Capitolo 43
Strathclyde. But in 592, it says Baeda that he/she lived him but three-quarters
of one century later that the event that he describes, "there it reigned on the
kingdom of the Northumbrians a braver and ambitious king,
AEthelfrith that, more than every other nobles of the English, it wasted the
the British's run; for none of our kings, none of our head of a tribe,
or more than their earths you/he/she has made tributary to or an integral part
of the territories English, if subjugating or the expatriating
natives." In the 606 AEthelfrith it rounded off the Peakland, now known as
Derbyshire, and it marched from the superior Trent on the Roman city of
Chester. There "he made a terrible butchery of the perfidious run."
On two thousand Welsh monks from the convent of Bangor Iscoed they were
killed by the invader of pagan; but Baeda explains that AEthelfriths it put them
to death because they prayed against him; a sentence that strongly
it suggests the idea that the English have not killed not usually fighting
Welsh.
The victory of divided Chester the Welsh power in the north as that of
Deorham had divided him in the south. Of now from now on, the Northumbrians
rule of sea hole sea, from the mouth of the Humber to the mouths of
the Mersey and the Goddesses. AEthelfrith also held on a harbor soldier ill-mannered in the Irishmen
Sea. This way Welsh nationality storms above in three separated and
weak divisions--Strathclyde in the north, Wales in the centre, and
Damnonia or Cornwall, in the south. Against these three fragments the
English introduced a forehead not rout and aggressive, Northumbria being standing
above against Strathclyde, firmly of Mercia that pushes his/her way along the
superior valley of the Severn against north Wales and Wessex that it advances in
the south against Southern Wales and the Welsh Of the west of Somerset, Devon, and
Cornwall. This way the conquest of the inside was practically complete.
Still he/she remained there, the subjugation of the west is true; but the
west was brought under the end-dominion English from slow degrees, and in