A LIST OF THE ARCHBISHOPS OF CANTERBURY.
1. AUGUSTINE, or as he is usually stiled, St. Augustine, from his being the apostle of the English nation, being a monk of the order of St. Benedict, and
abbot of St. Andrew's, in Rome, a convent founded
by the pope himself, was sent into Britain by pope Gregory, in the year 596, to preach the Christian religion
to the unbelieving Britons. He had come part of the
way on his journey, when wanting courage to go forward, he wrote to the pope, to request his leave to return back; but this the pope refused, and earnestly
exhorted him to proceed, which at last Augustine consented to, and arriving with his companions, forty in
number, and several interpreters, in the island of Thanet, he was received hospitably by Ethelbert, king of
Kent, and conducted to Canterbury, where he then resided with his queen Bertha, who was at that time a
Christian, to which faith Augustine, by his persuasive
doctrine soon converted the Pagan king, whom he baptized with multitudes of his people, as is said by the
writers of his life; after which the king gave him his
place to reside in, and retired with his court to Reculver, about seven miles distant.
Augustine having thus acquired for himself and his
companions, a settled place of residence at Canterbury,
went over into France, to Arles, where he was consecrated a bishop, by Elentherius, bishop of that place, (fn. 1)
but without a title to any particular church, as if he
was appointed at large to be the apostle or universal
bishop of the nation, (fn. 2) which was, in a great measure,
restored by him to the Christian faith, which, though
it had formerly flourished in England, was at that time
almost entirely lost from it.
Upon his return from Arles, Augustine sent Laurence and Justus, two of his companions, to Rome, to
acquaint the pope with his success in Britain, and to
request his direction in several articles concerning his
religious government. They came back in 601, and
brought with them the pope's answers, (fn. 3) and a number
of monks to help them in their labours of converting
the Pagans here; and as a reward of his success, pope
Gregory invested him with archiepiscopal authority in
603, by sending him the pall, (fn. 4) which was esteemed the
badge and livery of it; (fn. 5) but it appears that Augustine
had the liberty of fixing the patriarchal chair wherever
he pleased; for the pope having sent the pall to him
at London, he changed his determination, and fixed it
at Canterbury, the chief city and royal residence; the
metropolis, as Bede calls it, of the kings of Kent; a
strong inducement, added to those already mentioned
before, for his giving the preference to it; on the reception of the pall, Augustine having been consecrated, was inthroned in his see, with the apostolic ornaments. (fn. 6)
In Canterbury, he founded two monasteries of the
benedictine order, one of which, situated close to his
palace, he dedicated to our Saviour Christ, in which
he built his cathedral church, and fixed the partriarchal
chair of his archbishopric in it; the other, situated at
a small distance further eastward, but without the walls
of the city, he dedicated to the apostles St. Peter and
St. Paul, which was after wards known by the name of
St. Augustine's abbey, as a place of sepulture for the
king and his successors, kings of Kent, and for himself
and his successors in the see of Canterbury. In the
year 604, Augustine ordained Mellitus and Justus, bishops, the latter to the see of Rochester, where he had
prevailed on king Ethelbert to found a cathedral
church, the former to that of London, where the king
had founded another like church, in order to convert
the East Saxons to the Christian faith.
When he perceived his end to draw near, he prudently ordained a successor in his see, lest upon his
death a vacancy should be a detriment to his church,
which as yet, from its infant state, was but weak, and
therefore the more easy to be shaken. (fn. 7)
Writers differ much as to the year of Augustine's
death, some stating it to have happened as early as 604,
and others as late as 613, (fn. 8) though the year 605 seems
to have been that in general adopted. He was buried
within the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul, before
mentioned, without the walls of the city. (fn. 9)
Augustine is represented to have been as one of
stature exceeding tall, and of a very graceful appearance, and is said to have been rather religious than
learned.
Godseline, who was first a monk of St. Bertin's, in
St. Omer's, and afterwards of St. Augustine's, in Canterbury, and wrote the life of St. Augustine, says, that
the cross which augustine, on his coming into England, had in his hands, was remaining in his time in
this monastery, with this inscription, Crux Augustini;
and that there was there too another cross, made of pophry marble, ornamented with small plates of silver;
and there were some who afferted, that this too had
been likewise the cross of St. Augustine. (fn. 10)
As to the chronology of the archbishops, it cannot
be more properly mentioned, than in this place, that
great is the difference of writers relating to it, and
Mr. Battely differs very widely from almost all the rest
of them; but he tells us, in his Cantuaria Sacra, pt. ii.
