The
Dark Ages & Saxon Period
AD 491 to 1066

AFTER
THE ROMAN forces had departed Britain was left completely defenceless,
and after some three centuries of peace and security the native Britons
had no knowledge of defensive techniques, and fell easy victims to barbaric
invaders and marauders previously kept at bay by the Roman soldiers.
Consequently, Britain went through a period known appropriately as the
Dark Ages, during which time the settlements, towns and other marks
of civilisation built up under Roman rule were destroyed. The whole
period is shrouded in the mists of obscurity, with the legendary King
Arthur appearing on the scene as an uncertain national figure at some
time after the Roman departure.
Whatever
upheavals may have taken place during the Dark Ages, a renewed and more
settled civilisation had reappeared by the year 871 when England had
become unified into one Kingdom under King Alfred. The old hill-top
settlements and road systems had been abandoned in favour of villages
generally sited in the valleys, and it was therefore during this period
that most of the present day villages, including Bere Regis, were first
established. Such Saxon villages were usually small, consisting of little
more than a manor house, farm, church and a few cottages, mostly timber
built and thatched including, often, the church. It is not possible
to say exactly when Bere Regis was first established as a village, but
some sort of manor house is known to have been in existence by the year
978, and to have belonged to the crown, and we may therefore suppose
that a small village and church would have been associated with it.
It is probable that the Saxon church was basically a timber building,
but a part of it may have been stone, and if the stone portion was retained
and incorporated as a north transept into the subsequent Norman church,
it would account for the odd alignment at the east end of the nave and
north aisle still apparent in the present building.
The
first event in national history associated with this parish to which
an accurate date can be assigned, is the murder. or probably more correctly,
the assassination of King Edward the Martyr at Corfe Castle on the 18
March, 978. The Norman castle at Corfe had of course not then been constructed,
but a Saxon building of some sort did exist on the site, which like
the manor at Bere was crown property. It was evening, and the young
King Edward, having been hunting in the neighbourhood, had decided to
visit his stepmother Queen Elfrida who was at the time staying at the
Corfe house. As Edward was a young king, it seems Elfrida, as queer.
mother, was virtually ruler of the country and could use any crown property
as her own.
Edward
was about to drink a cup of wine he had been given before dismounting
at the entrance to the house, when he was stabbed and received a wound
from which he soon died, and it is said that he was dragged by the stirrup
for some distance when his horse took fright and fled. His body was
for some time hidden in a nearby cottage before being buried in a humble
grave at Wareham, but it was subsequently borne in great state to Shaftesbury
Abbey where his tomb became a shrine for pilgrims.
It
is not known for certain whether or not Elfrida was implicated in the
assassination, as Edward is known to have been very hot tempered at
times, especially towards his servants, so that he may have had many
enemies. However, as his death resulted in the throne coming to Elfrida's
own son Ethelred, Edward's half brother, she was considered to have
profited by it, and consequently suspicion fell heavily on her. Not
surprisingly, she sought refuge in one of the more secluded of the royal
houses and accordingly came to stay for a time at Bere. She is said
to have eventually become a nun, and to have lived a humble life of
atonement.
This
Saxon manor house would have almost certainly stood in what is now Court
Green, and would have been the nucleus from which developed the later
buildings of King John, and the still later manor house of the Turbervilles.
The pipe rolls of King John's reign (1199-1216) make no mention of actually
constructing his group of buildings at Bere, but refer only to alterations,
additions and repairs, suggesting that they already existed.
It
is said to have been whilst staying at Bere that Ethelred received a
beating from his mother Elfrida when he let it be known that he, too,
believed her guilty of Edward's death. She used large wax candles to
administer the beating, nothing more suitable being ready to hand, and
the Saxon chronicle, recording the incident, states: "Wherefor
Ethelred ever hated wax candles, and would have none burnt before him
all the days of his life".
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