Edith married Edward on 23 January 1045 and, around that time, Harold became
Earl of East Anglia. Harold is called "earl" when he appears as a witness in a will that may date to 1044; but, by 1045, Harold regularly appears as an earl in documents. One reason for his appointment to East Anglia may have been a need to defend against the threat from King
Magnus the Good of Norway. It is possible that Harold led some of the ships from his earldom that were sent to
Sandwich in 1045 against Magnus. Sweyn, Harold's elder brother, had been named an earl in 1043. It was also around the time that Harold was named an earl that he began a relationship with
Edith the Fair, who appears to have been the heiress to lands in
Cambridgeshire,
Suffolk and
Essex, lands in Harold's new earldom. The relationship was a form of marriage that was not blessed or sanctioned by the Church, known as
More danico, or "in the Danish manner", and was accepted by most laypeople in England at the time. Any children of such a union were considered legitimate. Harold probably entered the relationship in part to secure support in his new earldom. Harold's elder brother Sweyn was exiled in 1047 after abducting the abbess of
Leominster. Sweyn's lands were divided between Harold and a cousin,
Beorn. In 1049, Harold was in command of a ship or ships that were sent with a fleet to aid
Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor against
Baldwin V, Count of Flanders, who was in revolt against Henry. During this campaign, Sweyn returned to England and attempted to secure a pardon from the king, but Harold and Beorn refused to return any of their lands, and Sweyn, after leaving the royal court, took Beorn hostage and later killed him. In 1051, Edward appointed an enemy of the Godwins as
Archbishop of Canterbury and soon afterwards drove them into exile, but they raised an army which forced the king to restore them to their positions a year later. Earl Godwin died in 1053, and Harold succeeded him as Earl of Wessex, which made him the most powerful lay figure in England after the king. In 1055, Harold drove back the Welsh, who had burned
Hereford. Harold also became
Earl of Hereford in 1058, and replaced his late father as the focus of opposition to growing
Norman influence in England under the restored monarchy (1042–1066) of Edward the Confessor, who had spent more than 25 years in exile in
Normandy. He led a series of successful campaigns (1062–1063) against
Gruffydd ap Llywelyn of
Gwynedd, king of
Wales. This conflict ended with Gruffydd's defeat and death in 1063.
In northern France shows Harold touching two altars at Bayeux as the duke watches. In 1064, Harold was apparently shipwrecked at
Ponthieu. There is much speculation about this voyage. The earliest post-conquest Norman chroniclers state that King Edward had previously sent
Robert of Jumièges, the archbishop of Canterbury, to appoint as his heir Edward's maternal kinsman, Duke
William II of Normandy, and that at this later date, Harold was sent to swear
fealty. Scholars disagree as to the reliability of this story. William, at least, seems to have believed he had been offered the succession, but some acts of Edward are inconsistent with his having made such a promise, such as his efforts to return his nephew
Edward the Exile, son of King
Edmund Ironside, from Hungary in 1057. Later Norman chroniclers suggest alternative explanations for Harold's journey: that he was seeking the release of members of his family who had been held hostage since Godwin's exile in 1051, or even that he had simply been travelling along the English coast on a hunting and fishing expedition and had been driven across the
English Channel by an unexpected storm. There is general agreement that he left from
Bosham, and was blown off course, landing at Ponthieu. He was captured by Count
Guy I of Ponthieu, and was then taken as a hostage to the count's castle at
Beaurain, up the
River Canche from its mouth at what is now
Le Touquet. William arrived soon afterward and ordered Guy to turn Harold over to him. Harold then apparently accompanied William to battle against William's enemy,
Conan II, Duke of Brittany. While crossing into
Brittany past the fortified abbey of
Mont Saint-Michel, Harold is recorded as rescuing two of William's soldiers from
quicksand. They pursued Conan from
Dol-de-Bretagne to
Rennes, and finally to
Dinan, where he surrendered the fortress's keys at the point of a
lance. William presented Harold with weapons and arms, knighting him. The
Bayeux Tapestry, and other Norman sources, state that Harold then swore an oath on sacred relics to William to support his claim to the English throne. After Edward's death, the Normans were quick to claim that in accepting the crown of England, Harold had broken this alleged oath. The chronicler
Orderic Vitalis wrote of Harold that he "was distinguished by his great size and strength of body, his polished manners, his firmness of mind and command of words, by a ready wit and a variety of excellent qualities. But what availed so many valuable gifts, when good faith, the foundation of all virtues, was wanting?" Due to a doubling of taxation by Tostig in 1065 that threatened to plunge England into civil war, Harold supported
Northumbrian rebels against his brother, and replaced him with
Morcar. This led to Harold's marriage alliance with the northern earls but fatally split his own family, driving Tostig into alliance with King
Harald Hardrada ("Hard Ruler") of Norway. == Reign ==