High Middle Ages · Europe · Religion

1011

Alphege captured at Canterbury

1011

After a three-week siege, Danish raiders stormed the Anglo-Saxon primate's cathedral, killed a monastic community, and held Alphege for ransom. The archbishop refused to let his clergy pay and was eventually pelted to death with ox bones at a drunken feast the following April near Greenwich on the Thames. His martyrdom became a rallying symbol for English resistance to Danish occupation.