c. 604–624: Rædwald's baptism and religious syncretism
As a client king, Rædwald was likely forced to convert, with his baptism taking place in Kent, possibly with Æthelberht as a sponsor and
godfather. This act was likely a means to reinforce Æthelberht's authority over Rædwald, being motivated more by the king's political agenda than Augustine of Canterbury's religious one. The date of the baptism is not recorded by Bede, however it has been proposed to have taken place within the first 5 years of the Gregorian mission, but not before 601. Rædwald's nominal conversion did not seem to have resulted in a significant alteration of his worldview, with there being little evidence for his adoption of Christianity. Furthermore, Bede records that he returned to paganism on his journey home under the influence of his heathen wife and is later described as practising
syncretism between the two religions, having both an altar to
Christ and to
heathen gods. The king's limited adoption of Christianity is further attested in that both his sons,
Eorpwald and
Sigeberht, were heathen when he died. Furthermore,
King Ealdwulf of East Anglia is recorded to have remembered Rædwald's temple still standing when he was a boy, suggesting the building was still substantial in the 630s and 640s. The king continuing to practise the traditional religion, in contrast to Sæberht who remained Christian until his death, has been suggested to mean that Æthelberht's influence over the East Angles was weaker than that over the East Saxons. Upon the death of Æthelberht in 616, Rædwald rose to the position of overking in southern England. It has been proposed that just as the Kentish king used his power and authority to enforce baptism of the East Anglian and East Saxon kings, so too did Rædwald encourage the return to traditional religion in Kent and Essex. The date of Rædwald's death is not clear, with it likely taking place towards the end of the range 616–627. Whilst it is given as 624 by the 13th-century chroniclers
Roger of Wendover and
Matthew Paris, their sources are unknown. The
ship burial in
mound 1 at Sutton Hoo is
probably the grave of Rædwald. Other elite burials there include mound 17, in which a young nobleman was
buried with a horse, and mound 2 which was also a ship burial. These burials occurred in a wider context of smaller burials centred around a prehistoric
howe. While the elite burials begin in the early 6th century, the richest ones occur at a time that Christianity was being established in England, leading to the suggestion that graves like mound 1 were a protest against the incoming religion, demonstrating heathen identity in contrast, or defiance, with Christianity. ==c. 624–628: Eorpwald's baptism and later death in a heathen backlash==