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Osthryth (died 697), queen of the Mercians, was the wife of King Æthelred and daughter of King Oswiu of Northumbria and his second wife Eanflæd. She was murdered by the nobles of Mercia.〔 〕 Osthryth was not the first of her family to become a Mercian queen. Her sister Alhflæd had married Peada, King of South Mercia 654-656.〔Bede, ''The Ecclesiastical History of the English People'' (1994), 144.〕 After Peada's death, allegedly murdered with Alhflæd's connivance, she retreated to Fladbury in Worcestershire, to judge both from the place-name, which means "stronghold of Flæde", and from its subsequent history:〔Hooke, in ''The Anglo-Saxon Landscape: The Kingdom of the Hwicce'' (1985), p. 11, argues that Fladbury could have belonged to another sister of Osthryth, Ælflæda, Abbess of Whitby, but she had no known connection with Mercia and died in 713, after Osthryth, so Osthryth could not have inherited Fladbury from her.〕 sometime in the 690s Æthelred granted Fladbury to Oftfor, Bishop of Worcester, to re-establish monastic life there;〔(S76 Anglo-Saxons.net: Æthelred's grant of Fladbury )〕 however, this grant was later contested by Æthelheard, son of Oshere, who maintained that Æthelred had no right to give Fladbury away, as it had been the property of Osthryth. Æthelheard claimed it as her kinsman and heir.〔H. P. R. Finberg, ''The Early Charters of the West Midlands'' (Leicester 1961), p.170.〕 Æthelred and Osthryth loved and favoured Bardney Abbey in Lincolnshire. Osthryth placed there the bones of her uncle Oswald of Northumbria, who was venerated as a saint. It is clear from this story that Osthryth played a part in promoting the cult of St Oswald.〔Bede, ''The Ecclesiastical History of the English People'' ed. J. McClure and R. Collins (1994), 126.〕 Many years later she persuaded Oswald's widow Cyneburh to take the veil.〔H.P.R.Finberg, ''The Early Charters of the West Midlands'' (Leicester 1961), p.165.〕 Osthryth had to contend with major conflicts of loyalty. In 679 her brother Ecgfrith of Northumbria fought a battle against Æthelred, in which Ecgfrith's brother Ælfwine was killed. Bede tells us that he was "a young man of about eighteen years of age and much beloved in both kingdoms, for King Æthelred had married his sister."〔Bede, ''The Ecclesiastical History of the English People'' ed. J. McClure and R. Collins (1994), 207.〕 The murder of Osthryth in 697 by Mercian nobles is unexplained in the sources that mention it.〔Bede, ''The Ecclesiastical History of the English People'' ed. J. McClure and R. Collins (1994), 292; ''Anglo-Saxon Chronicle''.〕 Ann Williams attributes it to the hostility between the Mercians and the Northumbrians,〔Ann Williams, 'Osthryth', in Ann Williams et al, eds, ''A Biographical Dictionary of Dark Age Britain'', Seaby, 1991〕 while D. P. Kirby suggests that it may have been revenge for her sister's alleged involvement in Peada's murder.〔D. P. Kirby, ''The Earliest English Kings'', Routledge, 1991, p. 127〕 Finberg speculates that she and her kinsman Oshere were suspected of trying to detach the kingdom of the Hwicce from Mercian overlordship.〔H.P.R. Finberg, ''The Early Charters of the West Midlands'' (Leicester 1961), pp. 176-7.〕 Osthryth was buried at Bardney Abbey.〔 Osthryth was probably the mother of Æthelred's son, Ceolred, king of Mercia from 709 to 716.〔 ==Notes== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Osthryth」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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