Sweyn Forkbeard was the father of King Cnut (also known as
Canute), the Dane who ruled England from 1016 to 1035. Sweyn was himself the virtual
King of England for a brief period in 1013-14.
Sweyn was the son of the Danish king Harald Bluetooth, whom
he may have deposed in around the year 987. As king of Denmark, Sweyn spent
most of his reign attacking England and extracting the huge sums of money known
as Danegeld that severely weakened the English monarchy during the ineffective
reign of King Ethelred II, known to history as the “Unready”.
Sweyn was the master of a large and well-equipped fleet of
ships, which were used to great effect in mounting raids on the English coast
between the years 991 and 1013. It is known that Swain attacked London in 994
and, after ravaging across south-east England, wintered at Southampton, only
returning to Denmark after extracting a payment of £16,000.
He then spent several years dealing with problems nearer
home, involving Sweden and Poland, one consequence of which was his marriage to
a sister of Duke Boleslav of Poland, the child of the union being Cnut, born in
around 996.
It appears that he was back in England in 1001-2, as a geld
of £24,000 is recorded as having been paid at this time. He was certainly in
England in 1003, when he sacked Exeter and ravaged Wiltshire, and in East
Anglia in 1004 when Norwich and Thetford were sacked. In 1006 Sweyn’s forces
were active in Kent and Sussex. After wintering on the Isle of Wight they
raided through Hampshire and Berkshire and extracted a geld of £36,000 in 1007.
Several Danish armies were operating in England during the
years 1009-12, and Sweyn was almost certainly the commander of one of them,
possibly the one that extracted a geld of £48,000 and murdered Aelfheah, the
Archbishop of Canterbury.
In 1013 Sweyn returned with a different aim in mind, namely
the conquest of England. He sailed up the River Trent from the Humber estuary
and landed at Gainsborough. This was within the Danelaw and therefore an area
where he could count upon the support of the Anglo-Danish aristocracy. He swept
southwards, laying waste the country in an arc through Oxford and Winchester
towards London. This gained him widespread recognition as the King of England
and forced Ethelred to flee to Normandy.
However, Swain’s victory was short-lived because he died
suddenly on 3rd February 10 14, bequeathing his ambitions to his son Cnut,
although the return of Ethelred meant that the full imposition of Danish rule
on England would have to wait a little longer.
© John Welford
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