27 Latin is
included
as being the ecclesiastical language common to
all.
all.
bede
, 229 n.
, 231 n.
, 244 n.
, 353 n.
;
represented at Hertford by proxy, 228;
his Catholic teaching, xxvii, 208, 217;
invites Eddi from Kent to teach church singing, 217;
expelled from his see by Egfrid, 242, 243 n. , 244, 245, 267 n. , 351,
385;
foretells the battle of the Trent, 267 n. ;
demands an explanation from the King and Archbishop, 242 n. ;
goes to Rome to plead his cause, 243 n. , 245, 351;
Ebroin’s plot against his life, 192 n. , 351 n. ;
on his way to Rome driven by the wind to Frisland, 351;
visits Dagobert II of Austrasia, and Perctarit, King of the Lombards,
351 n. ;
acquitted by Agatho and the Lateran Council, 352;
his confession of faith on behalf of the English Church, 254 n. , 352;
returns to Britain, 352, accused of bribery, 352 n. ;
imprisoned at Bromnis, 352 n. ;
at Dunbar, 352 n. ;
released at Aebba’s request, 260 n. , 352 n. ;
takes refuge in Mercia, 267 n. , 323, 352 n. ;
expelled from Mercia, 267 n. , 352 n. ;
converts the South Saxons and the Isle of Wight, 179 n. , 245-248, 252,
352, 353;
founds the Monastery of Selsey, 247, 345;
his restoration to York, Hexham, and Ripon, 243 n. , 247 n. , 296, 353 n. ,
356 n. ;
administers Lindisfarne, 296;
his second expulsion, 274 n. , 296 n. , 323, 353;
second sojourn in Mercia, 353 n. ;
consecrates Oftfor, 274;
consecrates Suidbert, 323;
excommunicated by the Council of Ouestraefelda, 353 n. ;
second visit to Frisland, 161;
again goes to Rome to plead his cause, 353;
acquitted by Pope John and the Council, 353, 354;
taken ill at Meaux on his way back to Britain, 354, 355;
his vision, 355;
arrives in Britain, 355;
reconciled to Bertwald, Ethelred and Coenred, 355, 356;
Aldfrid refuses to receive him, 356;
Elfled’s influence in his favour, 189 n. ;
restored to his bishopric of Hexham by the Synod on the Nidd, 356;
dies at Oundle, 346, 356, 391;
buried at St. Peter’s, Ripon, 346, 356;
his epitaph, 356, 357;
length of his episcopate, 346;
his relics, 346 n. ;
his character, 347;
churches built by him, 351;
“Life of,” _see_ Eddius.
Wilfrid II, Bishop of York, 273, 346 n. , 379 n. , 380 n. , 381, 390;
account of, 273;
ordained by John, 312.
Wilfrid, Bishop of Worcester, 379 n. , 380.
Wilgils, father of Wilbrord, 320 n.
William III, xix.
William of Malmesbury, editorial references to, xxxvi, 86 n. , 87 n. , 125
n. , 232 n. , 239 n. , 287 n. , 346 n. , 377 n. , 392 n.
Wiltaburg, Wiltenburg, the Town of the Wilts, or Trajectum, now Utrecht,
324.
Wiltshire, 343 n.
Wincanheale, 204 n.
Winchester, Venta, or Wintancaestir, 228 n. ;
churches at, 149;
diocese of, xxvi, xxx, 3 n. , 148, 149, 150, 251, 343 n. , 345.
Winchester, Bishop of, _see_ Daniel, Haedde, Leutherius, Wini.
Winfrid, _see_ Boniface.
Wini, Bishop of Winchester, 150, 241;
consecrates Ceadda, 207;
expelled from Winchester, purchases the bishopric of London, 150, 231
n. ;
returns to Winchester, 228 n.
Wintancaestir, _see_ Winchester.
“Winter’s Tale, The,” editorial reference to, 263 n.
Winwaed, Battle of the, xxvii, 185 n. , 188, 189.
Winwaed, The River, 189.
Witberg, daughter of Anna, 149 n.
Witenagemot, The, xxv, 94, 95, 116, 151 n. , 231 n. , 242 n. , 251 n. , 316 n.
Woden, 30;
the sons of, 83 n.
Wooler, 119.
Worcester, diocese of the Hwiccas, 273 n. , 379 n. , 380.
Worcester, Bishop of, _see_ Bosel, Egwin, Oftfor, Tatfrid, Wilfrid.
Worcestershire, 84 n. , 379 n.
Worr, _see_ Aldwin.
Wulfhere, King of Mercia, son of Penda, xxvii, xxviii, 149 n. , 150, 181,
218, 226 n. , 241 n. , 261 n. , 332 n. ;
account of, 191 n. ;
with the aid of Immin, Eafa, and Eadbert, recovers Mercia from Oswy,
191;
his reign, 192;
his realm, 225;
conquers Lindsey, 243 n. ;
sends Jaruman to the East Saxons, 212, 245 n. ;
brings about the conversion of Ethelwalch, 245;
endows monasteries, 219, 346 n. ;
invades Northumbria, 191 n. ;
defeated by Egfrid, 191 n. ;
death, 191 n. , 384 n. , 385.
