Aethelweard

English chronicler
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Also known as: Ethelwerd
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Ethelwerd
Died:
998?
Also Known As:
Ethelwerd
Subjects Of Study:
universal history

Aethelweard (died 998?) was an English chronicler and likely ealderman of the western provinces (probably the whole of Wessex), a descendant of King Alfred’s brother Aethelred. He wrote, in elaborate and peculiar Latin, a chronicle for his continental kinswoman, Matilda, abbess of Essen. In the printed version of the text, the chronicle stops in 975, but fragments of the burned manuscript show that it continued into the reign of Aethelred (978–1016). Up to 894 it is based on a version, fuller than any now surviving, of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; thereafter it is an independent authority. Aethelweard was the patron of Aelfric the homilist. The last certain mention of him is in 998. His major work was edited as The Chronicle of Aethelweard by A. Campbell (1962).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.