Cymenshore is a place in Southern England where, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Ælle of Sussex landed in AD 477 and battled the Britons with his three sons Cymen, Wlencing and Cissa, after the first of whom Cymenshore was held to have been named.
Its location is unclear but was probably near Selsey.
Historical context
thumb|right| 250px |Later engraving of a picture commissioned in 1519 showing Cædwalla confirming a grant of land, at Selsey, to Wilfrid.
The position of the presentation is probably where the Mixon is today, based on the location of the church (at Church Norton) in the top left of picture.
The account of Ælle and his three sons landing at Cymenshore appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, a collection of seven vernacular manuscripts, commissioned in the 9th century, some 400 years or more after the events at Cymenshore.
The legendary foundation of Saxon Sussex, by Ælle, is likely to have originated in an oral tradition before being recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
From 491 until the arrival of Christianity in the 7th century, there was a dearth of contemporary written material.Information about early Sussex derived from the chronicle has been modified by our knowledge of what was happening elsewhere in England and by a growing body of archaeological evidence.
The Chronicle goes on to describe a battle with the British in 485 near the bank of Mercredesburne and, in 491, a siege of Andredescester – a settlement that is thought to be Pevensey or a place nearby; after the siege, the inhabitants were massacred.
Towards the end of the Roman occupation of England raids on the east coast became more intense and the expedient adopted by Romano-British leaders was to enlist the help of Anglo-Saxon mercenaries to whom they ceded territory.
Gildas said that the king of the Britons Vortigern invited the Saxons in among them like wolves into the sheep-fold.
It is thought that mercenaries may have started arriving in Sussex as early as the 5th century.
Archaeological evidence suggests that the main area of settlement during the 5th century can be identified by the distribution of cemeteries of that period  Apart from Highdown, near Worthing and Apple Down, 11 km northwest of Chichester, they are between the lower Ouse and Cuckmere rivers in East Sussex.
This area was believed to have been for the treaty settlement of Anglo-Saxon mercenaries
Bell suggested that subsequently Ælle seems to have tried to break out of the treaty area and in about 465 he fought the battle of 'Mearcredesburne', one translation of which is 'river of the frontier agreed by treaty'.
The Chronicle does not tell us who won the battle, but with the taking of Pevensey in c 471 Ælle extended his territory up to the Pevensey Levels.
East of the Levels was an area independently settled by the Haestingas, a people whose territory continued to be regarded as an area apart from the rest of Sussex as late as the 11th century.
No pagan cemeteries have been found in this region, and this is an indication that they were already Christian when they arrived.
As far as the west of the Arun Valley is concerned, this includes Selsey and Chichester, to date there have been no archaeological finds of the early Anglo-Saxon period.
The only known pagan Saxon burials are at Pagham (7th or 8th century AD) and Apple Down.
Etymology
thumb|250px|The distribution of funta, ora and portus place-name elements against select archaeological sites dated to the Roman and Saxon periods thumb|250px|A mention of Cymen, the Ælle's son, in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Although there is no archaeological evidence for Ælle's existence or his invasion, there is some lexical evidence for the existence of Cymensora, the place where the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle AS 477 say he landed.
The Latin word ora was used to indicate the edge of something such as a coast or sea-coast, (eg: ora-maritima could be used to signify the inhabitants of a coastal region).
Richard Coates has suggested that the Germanic invaders would previously have traded in the area and probably would have been familiar with the term and eventually use it by preference.
Today the word  ora is reflected in placenames where Jutish and West Saxon dialects were in operation (mainly in southern England).
It is possible that the stretch of low ground along the coast from Southampton to Bognor was called Ora "the shore", and that district names were used by the various coastal settlements.
They include Ower near Southampton, Rowner near Gosport, Copnor in Portsmouth, Marker in West Thorney, Itchenor, Chalder Farm, Keynor Farm, Honer in Pagham and Bognor.
Other place-name elements were derived from Latin too.
With Latin elements such as vīcus, portūs and funta eventually being absorbed into Old English.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle Cymensora is named after Cymen, one of Ælle's sons and thus would mean Cymen's landing place or shore.
Location
thumb|right| 250px|Remains of jetty at Wytherings location(grid reference SZ8797) Evidence for Selsey area
thumb|250px|right|Section of 1583 Dutch map showing Rumbridge (Weenbrug).
The Selsey area, is traditionally the most popular candidate for Cymenshore.
The tradition is based largely on two charters that refer to a place with a similar name in the boundary clause to that cited in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.The charter that defined the land award to Wilfrid at Selsey, in the 7th century, by King Caedwalla is actually a 10th-century forgery.
