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Ralph the Timid
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Ralph the Timid, also known as Ralf of Mantes (died 1057), was Earl of Hereford between 1051 and 1055 or 1057. His mother was Godgifu, the daughter of King Æthelred the Unready and his second wife Emma. His father was Drogo of Mantes, Count of Valois and the Vexin, who died on pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1035.[1]
Key Information
Ralph came to England with his uncle, the future King Edward the Confessor, in 1041. He attested three charters as earl in 1050, and his earldom was probably located in the East Midlands, where the lands of his wife Gytha were located. He was a benefactor of Peterborough Abbey. When King Edward quarrelled with Earl Godwin in 1051, Ralph raised the levies of his earldom to support the king. Godwin and his sons were forced into exile, but they returned the following year, and Ralph and Earl Odda commanded the fleet raised to resist them, but they were unable to prevent their return in triumph.[1]
Later in 1052 Godwin's son Sweyn died on pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and it was probably at this stage that Ralph was given Sweyn's earldom of Hereford, which included Oxfordshire. In 1055 Ælfgar, the Earl of East Anglia, was exiled and allied himself with the ruler of Wales, Gruffydd ap Llywelyn. Ralph met them in battle on 24 October, but suffered a disastrous defeat, and the invaders sacked Hereford. It was later claimed that Ralph and his Frenchmen started the rout, resulting in his insulting nickname, 'the Timid'. Godwin's son, Harold, the future king, then chased the invaders back into Wales. Ann Williams suggested that Ralph probably lost his earldom of Hereford to Harold after his defeat in 1055,[1] but in the view of Frank Barlow he held it until his death.[2]

The Norman poet Gaimar wrote that in 1057, Earl Ralph took the earldom of East Anglia,[3] after the death of Leofric in August 1057. Ralph would have held it only a few months, as he (Earl Ralph) died in his early thirties on 21 December 1057, and was buried at Peterbourgh Abbey.[4][1]
"Then died earl Leofric. Of his honour was Raulf seized. But little time he held it, and soon ended. He was a right good man, a short time he lived. The earl was buried at Peterborough."[5]
The Earldom of East Anglia then went to Ælfgar, Earl of Mercia[6]
Ralph's son Harold was one of the royal children brought up by King Edward's wife, Edith.[7] Ralph was on good terms with the Godwins, and his son may have been named after the future king and been his godson. Harold Godwinson may have been given the earldom of Hereford to hold until the Ralph's son came of age.[2] The younger Harold survived the Conquest and later received part of his father's lands, as well as Ewyas Harold, which is named after him. His descendants are the Sudeleys of Toddington, Gloucestershire.[1]
Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Williams, Ann (2004). "Ralph [called Ralph the Timid], earl of Hereford (d. 1057)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23045. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required)
- ^ a b Barlow, The Godwins, p. 83.
- ^ Lestorie Des Engles Solum La Translacion Maistre Geffrei Gaimar, Vol. 2: Translation (Classic Reprint) Paperback – November 4, 2017 by Geoffroy Gaimar (Author)
- ^ "This year (1057) died Earl Ralph, on the twelfth before the calends of January; and lies at Peterborough". The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle : Eleventh Century. Yale Law School. Lillan Goldman Law Library. URL: https://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/ang11.asp Accessed: 7 November 2022.
- ^ Lestorie Des Engles Solum La Translacion Maistre Geffrei Gaimar, Vol. 2: Translation (Classic Reprint) Paperback – November 4, 2017 by Geoffroy Gaimar (Author) URL: https://archive.org/stream/lestoriedesengl00gaimgoog/lestoriedesengl00gaimgoog_djvu.txt
- ^ The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle : Eleventh Century. Yale Law School. Lillan Goldman Law Library. URL: https://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/ang11.asp Accessed: 7 November 2022.
- ^ Stafford, p. 269.
References
[edit]- Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
- Hynde, Thomas, ed. (1995). The Domesday Book: England's History Then and Now.
