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Alphege
(Elphege, Ζlfheah) was born about 953, during the second major period of
Viking raids against England. He became first a monk and then a hermit, and
then was appointed Abbot of Bath. In 984 he became Bishop of Westminster. In
994 King Ethelred the Unready sent him to parley with the Danish invaders
Anlaf and Swein. The Anglo-Saxons paid tribute, but Anlaf became a Christian
and swore never to invade England again. He never did. In that same year
Alphege brought the newly baptized King Olaf Tryggvason of Norway to a
peaceful meeting with King Ethelred, and to his confirmation at Andover.
(Remark: "Unready" does not mean that the king was often unprepared; it
means that he was headstrong and stubborn, and would not accept "rede,"
meaning counsel or advice.)
In 1005 Alphege became Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1011 the Danes overran
much of southern England. The payment of the tribute agreed on (the Danegeld)
did not stop them, and in September they captured Canterbury and held
Alphege and other prominent persons for ransom. The others were duly paid
for and released, but the price demanded for Alphege was a fantastically
high 3,000 pounds (worth of course, far more than modern pounds). Alphege,
knowing the poverty of his people, refused to pay or let anyone else pay for
him. The infuriated Danes, at the end of a drunken feast, brought him out
and repeated their demands. When he again refused, they threw various
objects at him (large bones from the feast, for example) and finally an
axeman delivered the death-blow. Their chief, Thorkell the Tall, tried to
save him, offering all his possessions except his ship for the Archbishop's
life. By his death Alphege became a national hero.
When the Dane Cnut (Canute) became King of England in 1016, he adopted a
policy of conciliation, and in 1023 he brought the body of Alphege from
London to Canterbury, where he was long remembered as a martyr, one who
died, not precisely for professing the Christian faith, but for exercising
the Christian virtue of justice. In art, he is shown with an axe, the
instrument of his death, or as a shepherd defending his flock from wolves.
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