| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
Our primary source for the events of Ælle's life (besides the short mention in Bede's Ecclesiastical History) is the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. It states that he landed in Britain in 477 with three ships and his three sons Cymen, Wlencing, and Cissa at Cymenes ora, where "they killed many of the Welsh, and drove the rest into the wood that is called Anredsleage." For the year 485, the Chronicle records that he again fought the "Welsh" at the stream of Mearcread. Then in 491, Ælle with the help of Cissa successfully besieged Anderida (also identified as Pevensey), and slew all of the inhabitants. E. A. Thompson notes that this is the only example of the barbarians who invaded the Roman Empire successfully using siegecraft against a Roman city! And with that last entry, the Chronicle contains no more records of this warchief; we have no record when he died, nor how, nor even what happened in the kingdom of the South Saxons after his presumed death until the baptism of its king Æthelwalh around 675.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle at this point begins narrating the events of the founding of the West Saxon kingdom, or Wessex, so it is possible that the scribe assembling this chronicle forgot to return to the events of Ælle's life. Alaistar Campbell, in examining the chronology of this part of the Chronicle, notes that at several places events are duplicated at 28 year intervals, suggesting that the sources from which the composing scribe assembled the Chronicle were based on 28-year Easter Tables, and that the annal that mentioned the later events of Ælle's life were mislaid.
It has been suggested that Ælle led the Anglo-Saxon army at the Battle of Mons BadonicusIn the Battle of Mount Badon ( Latin Mons Badonicus Welsh Mynydd Baddon Romano-British and Celts inflicted a severe defeat on an invading Anglo-Saxon army sometime in the decade before or after 500. While it is a major political/military event of the 5th, possibly as early as 496Events Battle of Tolbiac; Clovis I defeats the Alamanni accepts Catholic baptism at Reims. Pope Anastasius II succeeds Gelasius I. The ruling Tuoba family in the Chinese Northern Wei Dynasty change their family name to Yuan. Byzantine Emperor Anastasius I, though the Annales Cambriae in the Historia Brittonum records the date as 516Events Council of Tarragona Sigismund becomes king of Burgundy. Births Athalaric, king of the Ostrogoths Deaths Gundobad, king of the Burgundians Oisc, King of Kent (possible date) 516.), and some scholars wonder if Ælle was killed in the battle. This would be a fitting end to the career of the first Bretwalda.
| Preceded by: — | Bretwalda | Succeeded by: Ceawlin of WessexCeawlin of Wessex also spelled "Ceaulin" or "Caelin" is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as being king of the West Saxons, or Wessex from 560 to 591, and named by Bede in his Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum as the second Bretwalda. The Anglo-S |