The relevant section of the forged charter, says (in Latin):
and the translation is:
A further source is from the Charter of Byrhthelm (presumably Brihthelm, bishop of Selsey), which is believed to be genuine and is to do with some land that had been seized from the See of Selsey, it confirms that the boundary is from Wytherings Mouth and Cymenshoran in the east to Hormouth in the west:
Rumbruge/ Rumbridge (alias "thri beorg" – three barrows, now the Medmerry Bank) is believed to have been an islet and trading port off the southwest coast of the Manhood Peninsula, that has long since succumbed to the sea and Wytherings mouth was part of what is now Pagham Harbour.
The Owers
Just off the tip of Selsey Bill, to approximately SSE, are groups of ledges and rocks known as the Owers.
thumb|center|500px| The Owers showing possible location for Cymenshore Outer and Middle Owers
Some historians such as Hunter-Blair identify the Outer Owers and Middle Owers as the landing place for Ælle.However this is problematical as according to SCOPAC the coastal erosion pattern means that this section of the Owers would not have been part of the shoreline for at least 5000 years.
The Outer Owers are approximately  off Selsey Bill and the erosion pattern suggests that the shore would have been  seaward 5000 years ago.
The Mixon
thumb|right|250px| Camden's description of Selsey and the ancient little City To the south of Selsey Bill lies the Mixon rocks.
It is believed that, in the Iron Age, the Atrebates (one of the Belgae tribes) built their Oppidum in the Selsey area and Richardson speculates that the Mixon could be the site of Cidade Celha (the Old City) and therefore Cymensora.
The archaeological evidence demonstrates that the Mixon would have been the shoreline during the Roman occupation, with it not being breached by the sea until the 10th or 11th century.
As late as the 17th century, it was reported that the remains of the "ancient little city" could be seen at low tide.
Keynor
The Manor of Keynor is situated at the western end of Pagham Harbour.
Selsey-based historians Edward Heron-Allen and Francis Mee favour the Keynor area of Sidlesham for Cymenshore; they suggest that the name Keynor is derived from Cymensora.
However Margaret Gelling asserts that Keyn-or actually means Cow-Shore in Old English.
Pagham Harbour
Pagham Harbour currently is a nature reserve, however in earlier times was a working harbour with three ports, one at the western end at Sidlesham Mill known as Wardur, one at the other at the entrance to the harbour and known as Charlton and one on the Pagham side known as the Port of Wythering (Wyderinges).
The port of Wardur was part of 'New Haven' a development in the Middle Ages.
The Port of Wythering was overrun by the sea in the 13th century and the whole harbour eventually silted up and ceased to be navigable, except for small craft.
West Wittering
West Wittering has been cited by some early cartographers and historians as the site for Cymenshore.
For example in his Britannia Camden said:
Also Morden's map of 1695 shows Cimenshore  being adjacent to the Witterings.
thumb|500px|center|Section of 1695 map of Sussex showing location of Cymenshore (spelt Cimenshore on map)
However, other historians have posited that siting Cymenshore off West Wittering as mistaken and was probably due to a mistranslation of the charter.
The charter itself, in the original early English describes part of the boundary of the land as ..
Wedering muðe..
(Wedering mouth).
Wedering was the port of Withering a village, now lost, at the entrance to what is now Pagham Harbour.
It is possible that earlier historians had translated Wedering incorrectly, as Wittering.
Other possible locations
Ouse-Cuckmere
Welch believes that the location for Cymenshore is more likely to be in the Ouse-Cuckmere area of East Sussex, his reasoning is that there is no archaeological evidence to support a landing at Selsey.
However Richardson states that the place names with the Old English ora element of Cymensora are very common along the Hampshire and West Sussex coastline but not around the Ouse-Cuckmere area.
There is also a suggestion that the archaeology off the Selsey coast has just not been fully realised yet.
Shoreham
Shoreham has also been cited as a possible location, for example in 1906 Hilaire Belloc in his Hills and the Sea when discussing St Wilfrid he said:
See also
History of Sussex
Notes
Citations
References
External links
Sidlesham Parish Site - Information on how to find Keynor - Note Keynor Lane on map and Earnley (suggested area for Rumbruge) immediately to the west.
St Thomas a Becket - Parish Church at the East end of Pagham Harbour near to Wythering.
St Wilfrid gave Pagham to the Archbishops of Canterbury when he left Selsey, and they are still the patrons of this church.
A Saxon burial urn was found near to the church in the 1950s and now is on display in the south aisle.
Movable Type Scripts - Useful site for calculating distances based on the latitude/ longitude bearings.
It will also provide a map of the locations.
You can use this to calculate the distances between Selsey Bill and the various Owers rocks.
Online translation of the 1607 edition of Camden's Britannia- See section 4.
of the Sussex pages for description of Selsey.