Wulfram, St. , Archbishop of Sens, 319 n.
Wuscfrea, son of Edwin, baptized, 119;
taken by his mother into Kent, and sent into Gaul, where he dies in
infancy, 132.
Wynfrid, Bishop of Lichfield, 192, 224, 225;
account of, 192 n. ;
deacon under Ceadda, 225;
at the Hertford Synod, 228;
deposed by Theodore, 231, 244 n. ;
retires to Ad Barvae, 231;
death, 231.
Yeavering or Adgefrin, 119, 120.
Yellow pest, a bubonic plague, 203, 204.
Yffi, first King of Deira, 83 n.
Yffi, son of Osfrid, 119, 132.
York, xxxvi, 13, 118, 131, 132, 135, 244, 293, 354;
diocese of, xxv, 65, 66, 243 n. , 351 n. ;
Cathedral, 119.
York, Archbishop of, _see_ Egbert, Paulinus;
Bishop of, _see_ Bosa, Ceadda, John, Wilfrid, Wilfrid II.
Yorkshire, 3 n. , 118 n. , 204 n. , 305 n. , 342 n.
Ythancaestir, Monastery of, 183, 187.
Zacharias, Pope, letter to Boniface, 87 n.
Zeuss, his “Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstämme,” 317 n.
Zozimus, Pope, 21 n.
FOOTNOTES
1 The St. Gallen MS. (ninth century) has, however, “VII Id. Mai. ”
Messrs. Mayor and Lumby, adopting this reading, place his death as
late as 742, in which year the eve of Ascension Day fell on May 9th.
For their argument, _v. _ Mayor and Lumby, pp. 401, 402.
2 The phrase is the present Bishop of Oxford’s in “Studies in the
Christian Character. ”
3 Stevenson, “Church Historians,” vol. i.
4 From Easter to Whitsuntide.
5 Rogation Wednesday.
6 King of Northumbria, cf. V, 23. He succeeded Osric, 729 A. D. In a
revolt he was forcibly tonsured, 731, but restored. He voluntarily
became a monk in Lindisfarne in 737. The fact that Bede submitted
the Ecclesiastical History to him for revision bears witness to his
piety and learning.
7 Albinus, the first English abbot of the monastery of SS. Peter and
Paul at Canterbury, succeeded Hadrian in 709 or 710. On his
scholarship, cf. V, 20.
8 Theodore, the great archbishop, noted for his organization of the
English Church and his services to education, consecrated in 668, at
the age of sixty-five, by Pope Vitalian, on the recommendation of
Hadrian, who had himself twice declined the office of archbishop.
Theodore was a native of Tarsus, in Cilicia, a man of great learning
and scholarly attainments. Cf. IV, 1.
9 Hadrian (_v. _ previous note, cf. IV, 1), an African by birth, sent
to England by Pope Vitalian along with Theodore, became Abbot of SS.
Peter and Paul, Canterbury. He co-operated with Theodore in his
educational work.
10 A presbyter of London, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, 735.
Received the _pallium_ (_v. _ I, 27, p. 54, note) in 736.
11 Gregory I (the Great), who sent the Roman mission to England.
12 Gregory II, _v. _ Plummer _ad loc. _ for arguments showing
conclusively that Gregory III cannot be meant.
13 Cf. IV, 16, and V, 18. In V, 23 he is more accurately described as
“Ventanus antistes. ” He was consecrated Bishop of Winchester when
the West Saxon bishopric was divided in 705; and his diocese
comprised only the smaller part of Wessex. He was the friend and
counsellor of St. Boniface.
14 Bishop of the East Saxons, cf. III, 21 foll.
15 St. Chad, Bishop of the Northumbrians, afterwards of Lichfield;
brother of Cedd: _v. _ III, 23, 28; IV, 2, 3; V, 19.
16 Lastingham, near Pickering in Yorkshire N. R. , _v. _ III, 23.
17 Nothing further is known of him.
18 The district to the north of the Wash.
19 Bishop of Sidnacester, in the province of Lindsey. He died in 732:
_v. _ IV, 12; V, 23.
20 The saint and hermit who was for two years Bishop of Lindisfarne,
685-687: _v. _ IV, 26-32. Bede wrote his life both in prose and
verse.
21 Holy Island, off the coast of Northumberland. Aidan chose it as the
place of his see and monastery in 635: _v. _ III, 3.
22 This total varies in different authors. The first few pages of Bede
are to a great extent copied out of Pliny, Solinus, Orosius, and
Gildas.
23 Richborough, Kent.
24 Boulogne.
25 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , _passim_; Verg. , Aen. , VIII, 727.