p. 65, that he has followed that most accurate writer,
Mr. Wharton, whose authority may be relied on with
more asforance, than that of Mr. Somner; for that
the former was an author, who had, as he deserved, the
general reputation of exactness and faithfulness in his
writings; and his particular dissertation concerning the
true succession of the archbishops of Canterbury, was
diligently and judiciously compiled. Dr. Burnet had
indeed been pleased to charge the two volumes of his
Historical Collections, called Anglia Sacra, (in the first
of which is the above dissertation) with being exceedingly faulty, but without any particular instance being
mentioned by him. However, being thus warned, he,
Mr. Battely, had not ventured to take his chronological account of the archbishops upon trust, but had
carefully examined it, with a full purpose to have corrected the errors, if he had found any such in it; and
that he had confirmed the chronology of some of the
archbishops, from the registers of this church, the Saxon
chronicle, Bede, and other writers.
2. LAURENCE, who had been nominated by Augustine, before his death, as his successor, became accordingly the next archbishop of this see, (fn. 11) and made use of
one of those palls which pope Gregory had sent to his
predecessor, of which there were two then left, (fn. 12) and
trod in the footsteps of his predecessor. As he succeeded him in the patriarchal chair, so he did in his labours of propagating the Christian faith, even to the
remotest part of Britain, (fn. 13) to the Northern Scots, and
to the Irish likewise. In his time king Ethelbert died,
whose son and successor king Eadbald, in the beginning of his reign, being a Pagan, became an avowed
enemy and persecutor of the Christians and their religion.
In the year 613, archbishop Laurence returning
from the conversion of the Irish and Scots, consecrated
the church of this monastery, in the presence of king
Ethelbert and a large multitude of people, and then
removed the body of Augustine into the north portico
of it; but those of Letard and Bertha, which had been
buried without the church, on account of its not being
consecrated at the time of their deaths, he buried in
the portico of St. Martin, where likewise the remains
of king Ethelbert, who died three years afterwards,
were deposited near to his queen. (fn. 14) But Eadbald at last
being convinced of his errors, renounced them, and
being converted to the Christian faith, was baptized by
archbishop Laurence, and founded a church within this
monastery, to the honour of the Mother of God; and
was besides, a good benefactor to it. (fn. 15) Having sat in
this see for five years, he died on Feb. 3, in 619, (fn. 16) and
was buried in the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul,
was buried in the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul,
near his predecssor. (fn. 17)
Weever says, he wrote a learned book on the Observation of Easter, and Exhortative Epistles to the
bishops and abbots of the Scottish, Irish and British
churches.
3. MELLITUS, who has been already mentioned
before, succeeded him in the patriarchal chair. He
was one of Augustine's companions, who came over
into Britain with him, and was afterwards made by
him bishop of London, where he made himself eminent by his conversion of the East Saxons, and of Sebert their king to Christianity; but on the death of
Sebert, and his three sons, who succeeded to his kingdom, becoming Pagans agian, Mellitus was driven
from his bishopric, and retired first into Kent, and then
into France; (fn. 18) from whence, however, he returned
into England in less than a year, upon the invitation of
king Eadbald, who yet could by no means obtain permission for him to return to his diocese, so that he continued at Canterbury, being entertained by archbishop
Laurence, to the time of his being constituted archbishop himself.