- DeVries, Kelly (1999). The Norwegian Invasion of England in 1066. Boydell Press. pp. 108–114. ISBN 1-84383-027-2.
- O'Brien, Harriet (2005). Queen Emma and the Vikings. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 223–224.
- Barlow, Frank (2002). The Godwins. Pearson Longman.
- Stafford, Pauline (2001). Queen Emma & Queen Edith: Queenship and Women's Power in Eleventh-Century England. Blackwell.
External links
[edit]Ralph the Timid
View on GrokipediaRalph the Timid (died 21 December 1057), also known as Ralph de Mantes, was an Anglo-Norman nobleman who served as Earl of Hereford from 1052 until his death.[1] The son of Dreux, count of Mantes in the Vexin, and Godgifu, sister of King Edward the Confessor, Ralph was appointed to the earldom by his uncle to bolster defenses along the Welsh border and promote Norman military practices in England.[1] In 1055, he led an army against an invasion by Gruffydd ap Llywelyn and Ælfgar of Mercia but suffered a decisive defeat near Hereford when his forces, unaccustomed to fighting on horseback as he ordered, fled the field, earning him the derisive nickname "the Timid."[2][3] Ralph died two years later, possibly from complications related to injuries or illness, and was interred at Peterborough Abbey.[3]
Early Life
Birth and Parentage
Ralph the Timid, also known as Ralph de Mantes, was the younger son of Drogo (died 1035), count of the Vexin and Mantes, and his wife Godgifu (died after 1049), a daughter of Æthelred II, king of the English (r. 978–1016), and his second wife, Emma of Normandy (died 1052). This parentage positioned Ralph as a nephew of Edward the Confessor (r. 1042–1066), Godgifu's full brother and a key figure in his later career in England. [4] The precise date and location of Ralph's birth remain undocumented in primary sources, though estimates place it circa 1025–1030 in the Vexin region of northern France, shortly after his parents' marriage around 1023–1024.[4] [5] His lineage is corroborated by medieval chroniclers, including Orderic Vitalis, who enumerates him among Drogo's sons, and Florence of Worcester, who identifies him explicitly as the son of Edward's sister.[4] Drogo, a Norman count with ties to the French monarchy, held lands in the Vexin until his assassination in 1035, while Godgifu remarried Eustace II, count of Boulogne, after Drogo's death, bearing additional children but maintaining her English royal connections.Arrival in England and Family Connections
Ralph de Mantes, known posthumously as Ralph the Timid, arrived in England in 1041 as part of the entourage accompanying his uncle, Edward, who had been invited to return from exile in Normandy by King Harthacnut. This arrival occurred amid the political instability following the deaths of kings Cnut and his sons, positioning Edward as a potential claimant to the throne, which he ascended the following year. Ralph was the younger son of Drogo (or Dreux), Count of the Vexin and Valois, who ruled from Mantes and was assassinated in 1035, and Godgifu (Goda), daughter of King Æthelred II of England and Emma of Normandy. Through his mother, Ralph held direct familial ties to the English royal house, as Godgifu was the full sister of Edward the Confessor, making Ralph Edward's nephew and facilitating his integration into the Anglo-Saxon court despite his Norman continental origins. Drogo's lineage traced to earlier counts of the Vexin, including Walter II, but Ralph's early prospects in England stemmed primarily from his maternal connections rather than paternal inheritance, which had been disrupted by his father's death. These ties underscored Edward's policy of favoring Norman relatives to counterbalance entrenched Anglo-Saxon earls like Godwin of Wessex.Rise to Power
Appointment as Earl of Hereford
Ralph, nephew of King Edward the Confessor through his mother Godgifu (also known as Goda), daughter of Æthelred the Unready, was appointed Earl of Hereford in 1051. This elevation occurred amid escalating tensions between Edward and the powerful Godwin family, particularly after an incident at Dover in September 1051 involving Eustace II, Count of Boulogne—Godgifu's second husband and Ralph's stepfather—whose men clashed with local English forces, prompting Godwin's refusal to punish the townsfolk and leading to the king's summons of military support. [3] The earldom, previously held by Swein Godwinson since around 1043, became vacant during the crisis when Swein and his family were outlawed and exiled in 1051 for defying Edward's order to ravage Dover. Edward, seeking to diminish Godwin's influence and introduce loyal Norman kin into key positions, granted the Herefordshire earldom to Ralph, who had earlier been entrusted with responsibilities in Worcestershire under Earl Leofric of Mercia. