18 March 978: King Edward is murdered at Corfe
The teenage monarch is viciously stabbed in the back
On 18 March 978, a brutal murder was committed at Corfe in Dorset – and the victim was Edward, king of the English. “No worse deed for the English race was done than this,” the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle lamented.
The main suspect for the assassination was Edward’s stepmother, Ælfthryth, widow of his father, King Edgar. Certainly she had a motive: with Edward dead, his younger half-brother – her son, Æthelred – would inherit the English throne. It has been suposed that she invited the young king to Corfe to participate in a hunt, with murder in mind.
That March evening, as the hunters gath- ered, mounted and ready to ride out, Ælfth- ryth offered Edward a cup of wine. Turning to sip from the cup, he was stabbed in the back by her servants. As he fell from his steed, bloodied but still alive, Edward’s foot became caught in the stirrup – and, when the horse fled, he was dragged to his death.
The murdered king was buried quickly and unceremoniously at Saint Mary’s Church in nearby Wareham; soon afterwards, though, his remains were disinterred and moved to the more-prestigious Shaftesbury Abbey. Following reports of various miracles at his tomb, he was then canonised – becoming known as Edward the Martyr. | Written by Dominic Sandbrook
18 March 1809
Frederick, Duke of York, resigns as commander-inchief of the British Army. It had been revealed that his mistress, Mary Anne Clarke, had been making money by offering to use her influence on behalf of officers wishing to gain promotion.
18 March 1861
After a year and a day’s hostilities the first Taranaki War was brought to an end when a truce was signed between the New Zealand government and their Maori opponents.
18 March 1882
HMS Edinburgh is launched at Pembroke Dockyard.
18 March 1913
King George I of Greece was assassinated by anarchist Alexander Schinas while walking in the streets of Greece’s second city, Thessaloniki.
18 March 1940
Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini met in the Alps at the Brenner Pass and discussed Italy’s participation in the war against France and Great Britain.
18 March 1962
The Algerian War of Independence was brought to an end when representatives of the French government and the Front de Liberation Nationale signed the ‘Evian Accords’ at Evian-les-Bains.