cuðred king of Kent. He ruled until the time of his death in
807. Coenwulf subsequently took control of Kent in name as well as fact and is styled King of the Mercians and the Province of Kent (''rex Merciorum atque provincie Cancie'') in a charter dated 809
[1].
Eadbert Praen was imprisoned at
Winchcombe, a religious house closely affiliated with Coenwulf's family which housed the royal archives and was presided over by Coenwulf's daughter
Cwoenthryth. Royal control over religious houses in Kent - specifically
Reculver and
Minster - resulted in a long dispute with
Wulfred,
Archbishop of Canterbury from
805 until his death in
832. Both parties sought the support of foreign powers including the emperor
Louis the Pious and the
Pope: papal privileges confirming Coenwulf's monastic possessions were obtained, whilst a number of forgeries in favour of episcopal control over
monasteries were produced at Canterbury. The issue of lay control over monasteries had been festering for some years, but firm statements against the practice came at synods held at
Clofesho in
803 and particularly the
synod of Chelsea in
816. Following the latter synod Wulfred was suspended from office for several years. The document written up in
825 recording the history of the debate from the - then victorious - Canterbury viewpoint claims six years, though other evidence contradicts this; four is perhaps more likely. Under Coenwulf at least, the debate was concluded in the king's favour around
820 when Wulfred was summoned to a meeting in
London and agreed to cede a very large and valuable estate to Coenwulf and pay him a considerable sum in gold in exchange for gaining lordship over the two contested monasteries.
Charters from subsequent years show Wulfred had some difficulty enforcing this control, and the king's power over these monasteries remained strong.
East Anglia under Coenwulf is considerably murkier. As in Kent, there was an uprising on the death of
Offa in
796, who had probably ruled East Anglia directly since
794.
Eadwald became king as a result of this rebellion. However, Coenwulf regained control of East Anglia by the early 800s, as can be discerned from the coinage.
Throughout his reign, Coenwulf waged war against the
Welsh of
Powys and
Gwynedd; in 798, the ruler of Gwynedd,
Caradog ap Meirion was killed, probably in battle against the Mercians. Further campaigns against the Welsh are recorded in
816 and
818, and
Geoffrey Gaimar records that Coenwulf died at
Clent near the Welsh border, quite probably making preparations for a campaign that took place under his brother
Ceolwulf the following year.
In
799, Coenwulf entered into a peace treaty with the
West Saxons under
Beorhtric, who had been installed as King of Wessex by Offa in
786; Beorhtric remained friendly to Mercian interests until his death in
802, when the less submissive
Egbert became king. Coenwulf may have instigated the failed raid into Wessex of
Ælthelmund, earl of the
Hwicce, upon the accession of Egbert. However, the major conflict that established the supremacy of Wessex at the expense of Mercia would not occur until the
820s, after Coenwulf's death.
In
801, following Coenwulf's harbouring of King
Eardwulf of Northumbria's enemies (such as Saint
Alcmund of Derby), Mercia was invaded by Eardwulf, but peace was soon made between the two sides.
It was during Coenwulf's reign that the
archbishopric of Lichfield was abolished, probably before
803, as the
Hygeberht who signed as an abbot at the
council of Cloveshoe in that year was the former archbishop.
Coenwulf died in 821, and was succeeded by his brother
Ceolwulf.
Coinage

Cross-and-wedges penny of Coenwulf, Canterbury, Beornferth

Cross-and-wedges penny of Coenwulf, Canterbury, Beornferth
The coinage of Coenwulf follows the broad silver
penny format established under
Offa and his contemporaries. His very first coins are very similar to the ''heavy coinage'' of Offa's last three years, and since the mints at
Canterbury and in
East Anglia were under the control of Eadbert Praen and Eadwald respectively, these earliest pennies must be the product of the
London mint. Before
798 the new ''tribrach'' type was introduced, initially at London alone but soon spreading to Canterbury after it was reconquered from the rebels. It was not struck in East Anglia, but there are tribrach pennies in the name of Cuthred, sub-king of Kent. Around
805 a new portrait coinage was introduced to Canterbury and London. At London a wide variety of styles and reverse designs were used, many of relatively poor artistic standard. The issues of Canterbury, however, were numerous and well-struck, especially in the initial ''cross and wedges'' coinage of Cuthred and Coenwulf and in the earliest portrait pennies of Archbishop Wulfred (the first archiepiscopal pennies to carry a portrait). After around
810 the quality of the portrait declined slightly, and a more diverse range of reverse designs was introduced, though several were common to many or all of the
moneyers.
The most dramatic development in the coinage of Coenwulf came with the discovery in 2001 of a
gold coin bearing the name Coenwulf at
Biggleswade in
Bedfordshire, England, on a
footpath beside the
River Ivel. The 4.25g
mancus (worth about 30 days' pay for a skilled worker) is only the eighth known Anglo-Saxon gold coin with a meaningful legend from after about
650, and is also the only one to bear any close relation to the contemporary silver coinage or to explicitly name its mint; in this case London, though the exact significance of the reverse legend DE VICO LVNDONIAE is debatable.
Initially sold to American collector
Allan Davisson for £230,000 at an
auction held by
Spink auction house in October of that year, the
British Government subsequently put in place an export ban in the hope of saving it for the British public.
In February 2006 the coin was bought by the
British Museum for £357,832 with the help of funding from the
National Heritage Memorial Fund making it the most expensive British coin purchased until then (though exceeded the following July by the third-known example of a
Double Leopard).
[2]
It is now on display in the museum's money gallery.
References
★
C. E. Blunt,
C. S. S. Lyon and
B. H. Stewart, 'The coinage of southern England, 796-840', ''British Numismatic Journal'' 32 (1963), 1-74
★
N. Brooks, ''The Early History of the Church of Canterbury'' (Leicester, 1984), chs. 6-9
★
J. J. Earle and
Charles Plummer's edition of the ''
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'', 796, 819 (Oxford, 1892)
★
W. de G. Birch, ''Cartularium Saxonicum'', 378 (London, 1885—1893)
See also
List of monarchs of Kent
Chronology of Kentish Kings