Heavenfield,
633AD
The History:
Oswald or
Saint Oswald as he became known, had fled along with his family to Dal Riata in
Scotland when his father was killed in battle by the Saxons of East Anglia in
616. During this time he was converted to Christianity and no doubt joined his
hosts in their many raids on their neighbours. The subsequent warfare in
Northumbria meanwhile was brutal and bloody as it was attacked mercilessly by
Penda of Mercia and his ally, Cadwallon of Gwynedd. Oswald’s brother Eanfrith,
who had become king of Bernicia, the northern part of Northumberland, was
killed during this time and young Oswald, with help from his protectors and
possibly Pictish mercenaries set out to reclaim his inheritance. He met Penda’s
ally Cadwallon on Hadrians Wall and took up an excellent defensive position
which secured his flanks, he also raised a wooden cross to inspire his men.
Oswald won the battle, despite being outnumbered and the troublesome Cadwallon
was slain.
Combatants:
Oswald, King
of Bernicia
Vs
Cadwallon,
King of Gwynedd
Forces Involved :
Oswald’s
army would have his own followers and his personal companions probably very
much like Saxons and I doubt he would have attempted an invasion if he did not
have at least some back up from Scots or Picts, we know about the Picts, but
the jury are out on the Dal Riatans, personally I would treat them as Picts or
Irish. Cadwallon’s army was Welsh and is traditionally supposed to have
outnumbered Oswald, but perhaps not by much, Oswald was an exile with no base
for a large army and Cadwallon had been campaigning far from home as a junior
partner of Penda’s and had already been involved in heavy fighting. So either
have both equal or give Cadwallon a small advantage.
Terrain :
Oswald
engineered this battle to give his smaller army an advantage and chose his
ground with care. Both his flanks are protected, one by the ruins of Hadrian’s
Wall, the other by a rocky crag, he also occupies the high ground.
Wargame:
A set piece
battle in which Oswald has to hold his ground and not be defeated. The cross
would have been easily seen by his whole army and given that it is there to
show who’s side God was actually on, its loss will immediately trigger a morale
test for the whole army, with a detrimental +/- depending on the rules used.
thanks for this I am researching this battle currently. L
ReplyDeleteNo problem, I must get around to fighting this myself at some point, I was always going to make a ragged cross from twigs.
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