The 'Night of the Long Knives' is the name
Geoffrey of Monmouth gave to the (possibly
apocryphal) treacherous killing of
native British chieftains by
Jute,
Anglo and
Saxon mercenaries at a place (a hall, a
monastery, or perhaps
Stonehenge) on
Salisbury Plain in ca.
460. The event came to be known as ''Brad y Cyllyll Hirion'' ('The Treachery of the Long Knives') in
Welsh.
The
traditional figure
Vortigern, who had supposedly become the high king of the Britons in the wake of the abandonment of Britain by the
Roman Empire, had invited Angles and Saxons from
Germania to settle in
Kent as a means of warding off incursions by
Picts and
Scots. The settlers, however, grew in number, and when a dispute arose over payment, began themselves to raid British villages and establish independent
kingdoms.
The ''Night of the Long Knives'', according to Geoffrey of Monmouth, took place at a banquet in modern-day
Wiltshire ostensibly arranged to seal a
peace treaty, which may have been the cession of
Essex and
Sussex in exchange for intermarriage between
Rowena, the daughter of Saxon chieftain
Hengest, and Vortigern. The story claims that the "Saxons"—which probably includes Angles and Jutes—arrived at the banquet armed with their long knives (''saxes'') hidden on their persons. During the feast, on a given word of command, they pulled their knives and killed the unarmed Britons sitting next to them. Variously described as the only escapee are Vortigern himself, and Saint
Abban the Hermit.
The historical existence of any of these events or persons is conjectural. Textual evidence is weak and begins in the
7th century with
Nennius. Geoffrey embroidered the tale considerably.
Modern significance
As ''Brad y Cyllyll Hirion'', the event had, and still holds, a potent symbolism in Welsh national consciousness. In
19th century Wales, the term ''
Brad y Llyfrau Gleision'' ('The Treachery of the Blue Books') was coined to refer to the report of the English commissioners on education in Wales, published in parliamentary blue covers in
1847, which was widely seen as an attack on the
Welsh language and a slur on the Welsh people. One of the effects of the report would be the exclusion of the Welsh language from Welsh schools for several generations and a consequent fall in the number of Welsh speakers.
[1]
References
1. Prys Morgan, 'From Long Knives to Blue Books' in ''Welsh Society and Nationhood'' (ed. R. R. Davies ''et. al.'', Cardiff, 1981)
See also
★
King Arthur