26 In his Hexameron.
27 Latin is included as being the ecclesiastical language common to
all. Bede does not imply that there was a Latin-speaking race still
in the island.
28 In Caesar’s time, the whole district lying along the north-western
coast of Gaul, afterwards narrowed down to the modern Brittany. That
the Britons (or Brythons) came from Gaul is doubtless a fact.
Another branch of the Celtic race, the Goidels or Gaels, appears to
have been in possession in Britain before them.
29 By Scythia Bede means Scandinavia. He only mentions this account as
a tradition. The problem of the Picts has not been solved yet.
According to one view, they belonged to the pre-Aryan inhabitants of
Britain, pushed westward and northward by the Celtic invaders. In
Scotland they held their own for a considerable time in a wide tract
of country, and they may have to some extent amalgamated with the
Celts who dispossessed them (Rhŷs). Others regard them as Celts of
the same branch as Welsh, Cornish, and Britons, being probably
nearest to Cornish. The absence of all but the scantiest remains of
their language makes the question of their origin one of great
difficulty.
30 The legend is an attempt to account for the law of Pictish
succession, which was vested in the mother, _v. _ Rhŷs, “Celtic
Britain,” pp. 170-171.
31 “Dal,” a division or part, is common in Irish names. Dalriada was a
district in the north-eastern part of Ulster. From there, a tribe of
Scots (a Celtic race who settled in Ireland at some unknown period)
came to Kintyre and spread along the coasts of Argyll, which took
from them the name of Dalriada (probably _circ. _ 500 A. D. ). They
brought the Christian religion with them. Bede follows that version
of the legend which makes Cairbre Riada, the eponymous hero of the
Irish Dalriada (_circ. _ 200 A. D. ), himself found the colony in
Scotland.
32 Dumbarton; _v. infra_ c. 12, p. 24 and note.
33 Caesar’s invasion took place A. U. C. 699 and 700; B. C. 55 and 54.
34 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , V, 11, 18 ff. A powerful British chief. His
territory lay north and north-east of the Thames, roughly comprising
Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Berkshire, but the exact limits
are uncertain. His people were the Catuvellauni (the name is Gaulish
in form).
35 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , V, 20. The Trinovantes occupied Essex and part of
Middlesex.
36 Variations of this name given by ancient authors are Andragius and
Androgorius. Caesar calls him Mandubracius.
37 The position of this place is unknown.
38 Claudius came to Britain A. U. C. 796, 43 A. D.
39 He can only have done so in name; it was probably Agricola who first
conquered the Orkneys. Cf. Tac. , Agric. , 10.
40 Cf. Tac. , Agric. , 13.
41 Marcus Antoninus Verus, commonly called Marcus Aurelius, succeeded
in 161 A. D. His colleague in the empire was his adopted brother,
Lucius Verus, whose full adoptive name was Lucius Aurelius Antoninus
Verus Commodus. He died in 169. Eleutherus became Pope between 171
and 177. Bede’s chronology is therefore wrong.
42 Most modern authorities consider the story fabulous. But cf. Bright,
“Early English Church History,” pp. 3-5.
43 Severus succeeded in 193 A. D. He died in 211.
44 This is the earthwork which runs parallel to the wall of Hadrian,
between the Solway and the Tyne, at an interval of from 30 to 1,300
yards from it. Its origin and purpose are doubtful. Ancient
authorities afford conflicting evidence with regard to the Roman
walls in Britain. Modern research seems to show that Severus built
no wall or rampart, though some ancient historians assert that he
did (_v. _ Haverfield, quoted by Plummer, _ad loc. _; cf. _infra_ c.
12 and note).
45 Bassianus Antoninus, surnamed Caracalla. Geta was murdered by
Caracalla.
46 Diocletian succeeded in 284.
47 Carausius was a native of Menapia, in Belgium, appointed to command
the Roman fleet stationed at Boulogne to guard the coasts. He took
the fleet with him when he usurped imperial authority in Britain.
Maximian, failing to reduce him, recognized his authority and gave
him the title of Augustus. He governed vigorously and prosperously.
48 Allectus was a follower of Carausius. His revolt was apparently
supported by the independent tribes, probably Caledonians.
49 Asclepiodotus was serving under Constantius Chlorus (one of the
reigning Caesars), who sailed to Britain and marched against
Allectus.
50 The statement that the Diocletian persecution extended to Britain
rests on no trustworthy evidence at all. Yet though the time
assigned is probably wrong, there seems to be no reason to doubt the
existence of the British Protomartyr. The story rests upon a local
tradition traceable up to the visit of Germanus in 429 A. D. , _v.
infra_ c. 18.
51 Venantius Fortunatus, a Christian poet, Bishop of Poitiers, b. 530
A. D. He was the last Latin poet of any note in Gaul.
52 In the lives of St. Alban (all later than Bede) this clerk is called
St. Amphibalus, a name probably invented from his cloak
(_amphibalus_).