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records Ralph already acting as earl by late 1051, as he rallied forces from his earldom to join Earls Leofric and Siward in supporting the king against Godwin at Gloucester.[3] Ralph's appointment aligned with Edward's broader strategy of favoring continental relatives to balance the dominance of native English earls, though it introduced French-speaking retainers who exacerbated local resentments. Despite the Godwin family's restoration in 1052 following a naval standoff, Ralph retained the earldom—the only foreign appointee to do so—after Swein's death on pilgrimage in late 1052, which permanently barred the Godwinsons from reclaiming it. [6] He attested charters as earl starting in 1051, confirming his formal status.Marriage and Alliances
Ralph de Mantes, known as Ralph the Timid, married Gytha, an Anglo-Saxon noblewoman whose family possessed estates in the East Midlands, likely around the time of his elevation to the earldom of Hereford in 1051 or 1052.[7] This union, arranged by King Edward the Confessor, aimed to integrate Ralph—a continental noble and the king's nephew—into the English landholding elite, thereby strengthening his tenuous hold on the Welsh marches through ties to local thegns and providing a counterweight to entrenched Anglo-Saxon earls like those of the House of Godwin.[7] Gytha's precise lineage is obscure in contemporary records, with later genealogical traditions proposing her as either a daughter of Earl Godwin of Wessex or a kinswoman of Leofric, Earl of Mercia, though these claims lack direct corroboration from 11th-century sources such as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.[5] The marriage yielded no surviving heirs who succeeded to the earldom, as Ralph died without legitimate issue capable of inheriting in 1057, leading to the title's temporary forfeiture before passing to Harold Godwinson.[8] Through this alliance, Ralph gained access to Gytha's dowry lands, which bolstered his administrative base in the Midlands and facilitated Norman-style fortifications along the Hereford frontier, though these efforts ultimately faltered amid regional unrest.[4] The strategic pairing underscored Edward's policy of balancing Norman favorites with Anglo-Saxon matrimonial networks to maintain royal authority amid factional tensions.[7]Military Role and Campaigns
Support Against Godwin's Rebellion
In 1051, following the violent clash at Dover involving Eustace II of Boulogne and escalating into a broader confrontation between King Edward the Confessor and Earl Godwin, Ralph mobilized the levies (fyrd) from his earldom of Herefordshire to bolster royal forces against Godwin's refusal to submit to the king's demands. This support aligned with the efforts of other earls, such as Leofric of Mercia and Siward of Northumbria, who convened with Edward at Gloucester to enforce Godwin's compliance, ultimately leading to the outlawry of Godwin and his sons without direct combat. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records Ralph's active rallying of troops throughout his earldom in defense of Edward during this crisis.[5] Godwin's subsequent exile across the Channel allowed Edward to redistribute lands favoring Norman allies, with Ralph receiving the earldom of Herefordshire, previously held by the exiled Swegn Godwinson, as a direct outcome of his loyalty.[9] This appointment, effective by late 1051, underscored Ralph's role in countering the Godwins' dominance, as Edward sought to balance power through foreign earls amid native resistance.[9] By early 1052, Godwin returned with a fleet of ships and rapidly amassed supporters along the south coast, forcing Edward's council into hasty preparations that proved inadequate. Although royal defenses, including those under Ralph and Earl Odda, were mobilized—such as directing ships to Sandwich—disunity and delayed mustering led to Edward's capitulation at London without pitched battle.[3] Ralph emerged as the sole Norman earl to retain his honors post-restoration, reflecting his strategic positioning and Edward's lingering preference despite the Godwins' resurgence.[9]Campaign Against Gruffudd ap Llywelyn and Ælfgar
