King Æthelred is unable to mount effective…
September 991 CE
King Æthelred is unable to mount effective resistance against the renewed Danish attacks in the aftermath of Maldon.
Sigeric, Archbishop of Canterbury, advises Æthelred in 991 to pay a tribute to the invading Danish king Sweyn Forkbeard.
Æthelred presents Sweyn with ten thousand pounds of silver, in response to which Sweyn temporarily ceases his destructive advance into England, though he will later return for further tribute.
Sweyn's ever-increasing demands in the following years will result in a debilitating tax known as the Danegeld, payable by the inhabitants of Æthelred's territories.
Sigeric, who had been educated at Glastonbury Abbey, where he took holy orders, had in about 975 to 990 been elected Abbot of St. Augustine's, and in 985 or 986 consecrated by Archbishop Dunstan as Bishop of Ramsbury.
Transferred to the see of Canterbury in 990, he may have been a disciple of Dunstan's.
Sigeric had made the pilgrimage to Rome following the Via Francigena to receive his pallium around 990, and contemporary records of this journey still exist.