ROYALTY: Let’s Make Sense of This Sh*t

Understanding Centwine of Wessex: The Little-Known Pagan King

25 min · 31. Mai 2026
Episode Understanding Centwine of Wessex: The Little-Known Pagan King Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode we explore the overlooked reign of Centwine king of Wessex who ruled from six hundred seventy six to six hundred eighty five just before the more famous Cædwalla took power. Drawing from the sparse entries in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle this bonus episode examines why Centwine receives so little attention in later histories and what his story reveals about early West Saxon politics religious transitions and the limits of surviving records from the seventh century. The discussion highlights how thin sources still shape our view of an entire era of divided rule and shifting power among royal kin making his nine years a quiet turning point worth closer attention even without dramatic legends attached. What You'll Discover: • How the Anglo Saxon Chronicle records only basic accession dates for Centwine without added stories. • Why historians label him the last pagan king before documented conversions appear. • The role of divided sub kingships across Wessex during his entire reign. • What one brief military campaign against the Britons in six hundred eighty two reveals. • How Bede and charters leave Centwine out of church related accounts entirely. Key Insights: • Centwine succeeded Æscwine in six hundred seventy six with no recorded family ties or battles. • A single annal notes his drive of Britons to the sea marking his only known action. • Power stayed split among several rulers rather than unified under one West Saxon king. • His exit in six hundred eighty five opened the way for Cædwalla to consolidate control. • Silence on any baptism leaves his personal beliefs unknown compared to later rulers. Historical Context: Seventh century Wessex formed one of several Anglo Saxon kingdoms competing along western borders with British territories while Christianity spread unevenly among ruling families. The Anglo Saxon Chronicle compiled later from earlier notes tracks succession and conflict with extreme brevity leaving gaps that later writers filled unevenly. This period of shared authority ended only after Centwine stepped aside marking a shift toward stronger single rulers. Coming Up Next Tune in next time for a full look at Cædwalla and the dramatic changes that followed Centwine with fresh details on how one reign reshaped Wessex forever. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

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29 Folgen

Episode Understanding King Eadred: The Rise to Power of England's Ailing Cover

Understanding King Eadred: The Rise to Power of England's Ailing

In this episode, we explore the remarkable reign of King Eadred, an Anglo-Saxon ruler who battled chronic illness yet managed to lead campaigns against Viking forces and maintain control over a fragmented kingdom from nine hundred forty six to nine hundred fifty five. His story highlights how personal adversity intersected with political strategy to shape early English unity. Eadred's use of advisors and charters proved essential in integrating Northumbria and supporting monastic reforms that endured beyond his lifetime. Understanding his challenges reveals the resilience required in tenth century monarchy and the foundations of a single English realm. What You'll Discover: • Eadred ruled despite stomach illness requiring liquid diet only. • He expelled Erik Bloodaxe from Northumbria by nine hundred fifty four. • Charters and coinage reinforced loyalty across southern and northern regions. • Close ties with Dunstan advanced monastic reforms during his reign. • Family succession from Edward the Elder ensured stable power transition. Key Insights: • Sudden death of brother Edmund thrust Eadred onto throne at age twenty. • Viking threats in north demanded repeated military expeditions despite health limits. • Trusted advisors executed plans when king could not travel personally. • No marriage or heirs focused attention solely on kingdom stability. • Final unity of England held after his death without major revolts. Historical Context: The tenth century saw ongoing struggles to unify England against Viking incursions from the north. The West Saxon royal line worked to consolidate power through military action and political alliances. Eadred's era marked a critical phase in forming a single English kingdom. Coming Up Next Discover how the next ruler navigated similar challenges and built upon these foundations for lasting legacy. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

28. Juni 202624 min
Episode Understanding Edmund I: The Betrayal That Shook the Anglo-Saxon Cover

Understanding Edmund I: The Betrayal That Shook the Anglo-Saxon

In this episode, we dive into the dramatic yet overlooked reign of King Edmund I of England, a young ruler whose sudden rise and violent end left lasting questions about power and legacy in the tenth century. Taking the throne at just nineteen after his half-brother Athelstan died, Edmund quickly reclaimed lost territories, issued key law codes, and secured family alliances through marriage and heirs. His story shows how ambition met brutal reality when an outlaw's attack cut everything short at age twenty-five during a feast. This episode unpacks the sources, family dynamics, and fragile achievements that shaped early English unification efforts despite the short timeline. We examine why his contributions faded from later histories while still influencing his sons' paths to the crown. What You'll Discover: • Edmund reclaimed the Five Boroughs from Viking control in 942 through targeted campaigns. • He issued law codes between 943 and 946 to curb theft and protect church rights. • Born around 921 as son of Edward the Elder, Edmund gained early battle experience alongside Athelstan. • Two sons from his first marriage, Eadwig and Edgar, later became kings and continued his work. • Second marriage to Athelflaed of Damerham strengthened southern noble alliances without further heirs. Key Insights: • An outlaw named Leofa fatally stabbed Edmund during a 946 feast at Pucklechurch. • Athelstan's 939 death thrust nineteen-year-old Edmund onto the throne amid northern threats. • Military successes led to submissions from Scottish and Strathclyde kings by 945. • Sudden murder at twenty-five halted promising reforms before they could fully develop. • Family succession plans ensured stability even as the crown passed quickly to brother Eadred. Historical Context: Tenth-century Anglo-Saxon England involved constant Viking pressures and efforts to unify divided regions after earlier conquests. Kings balanced warfare, diplomacy, and legal reforms to maintain control in a fragile political landscape where alliances shifted rapidly. Coming Up Next Explore how later rulers expanded these early unification tactics for greater stability across the kingdom. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

