In 690,
two priests called Ewald the Black and Ewald the Fair set out from
Northumbria to
convert the Old Saxons to
Christianity. It is recorded that at this time Old Saxony was divided into the ancient dioceses of
Münster,
Osnabrück, and
Paderborn. However, by 695 the pagan Saxons had become extremely hostile to the
Christian priests and missionaries in their midst and began to realize that their aim was to convert their overlord and destroy their temples and religion. Ewald the Fair was quickly murdered, but Ewald the Black they subjected to torture, and he was torn limb from limb. Afterwards the two bodies were cast into the Rhine. This is understood to have happened on 3 October 695 at a place called
Aplerbeck, near
Dortmund, where a chapel still stands. The two Ewalds are now celebrated in
Westphalia as saints. The Saxons' reluctance to accept the new Christian religion and propensity to mount destructive raids on their neighbours would eventually bring them into direct conflict with
Charlemagne, the powerful king of the
Franks and later emperor. After a bloody and highly attritious
thirty-year campaign between 772–804 the Old Saxons led by
Widukind were eventually subdued by Charlemagne and ultimately forced to convert to Christianity. The bonds of kindred and clan were particularly strong among the Saxons, and in spite of many divisions the Saxons were an unusually homogeneous nation living as late as the 8th century as the early Germans described by Tacitus in
Germania had lived. The long warfare with the
Franks largely reduced but did not wholly obliterate their distinct cultural identity.
Adam of Bremen, writing in the 11th century, compared the shape of Old Saxony to a triangle, and estimated from angle to angle the distance was eight days journey. In area Old Saxony was the greatest of the German
tribal duchies. It included the entire territory between the lower
Elbe and
Saale rivers almost to the Rhine. Between the mouths of the Elbe and the
Weser it bordered the
North Sea. The only parts of the territory which lay across the Elbe were the counties of
Holstein and
Ditmarsch. The tribal lands were roughly divided into four kindred groups: the
Angrians, along the right bank of the Weser; the
Westphalians, along the Ems and the Lippe; the
Eastphalians, on the left bank of the Weser; and the
Nordalbingians, in modern
Holstein. But not even with these four tribal groups was the term of tribal division reached. For the Saxon “nation” was really a loose collection of clans of kindred stock. For example, the Nordalbingians alone were divided into lesser groups:
Holsteiners,
Sturmarii,
Bardi, and the men of
Ditmarsch. ==See also==