Battle of Carham

Battle of Carham
Date1018
LocationRiver Tweed
Result Scottish victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of England Kingdom of Scotland Kingdom of Strathclyde
Commanders and leaders
Uhtred, son of Waldef Máel Coluim mac Cináeda Owain the Bald

The Battle of Carham (c. 1018) (also referred to as the Battle of Coldstream) was fought between the Kingdom of Scotland and the Northumbrians at Carham on Tweed. 'Uhtred, son of Waldef, earl of the Northumbrians, fought the combined forces of Máel Coluim (II) mac Cináeda (Malcolm son of Cyneth, king of Scots) and Owain the Bald (King of Strathclyde). Their combined forces defeated Earl Uhtred’s forces determining the eastern border of Scotland at the River Tweed.[1]

Written Records of the Battle

Sources for the battle are scarce. Those that do mention the battle often include it in a survey of other events. The English sources only briefly discuss the battle. Three of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle manuscripts (C, D, and E) record the events leading to the conflict:

"Then [Atheling Edmund and Earl Uhtred] led an army into Staffordshire and into Shropshire and to Chester, and they ravaged on their side and Cnut on his side. He then went out through Buckinghamshire into Bedfordshire, from there to Huntingdonshire, and so into Northamptionshire, long the fen to Stamford, and then into Lincolnshire; then from there to Nottinghamshire and so into Northumbria towards York."[2]

Mael Coluin and Owain grouped together "near Caddonlea (Selkirkshire) […] where the Wedale road from Alba met the Tweeddale road from Strathclyde, lay at the northern edge of Ettick Forest (roughly corresponding with to Selkirkshirein extent) which formed a march (an underdeveloped and sparsely populated border zone) between Cumbria and Northumbria."[3] Uhtred’s forces intercepted them before they crossed Cheviot. This interception meant that he did not have enough time to gather enough troops.[4] Another source, De obsessione Dunelmi (“On the Siege of Durham”), places the battle under the 1018 annul listing Uhtred as the Northumbrian army.[5]

The Dating Controversy

Symeon of Durham (12th Century), using dependable Northumbrian materials, records in Historia Dunelmensis Ecclesie places the battle in 1018 (“without mention of Uhtred”).[6] Frank Stenton proposed and some scholars maintain that astronomical events referred to in accounts of the battle actually indicate 1016.[7] Symeon’s record of a comet’s visibility during the battle correlates with astronomical evidence from August 1018.[8] Stenton also contended that the death of Earl Uhtred in 1016 voids the argument for 1018.[9] Three versions of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (C, D, and E) reference the death of Uhtred in the 1016 annul:

"When Uhtred learned this, he left his ravaging and hastened north-wards, and submitted then out of necessity, and with him all the Northumbrians and he gave hostages; and nevertheless he was killed with him Thurketel, Nafena’s son; and then after that the king (Cnut) appointed Eric for the Northumbrians, as their earl, just as Uhtred had been; and then turned him southward by another route keeping to the west and the whole army then reached the ships before Easter." [10]

Stenton and C. Plummer argue that the earlier date of the battle used the 1016 annual’s inclusion of Uhtred’s death.[11] Durham argues and Woolf supports that the mention is an aside from the scribe recording in 1018 or 1019.[12] De Obsessione Dunelmi (c. 1165) supports Durham’s theory that the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle scribe is discussing the more recent death of Uhtred as it places his death following the events outlined in the English source under the 1018 annul.[13]

Significance

The battle’s significance is a matter of controversy, especially in regard to the region of Lothian. Scottish historians claim Lothian was won for Scotland at Carham and that Scotland’s borders were expanded as a result; Marjorie O. Anderson argues that the English king Edgar the Peaceful granted Lothian to Cináed (II) mac Maíl Coluim, King of Scots, in 973.[14] In English sources, the Battle of Carham is not given any special significance.[15] Still others, such as G.W.S. Barrow hold, that "What English annalists recorded as the 'cession' of Lothian was... the recognition by a powerful but extremely remote south-country king of a long-standing fait accompli."[15]

The Scot’s possession of what now constitutes the south-east of Scotland seems to have been recognized by kings of England, even when kings such as Cnut and William the Conqueror invaded, as they did not seek permanent control of the area.