53 The text of this passage is probably corrupt, but all the MSS.
agree. I believe the above gives the intended meaning.
54 There is again probably some confusion in the text.
55 Now St. Albans in Hertfordshire, on the Watling Street, hence
probably the name, Vaeclingacaestir.
56 The place was afterwards called Holmhurst. The church mentioned by
Bede was superseded by the monastery of St. Alban, the foundation of
which is attributed to Offa, _circ. _ 793 A. D. Certain extraordinary
privileges were granted to it, and its abbot obtained a superiority
over all other English abbots (Dugdale, “Monasticon”).
57 The evidence for their martyrdom is very doubtful.
58 Caerleon-on-Usk, the headquarters of the Second legion, is here
meant (_v. _ Merivale, H. R. , vi, 248), though the name was also
applied to Chester, seat of the Twentieth legion (cf. II, 2, p. 87,
“civitas legionum”).
59 Constantine the Great. For the legality of the marriage, _v. _ Dict.
of Christian Biography, article “Helena. ”
60 The First General Council, 325 A. D. It asserted the doctrine of the
ὁμοούσιον against Arius. For a short account of the heresy, _v. _
Gore, Bampton Lectures, pp. 89-92. All the evidence goes to show
that this heresy affected Britain much less than Bede, on the
authority of Gildas, here implies.
61 Valens died 378.
62 Another of the insular usurpers (cf. c. 6). He had served under the
elder Theodosius in Britain. He revolted from Rome, successfully
repressed incursions of Picts and Scots, then crossed to Gaul, where
he maintained himself for four years, but was killed by the Emperor,
the younger Theodosius, at Aquileia, in 388.
63 The real date is 395.
64 Pelagius, the founder of the heresy known as Pelagianism, was
probably born in 370 A. D. , and is said to have been a Briton, but
the tradition that his real name was Morgan (Marigena, Graecised
Πελάγιος), and that he was a native of Bangor, rests on very
doubtful authority. His great opponent, St. Augustine, speaks of him
as a good and holy man; later slanders are to be attributed to
Jerome’s abusive language. The cardinal point in his doctrine is his
denial of original sin, involving a too great reliance on the human
will in achieving holiness, and a limitation of the action of the
grace of God.
65 Julianus of Campania is regarded as the founder of semi-Pelagianism,
_i. e. _, an intermediate position between the orthodox view and the
heresy of Pelagius. He was Bishop of Eclanum, near Beneventum, and
was along with seventeen other Italian bishops deposed in 418 A. D.
for refusing to sign the circular letter of Pope Zosimus condemning
the heresy.
66 A native of Aquitaine, born probably about 403 A. D. , a strong
opponent of the Pelagians. It is uncertain whether he was in Holy
Orders or not. He wrote in prose and verse; his longest poem is
called “De Ingratis” (_i. e. _, opponents of the grace of God). His
best known work is a Chronicle, not to be confused with the shorter
chronicle of Prosper Tiro.
67 Bede includes elegiacs under this term, cf. V, 8.
68 The date of Honorius is correct, but the invasion of Alaric is put a
year too late, if Bede refers to the first siege of Rome, in 408.
69 The British army, alarmed by the inroads of barbarians, and actuated
by a spirit of revolt against Roman authority, set up three local
emperors in rapid succession: Marcus, Gratian, and Constantine. The
first two they summarily deposed and killed, but Constantine by a
great victory made himself master of Gaul and Britain and extorted
from the Emperor Honorius a share in the Imperial authority.
Meanwhile, the Britons expelled the few remaining Roman officials,
and Honorius avenged himself on Constantine for the loss of Britain
in the manner described in the text.
70 A Roman general, afterwards associated with Honorius in the empire
for a few months.
71 Gerontius (Welsh _Geraint_, akin to Irish _Gerat_ or _Gerait_, a
champion), was a Briton, one of Constantine’s generals. Turning
against his master, he invited the Germans to invade Gaul and
Britain, probably intending to secure Britain for himself. But his
own men conspired against him and he died by his own hand.
72 Rome was taken 1163 A. U. C. ; 410 A. D.
73 Possibly “light-houses. ”
74 Probably Inchkeith in the Forth. The Irish called the Firth of Forth
the “Sea of Giudan” (_v. _ Reeves’ “Culdees,” p. 124). But Professor
Rhŷs is inclined to think that Bede has confused the island Giudi
with Urbs Giudi, which may perhaps be identified with the Urbs Iudeu
of Nennius, probably either Carriden or Edinburgh (Rhŷs, “Celtic
Britain”).
75 Alcluith is the Welsh name (Ail = a rock). The Goidels called it
Dúnbrettan = the fortress of the Britons. Hence its modern name,
Dumbarton. The river is, of course, the Clyde.
76 This is the earthen rampart, about thirty-five miles in length,
between the Clyde and the Forth, now attributed to Antoninus Pius.