The pall which he made use of, was the third and
last of those which pope Gregory had sent over to his
predecessor Augustine. Having sat in this see for the
space of five years, discharging his office with great
care, piety and integrity, he died on April 24,
624, of the gout, (fn. 19) and was buried with his predecessors
in the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul, without
the walls of Canterbury. (fn. 20) Bede gives him the character
of being infirm in body, being afflicted with the gout,
but strong in mind, that his birth was noble, but the
greatness of his mind still more so. (fn. 21)
4. JUSTUS succeeded him as archbishop; he was a
Roman born, and a monk of the order of St. Benedict, before he was sent into England by pope Gregory, which was in the year 601, that he might assist
Augustine in replanting Christianity throughout Britain; his diligence and success in which, were equally
wonderful. He was first constituted bishop of Rochester, and thence translated to this see, and as a confirmation of his metropolitical dignity and authority,
pope Boniface V. sent him the pall, being the first since
those transmitted to Augustine, as mentioned before,
and afterwards in an answer to a letter from Justus, for
the purpose, more strictly confirmed the primacy of
this church to him. (fn. 22) Archbishop Justus afterwards
consecrated Romanus, bishop of Rochester, and Paulinus, whom he sent to York; he died in the year 627, (fn. 23)
and was buried in the same monastery of St. Peter and
St. Paul, with his predecessors. (fn. 24)
5. HONORIUS was next made archbishop, after the
see had continued vacant about eighteen months. He
was a Roman by birth, and had been a disciple of pope
Gregory the great, and was a venerable and learned
man; he was confirmed at Rome, and afterwards received the pall from the pope (fn. 25) with a letter, in which
was a confirmation of the primacy to him; on his return he was consecrated at Lincoln, by Paulinus, archbishop of York. (fn. 26) He is said by some, to have divided
his province into parishes in 636, that he might with
more ease appoint ministers to particular congregations, (fn. 27)
though Mr. Selden and others judge otherwise, and
that he only divided his province into bishoprics or
dioceses, of which he established some new ones in it,
and that the division of it into parishes, may, more
probably be attributed to archbishop Theodore his
next successor but one. He sat in this chair twenty-six
years, promoting the cause of religion, and lived to the
end of September, anno 654; (fn. 28) he was, as his prede
cessors had been, buried in the monastery of St. Peter
and St. Paul, without the gates of the city. He is
said by Capgrave to have been canonized after his
death. (fn. 29)
6. DEUSDEDIT, or Adeodatus, for I find him called
by both these names, which were given him at his
consecration, his own original name having been Frithona, succeeded next as archbishop, being the first native of this land promoted to this see, which was after
a vacancy of eighteen months; (fn. 30) he was consecrated by
Ithamar, bishop of Rochester, at Canterbury, and received the pall from the pope. He was a man of good
learning, and eminent for his holiness of life, qualities
which recommended him for the government of this
church, in which he acquitted himself faithfully till the
day of his death, which is said to have been on July 14,
in the year 664, (fn. 31) and was buried, as all his predecessors were, in the church porch of the monastery of St.
Peter and St. Paul. (fn. 32) He is said by Capgrave to have
been canonized after his death. Pitseus says, he wrote
memoirs of the lives and actions of his predecessors.
After his death, one Wighard, who was an Englishman, was sent with a recommendation from the kings
of Kent and Northumberland, to pope Vitellianus to
Rome; but the pestilence raging there at that time, he
died with most of his attendants, of it, upon which the
pope appointed Adrian, abbot of Thiridanum, near
Naples, and African by birth, to be archbishop in his
room, but he would not be persuaded to undertake the
charge of it, but after some delay on the pope's strong
importunity, recommended Theodore to it, whom the
pope approved of, on condition that Adrian, afterwards
made abbot of St. Augustine's, in Canterbury, would
accompany him unto England, to assist him in his office, and for fear, lest being a Greek, Theodore being
born at Tharsus, in Cicilia, should introduce any Asiatic
ceremonies or usages.
7. THEODORE being thus appointed archbishop,
after a vacancy of the see for four years, was consecrated in 668, at Rome, being then aged 66 years;
whence he set off for England with Adrian, but was a
year and an half before he arrived, though without his
companion, who was detained some time longer. He
was a man of courage, good sense, and of singular
learning, being eminently skilled in the Latin and
Greek tongues, as well as in the customs of both those
churches.
He is said to have been the first, who, properly
speaking, exercised the authority and power of an archbishop here, (fn. 33) to whom the whole bishops and clergy
of Britain consented to submit, for he extended his jurisdiction even on the other side of the river Humber,
and being intrusted with a legantine power over England, Scotland and Ireland, he visited all places, deposed and ordained bishops at his pleasure, and reformed and corrected whatever appeared to him amiss. (fn. 34)
He introduced several new doctrines and practices into
the church; one of the most important of which, was,
that of auricular consession, as necessary to absolution.
By his influence, all the English churches were united
and brought to a perfect uniformity in discipline and
worship; bishoprics, too large, were divided, and
many new ones erected, great men were encouraged to
build parish churches, by declaring them and their successors patrons of those churches; a regular provision
was made for the clergy in all the kingdoms of the
heptarchy, by the imposition of a certain tax on every
village, from which the most obscure ones were not
exempted; by these and other wise regulations, introduced by this prelate, one of the greatest men that
ever filled this patriarchal chair, the church of England became a regular compact body, furnished with a
competent number of bishops and inferior clergy under
their metropolitan, the archbishop of this see.