In 1055, Ælfgar, Earl of East Anglia and son of the late Earl Leofric of Mercia, was outlawed by King Edward the Confessor on unspecified charges of treason.[2] Seeking to reclaim his position, Ælfgar fled to Wales, where he allied with Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, the king who had recently consolidated power over Gwynedd and Deheubarth through military victories, including the defeat of rival Gruffudd ap Rhydderch.[2] [10] This partnership enabled Ælfgar to assemble a combined force of Irish, Welsh, and exiled English troops, which advanced into the Welsh Marches and targeted Herefordshire, a frontier earldom vulnerable to such incursions.[2] As Earl of Hereford, Ralph mobilized the local fyrd—comprising English levies from the shire—and reinforced it with mounted Norman-style contingents drawn from his continental followers and allies.[11] These troops, unaccustomed to coordinated cavalry tactics in the Anglo-Saxon military tradition, intercepted the invaders near Hereford in a bid to repel the incursion and protect the border town.[11] The resulting engagement exposed limitations in Ralph's hybrid force, as the English foot soldiers reportedly faltered against the more mobile Welsh and allied warriors, allowing Ælfgar and Gruffudd to press forward.[2] Following the clash, the allied forces stormed and burned Hereford, destroying the minster of St. Ethelbert and inflicting heavy casualties on the defenders and populace.[2] This setback prompted a broader English response in 1056, with King Edward, Earl Leofric, and Earl Siward launching a large-scale expedition into Wales against Gruffudd, though Ralph's direct involvement in that effort is not recorded.[2] The 1055 campaign highlighted ongoing tensions in the Marches, where Norman-influenced earls like Ralph faced challenges integrating foreign military methods with local levies amid Welsh resurgence under Gruffudd.[10]Defeat and Nickname
Battle of Hereford
In October 1055, the exiled Ælfgar, Earl of Mercia—who had been outlawed by King Edward the Confessor's court—formed an alliance with Gruffudd ap Llywelyn, the ambitious ruler of Gwynedd and Powys who sought to expand Welsh influence into the Anglo-Welsh borderlands. This coalition invaded Herefordshire to challenge Ralph's authority and exploit local discontent with Norman-style governance. Ralph, as Earl of Hereford, mobilized a force primarily of mounted retainers, reflecting continental military practices introduced under Edward's influence, and advanced to intercept the invaders.[12] The clash occurred on 24 October 1055, roughly two miles northwest of Hereford. Ralph's army, estimated at several hundred including French knights unused to integrated Anglo-Saxon infantry tactics, engaged Ælfgar's Mercian exiles and Gruffudd's Welsh warriors, who employed light cavalry and irregular foot soldiers suited to the terrain. The battle turned decisively when Ralph withdrew prematurely, abandoning his troops; contemporary accounts attribute this to panic or tactical error rather than outright cowardice in all sources, though the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle explicitly labels him "cowardly" for fleeing and leaving his men exposed. The resulting rout scattered Ralph's forces, with many English thegns and housecarls killed or captured, while the knights' horses—untrained for close-quarters combat or pursuit—proved ineffective against the more agile Welsh horsemen.[13][14][6] Emboldened by the victory, Ælfgar and Gruffudd pressed on to sack Hereford itself, burning the town and St. Ethelbert's Minster—a significant religious center—and carrying off plunder before withdrawing. No precise casualty figures survive, but the devastation weakened English control over the Welsh marches, forcing Edward to negotiate terms with the Welsh king later that year. Florence of Worcester corroborates the date and Ralph's flight, emphasizing the invaders' coordination under Gruffudd's leadership. This encounter marked one of the earliest documented failures of feudal cavalry in English service, underscoring the limitations of imported Norman methods against native border warfare.[6][15][16]Causes of Defeat and Historical Assessments