Aftermath

After the battle of Carham, much of present-day Scotland was under the control of the King of Scots, although Norsemen still held sway in Ross, Caithness, Sutherland, and The Isles. The Lords of Galloway remained semi-independent. Scotland or Scotia referred to what constitutes present-day Scotland north of the Forth and Clyde; it was not until the time of King Dabíd (I) mac Maíl Choluim that people in the south-east of the kingdom began to think of themselves as Scots. In his own charters (e.g. to St Cuthbert's in Edinburgh), he continued to refer to the men of Lothian as English. Woolf asserts that “the likelihood is that these are under representative glimpses of a much longer conflict which escaped he detailed gaze of our chroniclers because far more interesting things were happening in Southumbria and Ireland at the time."[16]

The Carham 1018 Society

The Scotland-based society’s mission statement is “to investigate, raise awareness, and commemorate the Battle of Carham.”[17] The society’s website provides dates for “public meetings, commemorative events, and future plans” as well as excerpts from articles and archaeological findings pertaining to the battle. [18]

References

  1. Mack, p. 6
  2. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, D. Whitlock's Revised Translation, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1961
  3. Woolfe, A., The New Edinburgh History of Scotland Vol. 2: From Pictland To Alba 789-1070, Edinburgh UP, 2007, p. 238
  4. Woolfe, p. 238
  5. The full title is De obsessione Dunelmi et de probitate Uhtredi comitis, et de comitibus qui ei successerunt ("On the siege of Durham, and the character of Earl Uhtred, and the earls who succeeded him"); Translated by Christopher J. Morris, Marriage and Murder.
  6. Duncan, A.A.M., "The Battle of Carham, 1018" The Scottish Historical Review, Vol. 55, No. 159, 1976, p. 21
  7. Stenton, Frank (1971). Anglo-Saxon England 3rd Edition. Oxford UP. p. 418.
  8. Woolf, p. 27
  9. Stenton, p 418
  10. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle,' Whitock translation'
  11. Stenton, p. 418; Plummer, C. Two of the Saxon Chronicles Parallel, Oxford, 1892, 154-5.
  12. Durham, p. 25; Woolf, p. 27
  13. Morris, p. 3.
  14. Anderson, M.O. (1980). Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland. Scottisch Academic Press.
  15. 1 2 G.W.S. Barrow
  16. Woolfe, 239
  17. carham1018.org.uk/
  18. carham1018.org.uk/

References

Anderson, M.O. (1980). Kings and Kingship in Early Scotland. Scottisch Academic Press.

Carham Society of 1018.(2015) carham1018.org.uk/

De obsessione Dunelmi et de probitate Uhtredi comitis, et de comitibus qui ei successerunt ("On the siege of Durham, and the character of Earl Uhtred, and the earls who succeeded him"), C. J. Morris. (1992) in Marriage and Murder in 11th Century Northumbria: A Study of De Obsessione Dunelmi. University of York.

Duncan, A.A.M., "The Battle of Carham, 1018" The Scottish Historical Review, Vol. 55, No. 159, 1976

Plummer, C. Two of the Saxon Chronicles Parallel, Oxford, 1892.

Stenton, Frank (1971). Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd ed. Oxford UP.

Whitlock, D. (1961). Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: Revised Translation, Eyre and Spottiswoode.

Woolfe, A. (2007) The New Edinburgh History of Scotland Vol. 2: From Pictland To Alba 789-1070, Edinburgh UP. Coordinates: 55°38′13″N 2°19′15″W / 55.63694°N 2.32083°W / 55.63694; -2.32083


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.