Little is known about it, and it is probable that it was soon
abandoned.
77 Abercorn, a village on the south bank of the Firth of Forth.
78 The name is probably Celtic (Goidelic), though, if the view which
regards the Picts as a non-Celtic people be correct, it may show
traces of Pictish influence. It seems to be connected with the Latin
term “penna valli” = wing of (_i. e. _, pinnacle or turret at end of)
the _vallum_.
represented at Hertford by proxy, 228;
his Catholic teaching, xxvii, 208, 217;
invites Eddi from Kent to teach church singing, 217;
expelled from his see by Egfrid, 242, 243 n. , 244, 245, 267 n. , 351,
385;
foretells the battle of the Trent, 267 n. ;
demands an explanation from the King and Archbishop, 242 n. ;
goes to Rome to plead his cause, 243 n. , 245, 351;
Ebroin’s plot against his life, 192 n. , 351 n. ;
on his way to Rome driven by the wind to Frisland, 351;
visits Dagobert II of Austrasia, and Perctarit, King of the Lombards,
351 n. ;
acquitted by Agatho and the Lateran Council, 352;
his confession of faith on behalf of the English Church, 254 n. , 352;
returns to Britain, 352, accused of bribery, 352 n. ;
imprisoned at Bromnis, 352 n. ;
at Dunbar, 352 n. ;
released at Aebba’s request, 260 n. , 352 n. ;
takes refuge in Mercia, 267 n. , 323, 352 n. ;
expelled from Mercia, 267 n. , 352 n. ;
converts the South Saxons and the Isle of Wight, 179 n. , 245-248, 252,
352, 353;
founds the Monastery of Selsey, 247, 345;
his restoration to York, Hexham, and Ripon, 243 n. , 247 n. , 296, 353 n. ,
356 n. ;
administers Lindisfarne, 296;
his second expulsion, 274 n. , 296 n. , 323, 353;
second sojourn in Mercia, 353 n. ;
consecrates Oftfor, 274;
consecrates Suidbert, 323;
excommunicated by the Council of Ouestraefelda, 353 n. ;
second visit to Frisland, 161;
again goes to Rome to plead his cause, 353;
acquitted by Pope John and the Council, 353, 354;
taken ill at Meaux on his way back to Britain, 354, 355;
his vision, 355;
arrives in Britain, 355;
reconciled to Bertwald, Ethelred and Coenred, 355, 356;
Aldfrid refuses to receive him, 356;
Elfled’s influence in his favour, 189 n. ;
restored to his bishopric of Hexham by the Synod on the Nidd, 356;
dies at Oundle, 346, 356, 391;
buried at St. Peter’s, Ripon, 346, 356;
his epitaph, 356, 357;
length of his episcopate, 346;
his relics, 346 n. ;
his character, 347;
churches built by him, 351;
“Life of,” _see_ Eddius.
Wilfrid II, Bishop of York, 273, 346 n. , 379 n. , 380 n. , 381, 390;
account of, 273;
ordained by John, 312.
Wilfrid, Bishop of Worcester, 379 n. , 380.
Wilgils, father of Wilbrord, 320 n.
William III, xix.
William of Malmesbury, editorial references to, xxxvi, 86 n. , 87 n. , 125
n. , 232 n. , 239 n. , 287 n. , 346 n. , 377 n. , 392 n.
Wiltaburg, Wiltenburg, the Town of the Wilts, or Trajectum, now Utrecht,
324.
Wiltshire, 343 n.
Wincanheale, 204 n.
Winchester, Venta, or Wintancaestir, 228 n. ;
churches at, 149;
diocese of, xxvi, xxx, 3 n. , 148, 149, 150, 251, 343 n. , 345.
Winchester, Bishop of, _see_ Daniel, Haedde, Leutherius, Wini.
Winfrid, _see_ Boniface.
Wini, Bishop of Winchester, 150, 241;
consecrates Ceadda, 207;
expelled from Winchester, purchases the bishopric of London, 150, 231
n. ;
returns to Winchester, 228 n.
Wintancaestir, _see_ Winchester.
“Winter’s Tale, The,” editorial reference to, 263 n.
Winwaed, Battle of the, xxvii, 185 n. , 188, 189.
Winwaed, The River, 189.
Witberg, daughter of Anna, 149 n.
Witenagemot, The, xxv, 94, 95, 116, 151 n. , 231 n. , 242 n. , 251 n. , 316 n.
Woden, 30;
the sons of, 83 n.
Wooler, 119.
Worcester, diocese of the Hwiccas, 273 n. , 379 n. , 380.
Worcester, Bishop of, _see_ Bosel, Egwin, Oftfor, Tatfrid, Wilfrid.
Worcestershire, 84 n. , 379 n.
Worr, _see_ Aldwin.
