Eardwulf of Northumbria is not, so far…
796 CE
Eardwulf of Northumbria is not, so far as is known, connected to any of the factions that up to the mid-790s had been warring for the throne.
Nothing is definitely known of his background, though Symeon of Durham's History of the Kings, an early twelfth-century work based on the lost late tenth-century chronicle of Byrhtferth, records that his father's name was also Eardwulf, and both father and son are given the title dux.
Historian Barbara Yorke has proposed that he was a descendant of one Eanwine who (according to Symeon of Durham) was killed in 740 on the orders of King Eadberht.
This Eanwine may be identified with King Eadwulf's son of the same name.
Eardwulf's father may have been one of the two Eardwulfs whose deaths are recorded by Symeon of Durham in 774 and 775.
Eardwulf appears to have been an enemy of Æthelred I.
He first appears in the historical record in about 790, when Symeon of Durham reports that: Eardulf was taken prisoner, and conveyed to Ripon, and there ordered by the aforesaid king [Æthelred] to be put to death without the gate of the monastery.
The brethren carried his body into the church with Gregorian chanting, and placed it out of doors in a tent; after midnight he was found alive in the church.
A letter from Alcuin of York to Eardwulf suggests that this fortunate recovery was seen as being miraculous.
Eardwulf's whereabouts after his recovery are not known.
In surviving King Æthelred's anger he had been more fortunate than Ælfwald's sons, who in 791 had been drowned on Æthelred's orders.
Osred had returned from exile only to be betrayed and killed on September 14, 792, by Æthelred's command.
Æthelred himself is assassinated on April 18, 796, perhaps at Corbridge, by conspirators led by the dux Ealdred.
Æthelred is followed as king by Osbald, whose antecedents are unknown: he is deposed after twenty-seven days and flees to the land of the Picts with a few supporters.
Eardwulf on May 14, 796, becomes king.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that he was consecrated on May 26, 796, at York Minster by Eanbald I, Archbishop of York, and Bishops Æthelberht, Beadwulf and Hygebald..