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Kingdom of ElmetDuring the Early Middle Ages, between approximately the 5th century and early 7th century AD, it is believed to have been an independent Celtic kingdom covering a broad area of what is now the West Riding of Yorkshire. Although its precise boundaries are unclear, it appears to have been bordered by the River Sheaf in the south and the River Wharfe in the east. It adjoined Deira and Mercia to the north and south respectively and its western boundary appears to have been drawn near Craven, which itself was possibly a minor British kingdom.
Brief historyElmet was one of a number of Sub-Roman British realms of northern Britannia that existed during the Early Middle Ages. As well as Elmet, these included Rheged, Strathclyde, Ebrauc, Bryneich and Gododdin. It is unclear how Elmet came to be established, though it has been suggested that it may have been created from a larger kingdom ruled by the semi-legendary Coel Hen. The historian Alex Woolf suggests that the region of Elmet had enjoyed a distinct tribal identity in pre-Roman times and that this had re-emerged following the collapse of Roman rule. The existence of Elmet is attested by Nennius in his History of the Britons, in which he writes that King Edwin of Northumbria "occupauit Elmet, et expulit Certic, regem illius regionis" ("occupied Elmet and expelled Certic, king of that country"). Bede's Ecclesiastical History mentions that Hereric, the father of St Hilda of Whitby, was killed at the court of King Ceretic. It is generally presumed that Ceretic/Certic were the same person, otherwise known as Ceredig ap Gwallog. However, Bede does not speak of Elmet as the name of a kingdom but rather as that of a forest, silva Elmete. He mentions a royal residence and the battle of Winwaed (Winwood) in the region of Loidis (Leeds). (The reference to a royal residence: "Reges posteriores fecere sibi villam in regione quae vocatur Loidis"). Elmet appears to have had ties with Wales; an early Christian inscription found in Caernarvonshire reads "ALIOTVS ELMETIACOS HIC IACET", or "Aliortus the Elmetian lies here". A cantref (administrative division) of Dyfed was also named Elfed, the Welsh equivalent of Elmet. A number of kings of Elmet are recorded in Welsh sources. One of Taliesin's poems is for Gwallog ap Llaennog, who ruled the kingdom near the end of the 6th century.
The Northumbrians invaded and overran Elmet in 616. It is not known definitely what prompted the invasion, but it has been suggested that the casus belli was the death by poisoning of the Northumbrian nobleman Hereric, who was an exiled member of the Northumbrian royal house residing in Elmet. It may have been that Hereric had been poisoned by his hosts and Edwin of Northumbria invaded in retaliation; or perhaps Edwin himself had Hereric poisoned and invaded Elmet to punish Ceredig ap Gwallog for harbouring him. After the conquest of Elmet the realm was incorporated into Northumbria and the people were known as the Elmetsæte. They are recorded in the late 7th-century Tribal Hidage as the inhabitants of a minor territory of 600 hides. They were the most northerly group recorded in the Tribal Hidage. The Elmetsæte probably continued to reside in West Yorkshire as a distinct group throughout the Saxon period and may have colluded with Cadwallon ap Cadfan of Gwynedd when he invaded Northumbria and briefly held the area in 633. The survival of the local British community is probably responsible for the large number of British-derived placenames in the area, notably the numerous placenames beginning Ecles- and Wal-. The inhabitants of Elmet are believed to have called themselves the Loides, a name which is still reflected in multiple placenames: notably Ledston, Ledsham, Leathley and the modern city of Leeds (Loidis). Kings of Elmet
Further readingThe area is the subject of an acclaimed 1979 book combining photography and poetry; Remains of Elmet, by Ted Hughes and Fay Godwin. The book was re-published by Faber in 1994 simply titled Elmet, and with a third of the book being new additional poems and photographs. References
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