Wulfhere, King of Mercia, son of Penda, xxvii, xxviii, 149 n. , 150, 181,
218, 226 n. , 241 n. , 261 n. , 332 n. ;
account of, 191 n. ;
with the aid of Immin, Eafa, and Eadbert, recovers Mercia from Oswy,
191;
his reign, 192;
his realm, 225;
conquers Lindsey, 243 n. ;
sends Jaruman to the East Saxons, 212, 245 n. ;
brings about the conversion of Ethelwalch, 245;
endows monasteries, 219, 346 n. ;
invades Northumbria, 191 n. ;
defeated by Egfrid, 191 n. ;
death, 191 n. , 384 n. , 385.
Wulfram, St. , Archbishop of Sens, 319 n.
Wuscfrea, son of Edwin, baptized, 119;
taken by his mother into Kent, and sent into Gaul, where he dies in
infancy, 132.
Wynfrid, Bishop of Lichfield, 192, 224, 225;
account of, 192 n. ;
deacon under Ceadda, 225;
at the Hertford Synod, 228;
deposed by Theodore, 231, 244 n. ;
retires to Ad Barvae, 231;
death, 231.
Yeavering or Adgefrin, 119, 120.
Yellow pest, a bubonic plague, 203, 204.
Yffi, first King of Deira, 83 n.
Yffi, son of Osfrid, 119, 132.
York, xxxvi, 13, 118, 131, 132, 135, 244, 293, 354;
diocese of, xxv, 65, 66, 243 n. , 351 n. ;
Cathedral, 119.
York, Archbishop of, _see_ Egbert, Paulinus;
Bishop of, _see_ Bosa, Ceadda, John, Wilfrid, Wilfrid II.
Yorkshire, 3 n. , 118 n. , 204 n. , 305 n. , 342 n.
Ythancaestir, Monastery of, 183, 187.
Zacharias, Pope, letter to Boniface, 87 n.
Zeuss, his “Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstämme,” 317 n.
Zozimus, Pope, 21 n.
FOOTNOTES
1 The St. Gallen MS. (ninth century) has, however, “VII Id. Mai. ”
Messrs. Mayor and Lumby, adopting this reading, place his death as
late as 742, in which year the eve of Ascension Day fell on May 9th.
For their argument, _v. _ Mayor and Lumby, pp. 401, 402.
2 The phrase is the present Bishop of Oxford’s in “Studies in the
Christian Character. ”
3 Stevenson, “Church Historians,” vol. i.
4 From Easter to Whitsuntide.
5 Rogation Wednesday.
6 King of Northumbria, cf. V, 23. He succeeded Osric, 729 A. D. In a
revolt he was forcibly tonsured, 731, but restored. He voluntarily
became a monk in Lindisfarne in 737. The fact that Bede submitted
the Ecclesiastical History to him for revision bears witness to his
piety and learning.
7 Albinus, the first English abbot of the monastery of SS. Peter and
Paul at Canterbury, succeeded Hadrian in 709 or 710. On his
scholarship, cf. V, 20.
8 Theodore, the great archbishop, noted for his organization of the
English Church and his services to education, consecrated in 668, at
the age of sixty-five, by Pope Vitalian, on the recommendation of
Hadrian, who had himself twice declined the office of archbishop.
Theodore was a native of Tarsus, in Cilicia, a man of great learning
and scholarly attainments. Cf. IV, 1.
9 Hadrian (_v. _ previous note, cf. IV, 1), an African by birth, sent
to England by Pope Vitalian along with Theodore, became Abbot of SS.
Peter and Paul, Canterbury. He co-operated with Theodore in his
educational work.
10 A presbyter of London, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, 735.
Received the _pallium_ (_v. _ I, 27, p. 54, note) in 736.
11 Gregory I (the Great), who sent the Roman mission to England.
12 Gregory II, _v. _ Plummer _ad loc. _ for arguments showing
conclusively that Gregory III cannot be meant.
13 Cf. IV, 16, and V, 18. In V, 23 he is more accurately described as
“Ventanus antistes. ” He was consecrated Bishop of Winchester when
the West Saxon bishopric was divided in 705; and his diocese
comprised only the smaller part of Wessex. He was the friend and
counsellor of St. Boniface.
14 Bishop of the East Saxons, cf. III, 21 foll.
15 St. Chad, Bishop of the Northumbrians, afterwards of Lichfield;
brother of Cedd: _v. _ III, 23, 28; IV, 2, 3; V, 19.
16 Lastingham, near Pickering in Yorkshire N. R. , _v. _ III, 23.
17 Nothing further is known of him.
18 The district to the north of the Wash.
19 Bishop of Sidnacester, in the province of Lindsey. He died in 732:
_v. _ IV, 12; V, 23.
20 The saint and hermit who was for two years Bishop of Lindisfarne,
685-687: _v. _ IV, 26-32. Bede wrote his life both in prose and
verse.
