The earl of Northumbria is Siward, but …

Years: 1041 - 1041

The earl of Northumbria is Siward, but Earl Eadwulf of Bernicia ruls the northern part in semi-independence, a situation which does not please the autocratic Harthacnut.

Earl Eadwulf in 1041 gives offense to the king for an unknown reason but seeks reconciliation.

Harthacnut promises him safe conduct, then colludes in his murder by Siward, who becomes earl of the whole of Northumbria.

The crime is widely condemned, and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle described it as "a betrayal" and the king as an "oath-breaker".

Harthacnut is generous to the church.

Very few contemporary documents survive, but a royal charter of his transferred land to Bishop Ælfwine of Winchester, and he makes several grants to Ramsey Abbey.

The twelfth-century Ramsey Chronicle speaks well of his generosity and of his character.

Harthacnut had suffered from bouts of illness even before he became King of England.

He may have suffered from tuberculosis, and he probably knows that he has not long to live.

He invites his half-brother Edward the Confessor (his mother Emma's son by Æthelred the Unready) back from exile in Normandy in 1041 and probably makes him his heir.

He may well have been influenced by Emma, who hopes to keep her power by ensuring that one of her sons is succeeded by another.

Harthacnut is unmarried and has no known children.

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