The defeat at the Battle of Hereford on 24 October 1055 arose from a combination of tactical misjudgments and leadership failures by Ralph. He assembled a force comprising English levies, French, and Normans to confront the invading coalition of Ælfgar of Mercia, Gruffudd ap Llywelyn of Wales, and Irish auxiliaries, but insisted that the local English fyrd adopt Norman-style mounted combat, including horses and kite-shaped shields in place of their traditional round shields and infantry tactics.[15] This unfamiliar approach disrupted the cohesion of the English troops, who were unaccustomed to fighting as cavalry, leading to disarray when engaged two miles outside Hereford. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the English were "put to flight" in the ensuing clash, with Ralph and his Norman contingent fleeing first, precipitating a general rout that resulted in approximately 400 to 500 English deaths and the subsequent sacking and burning of Hereford by the victors.[3] Historical assessments have consistently portrayed Ralph's conduct as a pivotal factor in the disaster, emphasizing his personal cowardice and arbitrary command style. Contemporary and near-contemporary sources, such as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, highlight the flight without delving into motives, but later chroniclers like William of Malmesbury in the Gesta Regum Anglorum described Ralph as "inert" and "cowardly," attributing the nickname "the Timid" to his abandonment of the field, which left English forces exposed. This epithet, derived from Old English drēw (cowardly or timid), reflected perceptions of his failure to rally troops or adapt to local military realities, marking the episode as an early illustration of Norman impositions clashing with Anglo-Saxon practices under Edward the Confessor's regime. Modern historians view the defeat as emblematic of broader challenges in integrating continental military methods into English defenses, though Ralph's prior successes, such as against Godwin in 1051, suggest the issue lay in overambitious innovation rather than inherent incompetence. The event weakened royal authority in the Welsh marches, necessitating Harold Godwinson's subsequent campaigns to restore order.[3]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Demise
Ralph retained the earldom of Hereford following his defeat at the Battle of Hereford on 24 October 1055, though his authority was undermined by the ensuing Welsh incursions and his flight from the field, which cemented his nickname "the Timid" among contemporaries. He died on 21 December 1057, aged in his early thirties. Ralph was interred at Peterborough Abbey, where he had previously acted as a benefactor; the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records his passing three nights before the feast of St. Thomas the Apostle. ![Peterborough Cathedral Exterior, Cambridgeshire, UK][center] His heir, a young son named Harold, inherited the title but proved too immature to govern effectively, leading to the earldom's transfer to Harold Godwinson in 1058 amid ongoing instability in the Welsh Marches.[17]Succession and Long-Term Impact
Ralph died on 21 December 1057 and was buried at Peterborough Abbey, to which he had been a benefactor.[3] The Earldom of Hereford, undermined by his defeat at the Battle of Hereford in 1055, was not passed to an immediate successor upon his death; instead, Herefordshire fell under the administration of Harold Godwinson, Earl of Wessex, who effectively governed the region from 1058 until 1066.[18] Post-Conquest, King William I recreated the earldom in 1067, granting it to William FitzOsbern, bypassing any claim by Ralph's heirs.[18] Ralph's son, Harold (born circa 1050–1057), inherited family estates including the lordship of Ewias Harold in Herefordshire but did not receive the comital title, reflecting the precarious position of pre-Conquest Norman lineages amid shifting Anglo-Saxon politics.[19] Harold de Ewias retained these holdings through the Norman Conquest, appearing as a landholder in the Domesday Book of 1086 and living until after 1120, thus ensuring modest continuity for the family despite the loss of higher rank.[19] Ralph's tenure and demise underscored the difficulties of integrating Norman military methods—such as reliance on cavalry—into English forces accustomed to infantry tactics, contributing to his infamous flight from battle and the temporary resurgence of Welsh threats under Gruffudd ap Llywelyn until subdued by Harold in 1063. Historians assess him as inert and arbitrary in governance, his failures eroding Edward the Confessor's strategy of elevating continental relatives and bolstering the Godwinsons' resurgence, which shaped the unstable succession crisis culminating in 1066. His enduring nickname "the Timid," derived from the 1055 debacle rather than inherent cowardice, symbolizes the broader fragility of foreign appointees in frontier earldoms.References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography%2C_1885-1900/Ralph_the_Timid