Ancestorium Family Tree Collaboration

Wulfnoth Godwinson

Male - 1094


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    All

  • Name Wulfnoth Godwinson 
    Gender Male 
    Died 1094  Salisbury Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I026411  Ancestorium

    Father Godwin Earl of Kent & Wessex,   b. Abt 987,   d. 15 Apr 1053  (Age ~ 66 years) 
    Mother Gytha Thorkelsdóttir,   d. Aft 1069 
    Married Abt 1019 
    Family ID F02279  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 

    • Wulfnoth Godwinson
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wulfnoth_Godwinson

      Wulfnoth Godwinson (b.1040) was a younger brother of Harold II of England, the sixth son of Godwin. He was given as a hostage to Edward the Confessor in 1051 as assurance of Godwin's good behaviour and support during the confrontation between the earl and the king which led to the exile of Godwin and his other sons. Upon Godwin's return to England at the head of an army a year later, following extensive preparations in Ireland and Flanders, Norman supporters of King Edward, and especially Archbishop Robert of Jumieges, fled England. It is likely at this point that Wulfnoth (and Hakon, son of Svein Godwinson, Godwin's eldest son) were spirited away by the fleeing archbishop, and taken to Normandy, where they were handed over to Duke William of Normandy. According to Eadmer's Historia novorum in Anglia, the reason for Harold's excursion to Normandy in 1064 or 1065 was that he wished to free Wulfnoth as well as his nephew Hakon. To this end he took with him a vast amount of wealth, all of which was confiscated by Count Guy I of Ponthieu when Harold and his party were shipwrecked. However, Harold's reasons for travelling to the continent are not clear, and there are other reasonable explanations, not the least of which was a sounding out among continental magnates of a response to his own intention to ascend the English throne at one point, given Edward's advanced age and lack of heir. When later Harold allegedly swore an oath to William agreeing to become his vassal and to support his succession to the English crown, one of the promises made by William in return, according to Eadmer, was that Wulfnoth would be returned safe and sound when William had become king. Harold's assumption of the crown broke this alleged agreement and Wulfnoth was never released. Of course, there are many other explanations of Wulfnoth's enduring captivity. Even following William's victory at Hastings (1066) over Harold and crowning as King of England in London later that year, England's pacification remained uncertain. William may have held Wulfnoth as hostage against a resurgence of a remnant of Godwinson power. He stayed in comfortable, if not enviable, captivity in Normandy and later in England, and died in Salisbury in 1094, still a prisoner.