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Encyclopedia > Witan

The Witenagemot (or Witan) was a political institution in Anglo-Saxon England which operated between approximately the 7th century and 11th century. The name witenagemot derives from the Old English for "meeting of wise men" (witan, wise man or counsellor; gemot, assembly). It was a convocation of the land's most powerful and important people including senior clergy, ealdormen and the leading thegns.


The witan had its origins in the Germanic assemblies summoned to witness royal grants of land. Before the unification of England in the 9th century, separate witans were convened by the Kings of Essex, Kent, Mercia, Northumbria, Sussex and Wessex. Even after Wessex became the dominant power in England, supplanting the other kingdoms, local witans continued to meet until as late as 1065.


Summoned by the king (and later by regional earls), witans would advise on the administration and organisation of the kingdom, dealing with issues such as taxation, jurisprudence and both internal and external security. The witan was also needed to approve the succession of each monarch. The new king could be whoever the witan decided would best lead the country, not necessarily the offspring of the previous monarch. Kings and earls could also be deposed by witans; Sigeberht of Wessex was deposed this way in 755, Ethelwald of Northumbria in 765.


The witan was in some respects a predecessor to Parliament, but had substantially different powers and some major limitations, such as a lack of a fixed procedure, schedule or meeting place. The king, in those days, had a role which included some of the qualities of a president. The witan was thus a valuable check on royal power, preventing autocracy and carrying on government during interregnums.


Witans met at least once a year and commonly more often. There was no single seat of the national witan; it is known to have met in at least 116 locations, including Amesbury, Cheddar, Gloucester, London and Winchester. The meeting places were often on royal estates, but some witans were convened in the open at prominent rocks, hills, meadows and famous trees.


The best-known sitting of the English witan was that which on January 5, 1066 approved the succession to the kingship of Harold Godwinson following the death of Edward the Confessor.


This arrangement ended when the Normans invaded in 1066, replacing the witan with the curia regis, or King's court. However, in a sign of the witan's enduring legacy, the curia regis continued to be dubbed a "witan" by chroniclers until as late as the 12th century.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Witan - LoveToKnow 1911 (693 words)
As the number of kings decreased the number of witans decreased, until early in the 9th century there was one king and one witan in all England.
Generally speaking, it diminished as the years went by, and from "necessary assenters" its members became "merely attesting witnesses." Its duties are shown by the preamble to the laws of Ine, king of Wessex, and 200 years later by the preamble to those of Alfred the Great, while several similar cases could be instanced.
The witan was also a court of justice, Earl Godwine and many other offenders receiving sentence of outlawry therein.
Witan to cut work of its fund manager - Times Online (586 words)
Witan’s board yesterday said it was seeking to appoint a chief executive mandated to improve the investment trust’s performance by selecting other fund managers.
Witan, a generalist investment trust launched in 1909, spreads its assets across the world’s equity markets, although it is skewed towards the UK.
The prospect of losing much of its Witan work, one its most important contracts, comes at an awkward time for Henderson as it is being lined up for flotation by AMP, which aims to spin off all its UK operations by the end of this year.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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