Founding Bede in his
Ecclesiastical History of the English People writes that the
Jutes settled Wight as part of the
Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, along with the part of Great Britain opposite the island, and Kent. While his accounts reflect later geopolitics and have limited historical accuracy, a 'Jutish' material culture has been identified in these regions. Similarities in culture and genetics further support the migration of people at this time to Britain from continental
northern Europe such as modern day Denmark and northern Germany.
Asser's biography of
Alfred the Great lists Wihtgar and Stuf as the two earliest kings of Wight and nephews of
Cerdic, founder of the
Kingdom of Wessex, making them ancestors of Alfred the Great's mother
Osburh. The account further describes how Wihtgar and Stuf were of Jutish and
Gothic origin and set about exterminating the island's native
Briton inhabitants, either killing them or driving them into exile. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle gives a similar account in which Wihtgar and Stuf were kinsmen of Cerdic; Wihtgar and Stuf received the island from Cerdic's son
Cynric in 534, with the death of Wihtgar taking place in 544. Scholars have suggested that Wihtgar may have been fictitious: that is, the central figure of a
founding myth invented retrospectively, to justify the name of the island, with deriving from the Latin name of the island, .
Conquest and Annexation According to the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, in 661
Wulfhere of
Mercia conquered the Isle of Wight and gave the overlordship to his godson, King
Æthelwealh of
Sussex, to
convert the islanders to Christianity. Bede, however, records that the island was converted after an invasion in 686 by King
Cædwalla of Wessex, which the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states was conducted together with his brother
Mul of Kent. The final Jutish king of the Wihtwara,
Arwald, was purportedly killed while resisting Cædwalla. Arwald's two younger brothers, after attempting to escape Cædwalla, were captured, baptised, then executed by him. ==Later Middle Ages==