He held three councils; one at Hartford in 674,
a second at Hatfield in 680, and another at Twiford,
in Northumberland, in 684, and at the second of
them, at the king of Mercia's request, he divided his
kingdom into five provinces or bishoprics, (fn. 35) and he is
said by some, to have first divided his province into
distinct parishes, though as has been mentioned before,
this is attributed by others to his predecessor next but
one, archbishop Honorius. He was a great promoter
of learning, and so liberal a patron of learned men, that
whoever wished to be instructed in divinity, had immediately masters to teach them. He founded a school
at Canterbury, of which mention has been made before, and the method of singing in churches, which bebefore was only known in Kent, was by his means
spread, and began to be learned in all the churches of
England, (fn. 36) and it was chiefly by his endeavours that
learning so flourished in this island, that from a nursery
it became a peculiar seminary of philosophy.
He brought over with him a large library of Latin
and Greek books, the names of some of which, as
well as the acts of his pontificate, which were consisiderable, are recorded in the antiquities of the British
church, by archbishop Parker. (fn. 37) Having sat inthis
see for near twenty-one years, which are recorded as
being most happy ones to the English nation, (fn. 38) he died
on Sept. 19, in 690, very aged and infirm, being 88
years old, and was buried in the church of the monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul, afterwards called St.
Augustine's monastery, and not in the porch of it,
which was full, all his predecessors, six in number, having been buried there. (fn. 39) He is said by Capgrave to
have been canonized after his death. Pitseus says, he
wrote a book of the bishops of Canterbury, his predecessors, and among the Harleian manuscripts, No.
438–2, is one written by him called Liber Pænitentialis. (fn. 40)
8. BRITHWALD was the next archbishop, being the
second Englishman preferred to it. He had been first
a monk and then abbot of Glastonbury, where having
presided for ten years, he quitted it for the abbotship
of Reculver, whence he was advanced to this patriarchal chair on July 1, 692, and was consecrated the
next year (fn. 41) by Bregwine, or Godwine, metropolitan of
Wales. (fn. 42) He had been trained up in the knowledge of
the holy scriptures, and in the exercise of strict ecclesiastical discipline; he is said to have done many things
for the good of his church. (fn. 43) He held a synod at Cliff,
and another at Bacanceld in 694, (fn. 44) and in 697 another
council at Berkhampstede, and six years afterwards he
held another with Alfred, king of Northumberland, in
that prince's dominions, at a place called Onestufield,
or Osterfield, in which Wlfred, bishop of York, was
again deposed.
The Saxon chronicle says, that he caused written
charters to be made, to confirm to the church of
Canterbury and other religious houses, their lands,
donations and privileges; and Spelman and Casaubon
agree with Somner, that the monasteries in Canterbury, had no written charters nor muniments before
this.
In a charter of king Wightred, this archbishop is
stiled Primas Totius Britannie, which title Birchington
says, was first given to him by pope Sergius. No
archbishop continued so long in this see as he did,
either before or since his time, for he sat in this patriarchal chair thirty-one years and an half, and dying
on the 27th of June, anno 731, worn out with old
age, he was buried near his predecessor in the same
monastery. (fn. 45)
9. TATWYN, born in the province of Mercia, being
a priest in the monastery of Brodun, or Bredun, in
Mercia, (fn. 46) succeeded him as archbishop in June 731, (fn. 47)
and was consecrated the same month in his own church,
by the bishops of Winchester, London, Lichfield and
Rochester, and afterwards received the pall. (fn. 48) He is
much commended for his love of religion, and his skill
in the holy scriptures; (fn. 49) having sat in this see for the
space of three years; he died on July 30, anno 734, (fn. 50)
and was buried with his predecessors in the church of
the monastery of St. Augustine. (fn. 51)
10. NOTHELM succeeded him as archbishop. He
was a priest, or according to Thorn, arch-priest of the
church of St. Paul, in London; (fn. 52) he was consecrated
archbishop in 735, and received the pall from the
pope, (fn. 53) and dying on 17th October, in the year 741,
was buried by his predecessors in the church of St.
Augustine's abbey. (fn. 54)
11. CUTHBERT was his successor, who was translated from the see of Hereford, about the year 741,
and afterwards received the pall from the pope at
Rome. He was descended of an illustrious family, a
man of severe manners, and made up of goodness
itself; (fn. 55) five years after his translation to this see, that
is, in 747, by the council of Bonisace, bishop of Mentz.
he held a synod of the English bishops at Cliff, near
Rochester, (fn. 56) to regulate the monks and to reform the
irregularities with which the church of England was
at that time overspread, (fn. 57) Ethelbald, king of Mercia,
with his nobles, being then present and consenting to
it; (fn. 58) the constitutions of which may be seen in the British Councils and other books. He was the first who
obtained the privilege of having church-yards to the
churches in this kingdom, within the walls of towns
and cities, for the purpose of burying in them; (fn. 59) for it
was a law among the Romans, borrowed of the Grecians, and inserted into their twelve tables, that none
should be buried or burned within any town, so that
all were buried either in the fields, along the highwayside (to put passengers in mind of their mortality) or
at the top, or the feet of mountains; and this kind of
interment, by general custom, was used both by Jews
and Gentiles, as may be found illustrated at large by
Weever in his Funeral Monuments. (fn. 60) Hence it was,
that Augustine had procured the ground on part of
which he afterwards erected his abbey, lying without
the city walls, for a place of sepulture for all the succeeding archbishops of this see.