21 Holy Island, off the coast of Northumberland. Aidan chose it as the
place of his see and monastery in 635: _v. _ III, 3.
22 This total varies in different authors. The first few pages of Bede
are to a great extent copied out of Pliny, Solinus, Orosius, and
Gildas.
23 Richborough, Kent.
24 Boulogne.
25 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , _passim_; Verg. , Aen. , VIII, 727.
26 In his Hexameron.
27 Latin is included as being the ecclesiastical language common to
all. Bede does not imply that there was a Latin-speaking race still
in the island.
28 In Caesar’s time, the whole district lying along the north-western
coast of Gaul, afterwards narrowed down to the modern Brittany. That
the Britons (or Brythons) came from Gaul is doubtless a fact.
Another branch of the Celtic race, the Goidels or Gaels, appears to
have been in possession in Britain before them.
29 By Scythia Bede means Scandinavia. He only mentions this account as
a tradition. The problem of the Picts has not been solved yet.
According to one view, they belonged to the pre-Aryan inhabitants of
Britain, pushed westward and northward by the Celtic invaders. In
Scotland they held their own for a considerable time in a wide tract
of country, and they may have to some extent amalgamated with the
Celts who dispossessed them (Rhŷs). Others regard them as Celts of
the same branch as Welsh, Cornish, and Britons, being probably
nearest to Cornish. The absence of all but the scantiest remains of
their language makes the question of their origin one of great
difficulty.
30 The legend is an attempt to account for the law of Pictish
succession, which was vested in the mother, _v. _ Rhŷs, “Celtic
Britain,” pp. 170-171.
31 “Dal,” a division or part, is common in Irish names. Dalriada was a
district in the north-eastern part of Ulster. From there, a tribe of
Scots (a Celtic race who settled in Ireland at some unknown period)
came to Kintyre and spread along the coasts of Argyll, which took
from them the name of Dalriada (probably _circ. _ 500 A. D. ). They
brought the Christian religion with them. Bede follows that version
of the legend which makes Cairbre Riada, the eponymous hero of the
Irish Dalriada (_circ. _ 200 A. D. ), himself found the colony in
Scotland.
32 Dumbarton; _v. infra_ c. 12, p. 24 and note.
33 Caesar’s invasion took place A. U. C. 699 and 700; B. C. 55 and 54.
34 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , V, 11, 18 ff. A powerful British chief. His
territory lay north and north-east of the Thames, roughly comprising
Hertfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Berkshire, but the exact limits
are uncertain. His people were the Catuvellauni (the name is Gaulish
in form).
35 Cf. Caes. , B. G. , V, 20. The Trinovantes occupied Essex and part of
Middlesex.
36 Variations of this name given by ancient authors are Andragius and
Androgorius. Caesar calls him Mandubracius.
37 The position of this place is unknown.
38 Claudius came to Britain A. U. C. 796, 43 A. D.
39 He can only have done so in name; it was probably Agricola who first
conquered the Orkneys. Cf. Tac. , Agric. , 10.
40 Cf. Tac. , Agric. , 13.
41 Marcus Antoninus Verus, commonly called Marcus Aurelius, succeeded
in 161 A. D. His colleague in the empire was his adopted brother,
Lucius Verus, whose full adoptive name was Lucius Aurelius Antoninus
Verus Commodus. He died in 169. Eleutherus became Pope between 171
and 177. Bede’s chronology is therefore wrong.
42 Most modern authorities consider the story fabulous. But cf. Bright,
“Early English Church History,” pp. 3-5.
43 Severus succeeded in 193 A. D. He died in 211.
44 This is the earthwork which runs parallel to the wall of Hadrian,
between the Solway and the Tyne, at an interval of from 30 to 1,300
yards from it. Its origin and purpose are doubtful. Ancient
authorities afford conflicting evidence with regard to the Roman
walls in Britain. Modern research seems to show that Severus built
no wall or rampart, though some ancient historians assert that he
did (_v. _ Haverfield, quoted by Plummer, _ad loc. _; cf. _infra_ c.
12 and note).
45 Bassianus Antoninus, surnamed Caracalla. Geta was murdered by
Caracalla.
46 Diocletian succeeded in 284.
47 Carausius was a native of Menapia, in Belgium, appointed to command
the Roman fleet stationed at Boulogne to guard the coasts. He took
the fleet with him when he usurped imperial authority in Britain.
Maximian, failing to reduce him, recognized his authority and gave
him the title of Augustus. He governed vigorously and prosperously.
48 Allectus was a follower of Carausius. His revolt was apparently
supported by the independent tribes, probably Caledonians.
49 Asclepiodotus was serving under Constantius Chlorus (one of the
reigning Caesars), who sailed to Britain and marched against
Allectus.
50 The statement that the Diocletian persecution extended to Britain
rests on no trustworthy evidence at all. Yet though the time
assigned is probably wrong, there seems to be no reason to doubt the
existence of the British Protomartyr. The story rests upon a local
tradition traceable up to the visit of Germanus in 429 A. D. , _v.
infra_ c. 18.
