Sometime around 1032 Hereward the Wake was
born at Bourne. The exact year of his birth is uncertain, as is that of his
death which is thought to have been 1072. He inherited and held extensive lands
in Lincolnshire as a thane; as well as properties in Warwickshire, including
Weddington.
Later he became a leader of the English resistance to William the Conqueror in
1070. The Normans had been here only since 1066 and thoughts and wishes of
expelling them remained strong - if futile historically.
At the time, there were Danish forces throughout the eastern part of England.
King Alfred the Great had ceded the eastern part of England to the invading
Norsemen in 901. This region, known as Danelaw, extended from the east of a line
drawn from London to Chester. Not until Edward the Confessor became king did an
Anglo-Saxon rule again. It was Edward's death in 1066 that precipitated the
final crisis during which England effectively joined Europe - by force of
invasion, under William, later known as the Conqueror.
The brute fact was that the Anglo-Saxon kingdom was enfeebled and defunct,
impotent to resist the organised strength of the Normans. Before his death,
Edward the Confessor had promised the crown to Duke William of Normandy - there
were close family links between the two men - but Anglo-Saxon custom held this
to be invalid. Harold Godwinsson was elected in accordance with custom; he
happened also to possess large estates in Lincolnshire. William invaded to
claim the kingdom. The result of this action is well known: at the Battle of
Hastings Harold died with an arrow in his eye and Duke William of Normandy
became King William.
Land and the possession of it was at the heart of conflict, then as now. About
this the Domesday Book is very revealing. It shows that the majority of Domesday
landholders were from northern France. However, there were a few Anglo-Saxons
and Danes - remnants of Viking raids and Danelaw - listed also. But there was
only one member of the old Anglo-Saxon nobility who yet possessed estates of
any size. This was Thorkill of Arden, who held land in Warwickshire - where
Hereward himself is thought to have had land.
In Domesday, Danes and Anglo-Saxons, listed as thanes, were still under-tenants
of Normans – in Hereward’s case to Count Meulan. This would rankle not just
because of dispossession but for the reason that under-tenancy incurred a debt
of military duty to the lord - who would, of course, have been a Norman.
It was against this background that Hereward joined with a band of Danes, i.e.
Norsemen, who were based on the Isle of Ely. Over the years the invaders had
settled, the conquering impulse had waned, and their power diminished. But
together they attacked Peterborough and sacked the abbey there. Hereward was
joined by other English refugees; Morcar, Earl of Northumbria, and Aethelwine,
Bishop of Durham. Hereward and his raiders were such a threat to William's
control of the area that William made a treaty with the Danish king, Sweyn, who
as a result withdrew his raiders from Ely. However, Hereward remained, and Ely
became for a time refuge for William's enemies.
Looking back, it is clear that there was no realistic prospect of ridding the
country of the Normans: their forces were united and stronger than anything the
English could oppose them with. The complete replacement of the power structure,
the importation of a different language and customs, as well as a legal system,
succeeded in creating a new England.
Despite this, Hereward carried on guerrilla warfare against William, who laid
siege to Ely in 1071. Most of the garrison surrendered, but Hereward escaped
into the fen country inland and disappeared from history. He became an English
folk hero and the subject of many popular legends; according to one he was
pardoned, according to another he was killed by the Normans. Charles Kingsley
gathered some of them together in his novel 'Hereward the Wake'.
The epithet 'the Wake' is obscure both in origin and in meaning. It was
apparently first used by the chronicler, John of Peterborough. Its meaning can
only be guessed at: perhaps it is meant to indicate he was 'awake' and alert to
the Norman danger.