Having obtained this general privilege, he procured
in 743, that which rendered him most gracious and
dear to this convent, which was a licence from Eadbert, king of Kent, and from the pope likewise, that
the bodies of the archbishops which before had been
buried at St. Augustine's, should in future be buried
within his monastery of Christ-church; for which purpose he erected, near the east end of the cathedral, a
church or chapel, which he dedicated to St. John Baptist, and ordained, that it should be the burial-place
for the future archbishops, and dying 7 kal. Nov. in
758, his funeral was accordingly solemnized in it. (fn. 61)
He is said to have borne for his arms, Argent, on a
fess, gules, three cross-croslets, fitchee of the first.
12. BREGWYN succeeded him (fn. 62) on the feast of St.
Michael, next year. (fn. 63) He was a native of Saxony,
though educated in England, and is recorded to have
been a man much devoted to piety and religion; he
was consecrated and received his pall from the pope
in 759, and dying on August 25, 762, was buried
within this monastery, near his predecessor, in the new
chapel erected by him, and, as is said, with the same
precipitation. (fn. 64)
13. LAMBERT, called by others, Janbert, being abbot of the neighbouring monastery of St. Augustine,
was promoted to this see in 762, on the feast of the
Purification, was consecrated next year, (fn. 65) and received
his pall from the pope. Whilst abbot, he came twice
to this convent of Christ-church, to demand the corpse,
first of Cuthbert, then of Bregwyn, to be delivered to
him, in order for their interment in the church of his
monastery, according to usual custom; the latter time
he came attended with armed men, resolving to take
the corpse of Bregwyn by force, in case his demand
was not complied with; but the monks fearing this
might be the case, had secured it safe under ground
before he came for it, so he returned without success;
upon which the convent of St. Augustine made their
appeal to the court of Rome, and prosecuted the cause
with the utmost rigour. To silence this dispute, the
monks of Christ-church elected Lambert for their
archbishop, and their adversaries, out of respect to
him, ceased to give them any further trouble. (fn. 66) In his
time, king Offa having taken great displeasure at the
inhabitants of Caterbury, it was the occasion of continual troubles to him, for that king erected a new
archbishopric at Lichfield, and obtained of the pope
authority for Eadluph, bishop there, to add as a province to it, the dioceses of Worcester, Leicester, Sidnacester, Hereford, Helmham, and Dunwich, so that
there was left to the archbishop of Canterbury, for his
province, only those of London, Winchester, Rochester, and Sherborne. (fn. 67) On his death on August 12,
790, (fn. 68) he disappointed the monks of Christ-church
very much, for perceiving his end approach, he took
care by his own express will and desire, to be bureid in
St. Augustine's, (fn. 69) where he was very honourably interred, with much pomp, in the chapter-house. (fn. 70)
14. ATHELAND was elected to this archbishopric
in the same year that his predecessor died. He was a
learned, pious and good man, and is said to have had
great ablities; he had been first abbot of Malmesbury,
then bishop of Winchester, and thence promoted to
this see, being consecrated in 793, (fn. 71) and receiving his
pall from the pope at Rome; by his means king Offa
became a good benefactor to this church, (fn. 72) after whose
death he prevailed with his successor king Ceonulph
and pope Leo III. to abolish the above-mentioned
new archbishopric of Lichfield, and reduce the whole
into its former state. (fn. 73) In the year 798, he held a great
council at Baccancelde, in which he presided, king
Ceolnulf with several bishops and abbots being present at it, and another next year at Clovesho, in the
presence of the same king. (fn. 74) The obituary records his
having recovered several alienated lands to his church.