21. Juni 202622 min
Episode Understanding Æthelstan: The Rise of England's Overlooked First Cover

Understanding Æthelstan: The Rise of England's Overlooked First

In this episode, we uncover the forgotten legacy of Æthelstan, the tenth-century king whose victory at Brunanburh in 937 helped forge a unified England. Often overshadowed by later rulers, he earned the title ruler of Britain through battles, alliances, and reforms that shaped the nation. Explore how his overlooked story reveals the true origins of English monarchy and why his achievements still matter today for understanding royal history. What You'll Discover: • Æthelstan won decisively at Brunanburh, earning a full poem in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. • Charters from his reign already called him ruler of Britain. • He was grandson of Alfred the Great and son of Edward the Elder. • Childhood at the Mercian court taught him leadership and alliances. • He issued uniform laws and coinage to strengthen royal authority across regions. Key Insights: • Edward died in 924, triggering immediate rival claims from family members. • Æthelstan used prior Mercian ties to secure loyalty and manpower quickly. • Half-brother Ælfweard died weeks after challenging the succession. • March into Northumbria in 927 forced submissions from northern rulers. • Strategic marriages of his sisters built vital continental diplomatic alliances. Historical Context: The tenth century featured repeated Viking raids and fragmented Anglo-Saxon kingdoms across Britain. Æthelstan's campaigns and governance marked a turning point toward centralized rule and lasting unification efforts. Coming Up Next Discover how later kings expanded on these foundations and transformed the English throne in our next revealing episode. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

14. Juni 202628 min
Episode Understanding Edward the Elder: Rise, Betrayal, and Kingdom Cover

Understanding Edward the Elder: Rise, Betrayal, and Kingdom

In this episode we explore Edward the Elder and the decisive shift that turned Alfred's defensive stand into the foundation for a single English kingdom. In nine hundred twenty northern rulers met Edward at Bakewell and accepted him as overlord marking a clear reversal from Viking demands to English authority. We trace how Edward used burhs campaigns and family alliances to consolidate scattered gains into lasting control across Wessex Mercia and the eastern Midlands. His story shows the practical lessons of kingship learned at court during constant Viking pressure and how one son's steady expansion prepared the ground for Athelstan's later unification. The episode reveals why this often overlooked reign mattered for England's emergence. What You'll Discover: • Edward grew up watching Alfred balance warfare learning and alliances during Viking raids. • Succession fight with cousin Aethelwold taught Edward to secure noble loyalty quickly. • Burh building program created bases that supported steady territorial expansion after nine hundred ten. • Three strategic marriages strengthened ties across Wessex Mercia and Kent for broader support. • Large family network placed sons in key regions ensuring continuity after Edward's death. Key Insights: • Nine hundred twenty Bakewell meeting showed Viking leaders seeking terms instead of battle. • Early clash with Aethelwold proved family ties could turn into immediate throne threats. • Repeated advances into eastern Midlands cut Viking supply lines town by town. • Edward adjusted burh sites seasonally to maintain pressure through winter and summer campaigns. • Distribution of lands to sons created connected realm rather than fragmented territories. Historical Context: The early tenth century saw Wessex move from desperate defense against Viking settlement to active expansion. Fortified towns and written agreements replaced earlier cycles of raid and retreat while royal authority stretched across former Danish held regions. Edward's reign bridged Alfred's survival and Athelstan's unification. Coming Up Next Discover how Athelstan built directly on these foundations to claim the title of first king of all England and what his own campaigns reveal about lasting royal power. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

7. Juni 202626 min
Episode Understanding Alfred the Great: Legacy of the King Who Rebuilt Cover

Understanding Alfred the Great: Legacy of the King Who Rebuilt

In this episode we explore Alfred the Great the only English king awarded that title and the ruler who reversed Viking conquests after the disastrous winter of eight hundred seventy eight. Forced into hiding at Athelney Alfred rebuilt his forces and later established burhs a navy and educational reforms that secured Wessex. His story reveals how early lessons in family duty travel and scholarship prepared one man to transform a threatened kingdom into a lasting power and why his methods still influence ideas of resilient leadership today. What You'll Discover: • Alfred grew up youngest among brothers facing repeated Viking raids from childhood. • His Rome pilgrimage and mothers stories shaped values of learning and duty. • Early advisor role under brother Aethelred taught crisis leadership before the throne. • Victory at Edington forced Guthrum into baptism and territorial withdrawal. • Burh network and new ships created lasting defense system across Wessex. Key Insights: • Winter marshes at Athelney tested survival before dramatic return to power. • Series of brother deaths thrust unprepared Alfred into kingship amid invasion. • Edington battlefield win became turning point ending immediate Danish threat. • Treaty of Wedmore established boundary that preserved West Saxon independence. • Private illness and study routines sustained reforms across decades of pressure. Historical Context: Ninth century England faced relentless Viking Great Army invasions that toppled kingdoms and settled large territories. Wessex alone endured under Alfred whose measured military administrative and cultural responses prevented total collapse and laid groundwork for later English unification. Coming Up Next Discover how Alfreds children carried his defensive and scholarly legacy forward into the next generation of Viking conflicts and royal consolidation. 📩 Have questions or want to share your experience? Reach out at royalty@senseofthisshit.com. 💛 Join Our Supporters Club ($3 a month) 💛 Ad-free listening + early episodes — help keep independent media alive. Click Here: https://www.spreaker.com/podca... [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/royalty-let-s-make-sense-of-this-sh-t--6635619/support]

2. Juni 202623 min