Whatever the truth of the matter, it is clear that by the tenth-century the thegns were subordinate to the king's thegns and to the ealdormen, and that the gesith was no longer engaged in active service for the king.Share
One distinction between the gesith and the thegn was that of age; the thegn was a young man, the gesith more mature. Initially the thegn was not a powerful man, the term sometimes merely denoting a servant, albeit one who was free. By the tenth-century, however, ‘thegn’ had taken on a more specialised meaning. The law codes of the period show us something of how the thegns had become more important as servants of the king. They were given the responsibility of helping the king to ensure that the church was observing its rules:
"And I and my thegns shall compel our priests to that which the pastors of our souls direct us (clerical celibacy)." [2]
It is also clear that the thegns now had their own class, with a recognisable rank:
“And my thegns are to have their dignity in my time as they had in my father’s.” [3]
Anglo-Saxon society was not a static one. Thegnship had developed as a class of its own, but this did not mean that one had to be born into that class to belong to it. (Read more.)
The Last Judgment
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