(1003
– 1066) Son of King Ethelred
III and his Norman wife, Emma, daughter of Duke Richard I of
Edward
remained in Normandy, was brought up a Norman, and in 1042 on the death of his
half brother Hardicanute, son of Canute
and Emma, and largely through the support of the powerful Earl Godwin, he was
acclaimed King of England.
In
1044, he married Godwin’s daughter Edith. His reign was a peaceful one
characterized by his good rule and remission of odious taxes but also by the
struggle, partly caused by his natural inclination to favor the Normans,
between Godwin and his Saxon supporters and the Norman barons, including Robert
of Jumieges, whom Edward had brought with him when he
returned to England and whom he named archbishop of Canterbury in 1051.
In
the same year, Edward banished Godwin, who took refuge in
Edward’s
difficulties continued after Godwin’s death in 1053 with Godwin’s
two sons: Harold who had his eye on the throne since Edward was childless, and Tostig, earl of
After this Edward became more interested in religious
affairs and built St. Peter’s Abbey at Westminister,
the site of the present cathedral, where he is buried.
His
piety gained him the surname “the Confessor.” He died in
Taken
from “Dictionary of Saints”
by John J. Delaney