Having sat thirteen years, he died in 803, (fn. 75) and was
buried, by his own particular order, in his own monastery of Christ-church, in the new church or chapel of
St. John Baptist. (fn. 76)
15. WLFRED from the stalls of the monks, or rather from the archidiaconal dignity, was advanced
to the archiepiscopal throne in the year 803, and was
consecrated by the pope, and received the pall from
him at Rome, next year. The compiler of the antiquities of the British church, and bishop Godwyn,
have recorded, that this archbishop (who kept possession of this see a good number of years, viz. about 28)
did nothing worthy of remembrance; (fn. 77) but if they had
regarded the records and evidences of the antient benefactions to this church, they would have seen that
those of this archbishop by far exceeded in number
and greatness, the benefactions of any one of his predecessors. This appears in the instrument of donations, published in Mr. Somner's appendix, (fn. 78) and yet
more fully in the evidences of Christ-church, printed
at the end of Thorn's Chronicle, in the Decem. Scriptores, (fn. 79) and in the obituaries of the archbishops. (fn. 80) In
these they would have learned that he not only bought
lands and gave them to the church, but procured others
from the king, and recovered some which had been
taken from the church; indeed his particular benefactions amount to twenty-nine in number. This
agrees well with the character which Gervas gives of
him, of being a most prudent man, acting at all times
with courage and resolution, stoutly asserting the rights
of his church, and ever consulting the good of it. (fn. 81)
In the year 816, he held a council at Cealc-hythe, (fn. 82) and
in 821, he presided with Beornulph, king of Mercia,
at a synodal council, held at Clovesho. (fn. 83) In his time
the monks of this church died, all but five. (fn. 84) Arch
bishop Wlfred died on 30th August, 829, (fn. 85) and was
buried in his own church, in the church or chapel of
St. John. (fn. 86)
16. FLWOLOFILD, or as others call him, Theololgild,
succeeded him, but continued in the see only for the
space of three months, (fn. 87) and dying in 830, he was buried in the monastery of Christ-church; (fn. 88) one, named
Syred, (fn. 89) succeeded him, but deceasing before he had
taken full possession of this patriarchal chair, he is not
reckoned among the list of archbishops. (fn. 90)
17. CEOLNOTH was elected archbishop on August
27, the same year, (fn. 91) received his pall from the pope,
and continued in this see upwards of thirty eight years,
all which were full of troubles and dangers, by the continual invasions of the Danes. He brought secular
clerks into his church to assist the five remaining
monks who were left in it in archbishop Wlfred's
time, (fn. 92) and purchased with his own money the village
of Chart, which he gave to the church; a great benefaction in those times. (fn. 93) He died in 870, and was buried in his own monastery of Christ-church, (fn. 94) in the
south cross of the nave, before the altar of St. Benedict, where his body remained after the rebuilding of
it by Lanfranc.
18. ATHELRED, a monk of this church, succeeded
to this archbishopric, with the consent of Ethelred and
Alured his brother, soon after the death of Ceolnoth
being confirmed, and receiving the pall from the
pope's hands; he continued in this see near eighteen
years, during which, the times were full of storms and
perils, by the continual invasions of the Danes. He
expelled those seculars out of his church, which his
predecessor had brought into it, and made up the number of the monks again. (fn. 95) He is said to have consecrated two bishops of Landaff successively, and a bishop of St. David's, in his own cathedral church; he
restored five bishoprics among the West Saxons,
which had been left destitute of their bishops (fn. 96) He
died in 888, and was buried within the monastery of
his own church; (fn. 97) on the death of Athelred or Eldred,
as he is written by some, king Alfred bestowed the
archbishopric on Grimbald, who then lived in a monastic state at Winchester, of which he was afterwards
abbot; but he peremptorily refusing to accept of it,
Plegmund was, by his recommendation, made archbishop. (fn. 98)
19. PLEGMUND was accordingly elected archbishop
in 890. (fn. 99) He was a native of Mercia, and having retired from the world had led a king of hermit's life. (fn. 100)
He was a man of liberal education, being one of those
learned men who had been preceptor to and had instructed king Alfred; being elected archbishop, he
was consecrated and received the pall from pope Formosus at Rome, where he purchased for a great sum
of money the relics of St. Blase, which he gave to his
church. He died in 923, in a good old age, having
sat thirty-four years, and was buried in the monastery
of his own church, in the chapel or church of St.
John Baptist.
20. ATHELM, by some called Aldhun, bishop of
Wells, and uncle to St. Dunstan, (fn. 101) succeeded him as
archbishop, and received his pall from the pope. (fn. 102)
He is said by some, not to have been a monk as all
his predecessors had been, though according to others
he had been abbot of Glastonbury. (fn. 103) In 924, he
crowned king Athelstane at Kingston. (fn. 104) He died in
925, and was buried with his predecessors. (fn. 105)
21. WLFELM, bishop of Wells, was next elected
to this see, (fn. 106) and received the pall from the pope.—He died, according to Matthew Westminster, in 934, (fn. 107)
or as others say, so late as 941, (fn. 108) and was buried in the
church or chapel of St. John, within his own monastery. (fn. 109) He was present at a great synod held at Greateley, in which were present all the great and wise
men that king Athelstane could get together, when
all those laws which the king had made were confirmed. (fn. 110)
22. ODO, surnamed Severus, bishop of Sherborne,
succeeded him in 941, and received his pall from the
pope. He was a Dane by birth, and is by some said
to have been a soldier before he took to the church.
