The Isle of Wight lies off the south coast
of England, separated from Hampshire by two narrow waterways, namely The Solent
and Spithead. It might be thought that its name derives from a corruption of
“white”, with a reference to the white cliffs that culminate in the Needles
rocks at its western end, but this is not so.
Tradition maintains that “Wight” comes from
“Wihtgar”, who was a shadowy – probably legendary - figure from the early
history of England.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle says that two
warriors, Stuf and Wihtgar, fought against the British in the year 514 and were
later given lordship over the Isle of Wight by Cerdic and Cynric (Kings of
Wessex), to whom they were related. Wihtgar is said to have died in 544 but to
have founded a dynasty that ruled the island until 685. One of his descendants
was reputed to have been Osburh, the mother of King Alfred the Great.
But can the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle be
believed? Although the name Stuf is acceptable as a personal name, there are
problems with “Wihtgar”. “Wiht” is an Anglicised form of Vecta, which was the
Latin name for the Isle of Wight going back to Roman times, and the later inhabitants
of the island were often referred to as “Wihtgara”.
The Venerable Bede, who wrote his
“Ecclesiastical History of the English People” in around the year 730, held
that Kent and the Isle of Wight were settled by people known as Jutes, a
Germanic tribe who arrived in Britain alongside the Angles and the Saxons in
the late 4th century. Doubts have been cast by later historians over
whether the Jutes ever existed as a separate people, but there certainly appear
to have been links between the settlers of Kent and the Isle of Wight. One such
link is that several royal personages in Kent had names that began with
“Wiht-“. The suggestion is therefore
that the name Wihtgar derives from Wiht and Wihtgara and not the other way
round.
The connection between Wihtgar, Cerdic and
Cynric also appears to have been made much later than the early 6th
century, the first mentions of such a link being from around the time that the
last King of Wight, Arauld, was killed after the island was overrun in 685 by
the West Saxon King Cædwalla.
It therefore appears that King Wihtgar may
never have existed at all but to have been an invention of the early
chroniclers who sought an origin for a name, which was something that is known
to have happened in other cases.
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