Very little is known about Widukind's life. His name literally translates as "child of the forest". In the chronicles he is accompanied by
Abbi who may have been a close relative. However, it is uncertain how they were related because all sources about him stem from his enemies, the
Franks, who painted a negative picture representing him as an "insurgent" and a "traitor". While Widukind was considered the leader of the Saxon resistance by the Franks, his exact role in the military campaigns is unknown. According to the
Royal Frankish Annals, the Franks campaigned in
Saxony in 772, when Charlemagne ordered the destruction of the
Irminsul sanctuary. The Saxon Wars continued when
Westphalian tribes devastated the church of
Deventer and the
Angrarii laid siege to the Frankish court at
Fritzlar. The king retaliated against the local nobility, enforcing the decree to incorporate the Saxon lands as a Frankish
march. Widukind was first mentioned by the
Annals in 777 when he was the only one of the Saxon nobles not to appear at Charlemagne's court in
Paderborn. Instead, he stayed with the Danish king
Sigfred (possibly
Sigurd Hring). The next year, the Westphalians again invaded the Frankish
Rhineland and subsequently fought a running battle against the Franks and their local allies while Charlemagne
was busy in Spain. By 782, Widukind had returned from
Denmark and goaded the Saxon nobles into rebellion. From 782 to 784, battles between Saxons and Franks occurred annually, while Charlemagne had 4,500 Saxons executed at the
Massacre of Verden. Widukind allied himself with the
Frisians but Charlemagne's winter attacks of 784/785 were nevertheless successful, and the
dux and his allies were pushed back to their homelands. Charlemagne, leading an expedition towards the mouth of the
Elbe, learned that Widukind was in the land of the
Nordalbingians, on the right bank of the river. In the
Bardengau in 785, Widukind agreed to surrender in return for a guarantee that no bodily harm would be done to him. He and his allies were then baptized, possibly in
Attigny, with Charlemagne as his
godfather. Widukind thereby reached a peace agreement and the acknowledgement of the Saxon noble rank by their Frankish overlords. There are no contemporary sources about Widukind's life or death after his baptism. Historian Gerd Althoff assumed that he was imprisoned at a
monastery—a fate that happened to other rulers deposed by Charlemagne. He tried to identify
Reichenau Abbey as a likely location where Widukind may have spent the rest of his life, but his results are inconclusive and widely rejected. Alternatively, he may have received a position in the administration of occupied Saxony. The
Vita Liudgeri biography of Saint
Ludger mentions him accompanying Charlemagne on his campaign against the
Veleti leader
Dragovit. According to the 12th-century
Kaiserchronik, he was slain by Charlemagne's brother-in-law
Gerold of Baar. ==Legend==