His parents having in vain dissuaded him from embracing Christianity, turned him out unprovided into
the world; thus exposed, he applied to Athelm, a
nobleman and Christian in the court of Alfred; who,
pleased with the lad's appearance, sent him to school
and educated him in the Latin and Greek tongutes.
Having entered into holy orders, he, by his own merits and the interest of his patron Athelm, passed rapidly through the inferior stations in the church, and
was ordained a priest before the age prescribed by the
canons, and was not long after consecrated bishop of
Sherborne; and on the death of Wlselm, the world
turned their eyes towards this pious, learned, and valiant bishop, as the fittest person to fill this patriarchal chair, in which, though his zeal for religion
seemed to be sincere and servent, yet his bold alpiring spirit, no longer under any restraint, led him to
exercise his power with a very high hand. On his
promotion to it, that he might be received with more
welcome and propriety at Canterbury, he went over
to and received the monastic tonsure abroad, which
made him the more acceptable to the monks here. (fn. 111)
In 945 archbishop Odo consecrated king Edmund
at Kingston, after whose murder next year, he consecrated Eadred his brother at the same place, who received his crown from him; and he afterwards consecrated there, Eadred's successor Eadwin. (fn. 112) He was
a good benefactor to his cathedral, by new making
the roof of it, which had become ruinous through
length of time, (fn. 113) and in 948 removed into it the bones
of Wilfrid, archbishop of York, who died in 711, that
church having fallen down. (fn. 114) In 943 he published
his famous pastoral letter to the clergy and people of
his province, commonly called the constitutions of
Odo. Besides these there were several ecclesiastical
canons made, in a great council of the clergy and
laity which was held at London, the year following,
by king Edmund. Though some place his death
so late as 961, yet it happened more probably in
958, (fn. 115) when he was buried in his own cathedral
church. (fn. 116)
Osbern has left us the history of his life, and praises
him much for his sanctity and integrity. (fn. 117) He was
canonized after his death, and is therefore usually stiled
St. Odo.
23. ELSIN, bishop of Winchester, (fn. 118) succeeded Odo
as archbishop, whose inveterate enemy he was, and
continued his hatred to him after his death, which he
shewed by trampling over his grave. Being named to
this see by the king's authority, he is said by the monkish writers to have been intruded into it. (fn. 119) He was
of affinity to the blood royal, and is said to have been
of very extraordinary learning. He perished on the
Alps with cold, as he was-travelling towards Rome
for his pall. (fn. 120) He died in 958 or 9, (fn. 121) and was brought
into England by his attendants and buried at Winchester. On his death Brithelm, bishop of Wells,
was elected to this see, but feeling himself unequal to
the weight of it, and being of a soft and gentle disposition, he declined it, and by the king's command
returned to the see of Wells again, (fn. 122) where he died in
973, and was there buried.
24. DUNSTAN, bishop of London, was upon this
appointed to succeed him in this patriarchal chair, in
the year 960, and that with the unanimous consent
of the church, (fn. 123) and went the same year to Rome for
his consecration and pall. He is said to have been
descended of a noble family in Somersetshire, and to
have been educated in Glastonbury abbey, of which
he became abbot, and being a great favourite of king
Edmund, that king endowed it for his sake with
many peculiar privileges. He was afterwards promoted to the see of Worcester, and from thence was
translated to London. (fn. 124) On king Edmund's death he
stood still higher in the favour of his brother and
successor king Edred, to whom he was confessor and
chief confident, during which he employed all his influence in promoting the interest of his own, the
Benedictine order of monks, of which he was a most
active and zealous patron.
Having the treasures of the above two princes at
his command, he built and endowed monasteries for
that order, because almost all the antient ones were in
the possession of secular canons.
The conduct of Dunstan whilst he was in power,
which was exaggerated by his persuading Edred to
give by his last will, immense treasures to churches
and monasteries, by which the crown was left in a
state of indigence, rendered him so very odious to
Edwi, who succeeded his uncle Edred in 955, and
his rude behaviour to him and his beloved queen
Ediva, raised the resentment of that prince so high,
that he deprived him of all his preferments, and
drove him into exile.
