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''Heptarchy'' ( after the Anglo-Saxon conquest of the southern portion of the island of Great Britain , named Angleland (England) by them ( Scotland and Wales each had several kingdoms of their own), up to the time when the Vikings started their predations into parts of Britain, establishing notably a Danelaw and Norse kingdoms at York and on the Isle Of Man .

This period is generally intended as covering the timespan from AD 500 to 850.

The word ''heptarchy'' refers to the existence (as was thought) of the seven kingdoms which eventually merged to become the Kingdom Of England during the early 10th Century , and comprising Northumbria , Mercia , East Anglia , Essex , Kent , Sussex , and Wessex .

The term itself dates back to the Twelfth Century , and the English Historian Henry Of Huntingdon , and has been in common use since the Sixteenth Century .

More recent research has revealed that some of these kingdoms (notably Essex and Sussex) did not achieve the same status as did the others.

Conversely there also existed at the time a number of other political divisions which played a far more important role than was previously considered the case. Such were the kingdoms (or sub-kingdoms) of Lindsey (in present-day Lincolnshire ), the Hwicce , the Magonsaete or Magonset (in present-day Herefordshire ; a sub-kingdom within Mercia), the Wihtware (from which the Isle Of Wight ), the Middle Angles , the Haestingas (from which Hastings in Sussex ) and the Gewissae (which became the kingdom of Wessex ).

Certainly the term Heptarchy has been considered unsatisfactory since the early Twentieth Century , and many historians have ceased using it, feeling it does not adequately describe the period to which it refers. However it remains in general use as a label of convenience for that period of English history.


Anglo-Saxon England heptarchy

The separate Kingdoms which made up Anglo-Saxon England were:


Subkingdoms of Northumbria



Other minor kingdoms



Sources and references

  • http://www.britannia.com/history/h6f.html

  • ''Westermann Großer Atlas zur Weltgeschichte''



See also