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St. Oswald
King and martyr; b., probably, 605; d. 5 Aug., 642; the second of seven brothers, sons of Ethelfrid, who was grandson of Ida, founder of the Kingdom of Northumbria in 547. Oswald's mother was Acha, daughter of Ella or Alla, who, after Ida's death, had seized Deira and thus separated it from the Northern Bernicia. The years of Oswald's youth were spent at home, as long as his father reigned, but when, in 617, Ethelfrid was slain in battle by Redwald, King of the East Angles, Oswald with his brothers fled for protection from Edwin, their uncle, Acha's brother, to the land of the Scots and were cared for at Columba's Monastery at Hii, or Iona. There they remained until Edwin's death in the battle of Heathfield (633). Eanfrid, his elder brother, then retuurned to accept the Kingdom of Deira, whilst Osric, cousin of Edwin, received Bernicia. The kingdom was thus again divided and both parts relapsed into paganism. In the following year Osric was slain in battle, and Eanfrid treacherously murdered by the British king, Cadwalla. Oswald thereupon came down from the North, and in 635 a small but resolute band gathered round him near the Roman Wall at a spot seven miles north of Hexham, afterwards known as Hevenfelt, or Heaven's Field. Here, encouraged by a vision and promise of victory from St. Columba, who shrouded with his mantle all his camp, Oswald set up a cross of wood as his standard - the first Christian symbol ever raised in Bernicia - and gave battle to the Britons, who were led, probably, by Cadwalla. The Britons were completely routed, and thenceforth could only act on the defensive.
Oswald's victory reunited the Northumbrian Kingdom not only because he
delivered it from the humiliating yoke of the Mercians and Britons, but also
because on his father's side he was a descendant of Ida of Bernicia and on his
mother's of the royal house of Ella of Deira. Thus united, Northumbria could not
fail to become the chief power in a confederation against Penda of Mercia and
the Britons of Wales. Oswald was thoroughly grounded in the principles of the
Christian religion, and, though but twelve nobles with whom he returned from
exile were Christians, far from abandoning his faith, his first care was to
spread it among the Bernicians, thus confirming the political union effected by
Edwin with a religious union unknown before. Edwin, it is true, had himself
received the Faith in 627, through the influence of his wife Ethelburga, sister
of the Kentish King, who had brought St. Paulinus to the North, but his example
was followed only by the people of Deira. Oswald, brought up in Columba's
monastery at Iona, naturally looked to the North for missionaries. The first
preacher who set forth soon returned, having found the Northumbrian people too
barbarous and stubborn. Then Aidan was sent, a man of singular meekness, piety
and moderation
, who established his episcopal see at Lindisfarne, in 635.
Oswald's zealous co-operation with the monk-bishop soon filled the land with
churches and monasteries, and the church at York, begun by Edwin, was completed.
Moreover, his wonderful humility in the midst of success, his charity, and his
piety soon had their effect in turning his subjects from Woden to Christ. We are
told that the king in his Court acted as the interpreter of the Irish
missionaries who knew not the language of his thanes.
It was Oswald's work to add to the warlike glory of his father Ethelfrid and
the wise administration of his uncle Edwin the moral power of Christianity, and
to build up a great kingdom. Edwin had gathered the whole English race into one
political body and was overlord of every English kingdom save that of Kent. The
Venerable Bede (III, 6) says that Oswald had a greater dominion than any of his
ancestors, and that he brought under his sway all the nations and provinces of
Britain, which are divided into four languages, namely the Britons, the Picts,
the Scots, and the English
. He had great power in the North-West, as far south
as Chester and Lancashire, and was probably owned as overlord by the Welsh
Kingdom of Strath Clyde, as well as by the Picts and Scots of Dalriada. In the
East he was supreme in Lindsey, and the words of Bede seem to imply that he was
overlord of Mercia, which was still ruled by Penda; but this could have been
scarcely more than nominal. The West Saxons in the South, influenced by the fear
of Penda, readily acknowledged Oswald, their allegiance being strengthened, in
635, by the conversion of King Cynegils, of Wessex, at whose baptism Oswald
stood sponsor, and whose daughter he married. Both sovereigns then established
Bishop Birinus at Dorchester.
This vast supremacy, extending from north to south, and broken only by
Penda's kingdom in Mid-Britain and that of the East Angles, led Adamnan of Hii
to call Oswald The Emperor of the whole of Britain
. Christianity seemed to be
forming a network round the pagan Penda of Mercia. The kingdom of the East
Angles, which was still Christian, but acknowledged Penda as overlord, was
necessary to Oswald to maintain the connection between his dominions in the
north and the south. War was therefore inevitable. At the battle of Maserfeld,
said to be seven miles from Shrewsbury, on the border of Wales, near Offa's
dyke
, Oswald was slain on 5 Aug., 642, and thus perished the most powerful and
most Christian King
in the eighth year of his reign and in the flower of his
age. His last words were for the spiritual welfare of his soldiers, whence the
proverb: God have mercy on their souls, as said Oswald when he fell.
His body
was mutilated by Penda, and his limbs set up on stakes, where they remained a
full year, until they were taken away by Oswy and given to the monks at Bardney
in Lindsey. In the tenth century some of the bones were carried off by Ethelred
and Ethelfleda of Mercia to St. Peter's, Gloucester. His head was taken from the
battlefield to the church of St. Peter in the royal fortress at Bamborough, and
was afterwards translated to Lindisfarne, where, for fear of the Danes, it was
placed in 875 in the coffin of St. Cuthbert, which found its resting place at
Durham in 998. It was in the coffin at the translation of St. Cuthbert in 1104,
and was thought to be there when the tomb was opened in 1828. His arm and hand
(or hands) were taken to Bamborough and perhaps afterwards removed to
Peterborough, and were still incorrupt in the time of Symeon of Durham, early in
the twelfth century. Reginald gives an account of his personal appearance: arms
of great length and power, eyes bright blue, hair yellow, face long and beard
thin, and his small lips wearing a kindly smile.
BEDE, History; REGINALD, Life (printed by the Surtees Soc., and all portions not containing matter taken from Bede in R. S. among works of Sym. of Durham); SYM. OF DURHAM, Hist. Dunelm.; IDEM, Hist. Regum in R. S. and Surtees Soc. Publications; ADAMNAN, Life of St. Columba, ed. and tr. by FOWLER (Oxford, 1894); ALCUIN, Carmen in Historians of York, in R. S.; WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY, Gesta Pontif.; IDEM, Gesta Regum in R. S.; Miscell. Biogr. in Surtees Soc. Publications. For account of his relics see also RAINE, St. Cuthbert; IDEM, Opening of St. Cuthbert's Tomb (Durham, 1828); WALL, Shrines of British Saints: Oswald and Cuthbert (London, 1905). - RAINE in Dict. of Christ. Biogr., s.v.; BUTLER, Lives, Aug. 5; GREEN, Making of England (London, 1897), vi; BELLESHEIM, Cath. Ch. of Scotland, tr. HUNTER-BLAIR, I (Edinburgh, 1887); MONTALEMBERT, Moines d'Occident, tr. (London, 1896); SKENE, Celtic Scotland, I (Edinburgh, 1876); HUNT, History of the English Church from 597-1066 (London, 1899).
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