The banishment of Dunstan was a severe blow to
the monks, who were upon that expelled from several
of their monasteries, and the married secular clergy
were placed in them, in their room. But their sufferings were not of a long continuance; for Edgar,
the younger brother of Edwi, having raised a successful rebellion against his unhappy brother, and usurped
all his dominions on the north side of the river
Thames, recalled Dunstan, and gave him the bishopric of Worcester in 957; from which time he was the
chief adviser and confident of king Edgar, who became the sole monarch of England, by the death of
his brother, and presently afterwards advanced Dunstan to the archiepiscopal chair.
Being now possessed of the primacy, and assured of
the royal support and assistance, the archbishop, with
St. Oswald and St. Ethelwald, began the execution
of the design he had long meditated, of endeavouring
to persuade the secular canons in their cathedrals and
other monasteries, to put away their wives and take
the monastic vows and habits; but finding these of
little or no avail, they proceeded to effect it by violence, and the king gave them a formal commission
to expel the married canons out of all the cathedrals
and larger monasteries, and promised to assist them in
the execution of it with all his power. Under the influence of these prelates, the king, however profligate
he might otherwise be, shewed a constant attention to
ecclesiastical affairs, and held several councils, (fn. 125) one
of which, in particular, was at Winchester in 975, in
which several canons were made for the regulation of
the church, among which were those sixty-seven, called
the canons of king Edgar. (fn. 126)
The commission for expelling the secular canons
was executed with great rigour, but on the king's
death in 975, it received a check. The sufferings of
the persecuted canons had excited much compassion,
and many of the nobility now espoused their cause,
and in some measure effected their restoration. In
the reign of king Ethelred, surnamed the Unready,
who succeeded his brother Edward in 979, the English were engaged in such continual wars with the
Danes, and involved by their invasions in so many
calamities, that they had no leisure to attend to ecclesiastical affairs, which renders the church history
of these times as barren as the state of it was melancholy. (fn. 127)
As archbishop Dunstan was so great a patron and
restorer of monastic institutions, the grateful monks,
who were almost the only historians of those dark
ages, have bestowed the most extravagant praises on
him, and have represented him as the greatest worker
of miracles, as well as the highest favorite of Heaven
that ever lived. Having sat in this see for upwards
of twenty-seven years, he died on May 19, in 988,
æt. 64, (fn. 128) and was buried in his own cathedral, that is
(and so it must be understood of all his predecessors,
said to be there buried) in the old church, notin the
modern; Osbern says, near the altar, and Gervas says,
in the undercroft. (fn. 129)
After his death he was, like his predecessor St.
Odo, canonized, (fn. 130) for his piety and miracles; and his
relics soon became of such high account, that archbishop Lanfranc, when he rebuilt this church in the
Conqueror's reign, very solemnly translated his corpse,
from the place of its first sepulture, into his new
church, and there new entombed it (with the pontificals, in which, according to the times, it was habited, and a plate of lead, bearing an inscription, to
shew whose body it was) near unto the high altar on
the south side, from which time the tomb had the denomination of St. Dunstan's altar. (fn. 131) Whoever observes
the pavement on the south side of the steps between
archbishop Stratford's and Sudbury's monuments,
with the gilded work on the wall and pillar there, will
easily discern some such thing taken from thence,
as questionless this altar was at the clearing of the
church of such ornaments at or shortly after the reformation.
Whilst it was standing there, this saint and his relics were of such high estimation, and they became so
beneficial to the place that enjoyed them, by the offerings to his altar, that the monks of Glastonbury
began to boast in king Henry VII.'s time, that they
had them in possession, having been translated thither
from Canterbury, as Capgrave, in the life of St. Dunstan, affirms, in the year 1012. Upon which, those
monks built him a shrine, by which and other means,
the benefit formerly accruing to Christ-church, was
turned to Glastonbury. This so troubled the archbishop of Canterbury and his monks, that bethinking
themselves of a speedy remedy, they resolved to make
a scrutiny in his tomb or altar, by opening it, to see
whether his corpse and relics were really inclosed there
or not. The scrutiny was accordingly made, and the
searching found in favour of the monks of Christchurch, that the corpse and relics were really in it;
upon which archbishop Warham, who then sat in the
see of Canterbury, immediately directed and sent his
letters to the abbot and convent of Glastonbury,
straightly charging them to desist from all further
boasting of their possession of St. Dunstan's relics;
which letters he was forced to repeat, before they
would obey, so loth were they to forego so great a
profit. (fn. 132)