Home
The School
About Bexhill
Who
was King Offa
Contacts
| |
King Offa ruled Mercia
for 39 years,
from 757 until his death in 796.
His kingdom covered the area between the Trent/Mersey Rivers in the
North to the Thames Valley in the South, and from the Welsh border
in the West to the Fens in the East. He also controlled Kent,
Sussex, East Anglia and Lincoln; He was, therefore, in effect an
early King of England. He
was
one of the most powerful kings in early Anglo Saxon England, and
probably
the most famous of the Middle Ages. King
Offa was a brilliant soldier,
suppressing any resistance from the smaller kingdoms around
Mercia. He was
also a clever statesman, politician and organiser, being fair and
kind-hearted in everything that he did. The wealth and security he
created had great influence, socially and culturally, on the
English people.
King Offa’s
fame was widespread; he earned the
respect of many European kings, and
influenced political affairs all over
Europe. |
His most notable achievements were his
establishment of a new form of coinage that
influenced the design of English currency for many centuries
and the
earthworks, known as Offa's Dyke, that were built to mark the
border between England and Wales. It is an indication of King
Offa's power that he was able to raise sufficient manpower to
complete these enormous earthworks, which
stretch for 70 miles
and are still, in places, two
and a half metres high and up to twenty metres wide. |

|
|

|
Offa's
silver penny was the forerunner of modern coins, it had the king's name
and the name of the person responsible for the quality of the coins
stamped on it, he also produced some coins with a portrait of his wife,
Cynethryth, as queen of Mercia. Offa's coins were probably minted at
Canterbury, in Kent. |
 |