Tribute Eadric was appointed the Ealdorman of Mercia in 1007. The position had been vacant since 985, when his predecessor
Ælfric Cild was driven into exile after being accused of treachery. However, Eadric must have been on better terms with king Æthelred as he was soon married to his daughter Eadgyth. At this time, Æthelred ordered a new fleet of warships to be built, on a national scale, but this was weakened when
Wulfnoth, who was accused by Eadric's brother Brihtric of treason, deserted with twenty ships to ravage the south coast. Brihtric chased after him with eighty ships, but they were wrecked in a storm. With England now more vulnerable to seaborne invasion, an army led by
Thorkell the Tall arrived in 1009 and ravaged the country for the next three years. According to the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle on the one occasion when Æthelred succeeded in intercepting Thorkell, Eadric dissuaded him from engaging in battle. In 1012 Eadric oversaw the payment of £48,000 to the Danes to leave England.
Invasion In 1013,
Sweyn Forkbeard arrived in England with the intention of crowning himself King of England. By the end of 1013, English resistance had collapsed and Sweyn had conquered the country. Eadric's position at this time is not clear, but according to
Roger of Wendover, Eadric "crossed over" the channel to Normandy with Queen
Emma "and a hundred and forty soldiers". Æthelred followed them in January 1014. However, the situation suddenly changed when Sweyn died on 3 February 1014. The crews of the Danish ships in the Trent, who had previously supported Sweyn, immediately swore their allegiance to his son Cnut; but leading English noblemen sent a proposal to Æthelred to negotiate Æthelred's restoration to the throne. He was required to declare his loyalty to the noblemen, to bring in reforms regarding everything that they previously disliked, and to forgive all that had been said and done against him in his previous reign. Æthelred soon regained his throne with assistance from
Olaf Haraldsson; Cnut went back to Denmark, while his allies were punished for their cooperation with him. In 1015, there was a council held in
Oxford, to which Eadric invited the brothers
Sigeferth and
Morcar, who were two thegns from the Seven Burhs in the East Midlands. Unfortunately for them, Eadric had them killed, probably on Æthelred's orders, and he seized their lands. This infuriated their close ally, Æthelred's oldest surviving son,
Edmund Ironside, who married Sigeferth's widow and rebelled against his father.
Return of the Danes Cnut arrived from Denmark in August 1015 at
Sandwich in Kent with an invasion force of about 200 ships, but immediately went off plundering in Dorset, Wiltshire and Somerset. Eadric collected an army at
Cosham, where king Æthelred lay sick. Edmund came to join him from the North, where his new territories lay. It is believed that Eadric had the intention of betraying Edmund, but when their forces came together he could not. The armies separated without incident, and Eadric soon took forty ships from the royal fleet, fled to Cnut, and entered into his service. Around the New Year, Eadric accompanied Cnut into
Warwickshire, where they plundered, burned and slew all they met. Edmund assembled an army to face them, but his Mercian forces refused to fight the Danes and disbanded. Edmund went on to assemble another army and, with the assistance of Earl
Uhtred of Northumbria, plundered Eadric's lands in
Staffordshire,
Shropshire, and
Cheshire. Uhtred returned to his occupied Northumbria to submit to Cnut, but he was killed and replaced with
Eric Haakonsson. Æthelred died on 23 April in London; his son Edmund was elected king of what was left of his father's kingdom. He fought two inconclusive battles against Cnut and Eadrict at
Penselwood in
Somerset and
Sherston in
Wiltshire, and then went on to rescue London, driving Eadric and Cnut away and defeating them after crossing the Thames at Brentford. He then withdrew to Wessex to gather fresh troops, and the Danes again brought London under siege. But after another unsuccessful assault, the Danes withdrew into Kent, under attack by the loyalists. After a final defeat at Otford, Eadric met Edmund at
Aylesford and was accepted back into Edmund's good graces. Cnut set sail northwards across the sea to Essex, and went up the River Orwell to ravage Mercia.
Battle of Assandun hill in
Essex, the more likely location of the
Battle of Assandun On 18 October 1016, the Danes were engaged by Edmund's army as they retired towards their ships, leading to the
Battle of Assandun – fought more probably at
Ashingdon, in south-east, or
Ashdon, in north-west
Essex. In the ensuing struggle, Eadric, whose return to the English side was perhaps a ruse, withdrew his forces from the field of battle, and as the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle puts it, he "thus betrayed his liege lord and all the people of England", bringing about a decisive English defeat. Edmund and Cnut made peace on the advice of Eadric on Ola's island near
Deerhurst. It was decided that England would be split in half at the Thames, Cnut in the North and Edmund in the South; however, Edmund died in November 1016 and Cnut became sole ruler of England. In 1017 Cnut confirmed Eadric as Ealdorman of Mercia.
Death Later in 1017, while at the royal palace in London, Eadric was killed at the command of King Cnut, along with three other prominent English nobles:
Northman, son of
Leofwine, Æthelweard, son of
Æthelmær the Stout, and Brihtric, son of Ælfhheah, Ealdorman of Devon. According to the
Encomium Emmae it was done under claim that those executed had not fought "faithfully" for their liege Edmund and "whom he (Cnut) knew to have been deceitful, and to have hesitated between the two sides with fraudulent tergiversation." The Encomium also says that Cnut ordered Earl Eric Haakonsson to "pay this man what we owe him" and then chopped off Eadric's head with his axe. The exact date of Eadric's death is not given by any source, but
John of Worcester states that Cnut gave the order on Christmas Day, therefore it is likely he died on 25 December 1017. Cnut ordered his body to be thrown over the city wall, and left unburied.
Henry of Huntingdon says that Eadric's head was "placed upon a pole on the highest battlement of the tower of London". Eadric is not known to have had any children. His position was at some point filled by
Leofric, the brother of Eadric's knight Northman, the family of whom held Mercia until after the Norman conquest. ==Character==