51 Venantius Fortunatus, a Christian poet, Bishop of Poitiers, b. 530
A. D. He was the last Latin poet of any note in Gaul.
52 In the lives of St. Alban (all later than Bede) this clerk is called
St. Amphibalus, a name probably invented from his cloak
(_amphibalus_).
53 The text of this passage is probably corrupt, but all the MSS.
agree. I believe the above gives the intended meaning.
54 There is again probably some confusion in the text.
55 Now St. Albans in Hertfordshire, on the Watling Street, hence
probably the name, Vaeclingacaestir.
56 The place was afterwards called Holmhurst. The church mentioned by
Bede was superseded by the monastery of St. Alban, the foundation of
which is attributed to Offa, _circ. _ 793 A. D. Certain extraordinary
privileges were granted to it, and its abbot obtained a superiority
over all other English abbots (Dugdale, “Monasticon”).
57 The evidence for their martyrdom is very doubtful.
58 Caerleon-on-Usk, the headquarters of the Second legion, is here
meant (_v. _ Merivale, H. R. , vi, 248), though the name was also
applied to Chester, seat of the Twentieth legion (cf. II, 2, p. 87,
“civitas legionum”).
59 Constantine the Great. For the legality of the marriage, _v. _ Dict.
of Christian Biography, article “Helena. ”
60 The First General Council, 325 A. D. It asserted the doctrine of the
ὁμοούσιον against Arius. For a short account of the heresy, _v. _
Gore, Bampton Lectures, pp. 89-92. All the evidence goes to show
that this heresy affected Britain much less than Bede, on the
authority of Gildas, here implies.
61 Valens died 378.
62 Another of the insular usurpers (cf. c. 6). He had served under the
elder Theodosius in Britain. He revolted from Rome, successfully
repressed incursions of Picts and Scots, then crossed to Gaul, where
he maintained himself for four years, but was killed by the Emperor,
the younger Theodosius, at Aquileia, in 388.
63 The real date is 395.
64 Pelagius, the founder of the heresy known as Pelagianism, was
probably born in 370 A. D. , and is said to have been a Briton, but
the tradition that his real name was Morgan (Marigena, Graecised
Πελάγιος), and that he was a native of Bangor, rests on very
doubtful authority. His great opponent, St. Augustine, speaks of him
as a good and holy man; later slanders are to be attributed to
Jerome’s abusive language. The cardinal point in his doctrine is his
denial of original sin, involving a too great reliance on the human
will in achieving holiness, and a limitation of the action of the
grace of God.
65 Julianus of Campania is regarded as the founder of semi-Pelagianism,
_i. e. _, an intermediate position between the orthodox view and the
heresy of Pelagius. He was Bishop of Eclanum, near Beneventum, and
was along with seventeen other Italian bishops deposed in 418 A. D.
for refusing to sign the circular letter of Pope Zosimus condemning
the heresy.
66 A native of Aquitaine, born probably about 403 A. D. , a strong
opponent of the Pelagians. It is uncertain whether he was in Holy
Orders or not. He wrote in prose and verse; his longest poem is
called “De Ingratis” (_i. e. _, opponents of the grace of God). His
best known work is a Chronicle, not to be confused with the shorter
chronicle of Prosper Tiro.
67 Bede includes elegiacs under this term, cf. V, 8.
68 The date of Honorius is correct, but the invasion of Alaric is put a
year too late, if Bede refers to the first siege of Rome, in 408.
69 The British army, alarmed by the inroads of barbarians, and actuated
by a spirit of revolt against Roman authority, set up three local
emperors in rapid succession: Marcus, Gratian, and Constantine. The
first two they summarily deposed and killed, but Constantine by a
great victory made himself master of Gaul and Britain and extorted
from the Emperor Honorius a share in the Imperial authority.
Meanwhile, the Britons expelled the few remaining Roman officials,
and Honorius avenged himself on Constantine for the loss of Britain
in the manner described in the text.
70 A Roman general, afterwards associated with Honorius in the empire
for a few months.
71 Gerontius (Welsh _Geraint_, akin to Irish _Gerat_ or _Gerait_, a
champion), was a Briton, one of Constantine’s generals. Turning
against his master, he invited the Germans to invade Gaul and
Britain, probably intending to secure Britain for himself. But his
own men conspired against him and he died by his own hand.
72 Rome was taken 1163 A. U. C. ; 410 A. D.
73 Possibly “light-houses. ”
74 Probably Inchkeith in the Forth. The Irish called the Firth of Forth
the “Sea of Giudan” (_v. _ Reeves’ “Culdees,” p. 124). But Professor
Rhŷs is inclined to think that Bede has confused the island Giudi
with Urbs Giudi, which may perhaps be identified with the Urbs Iudeu
of Nennius, probably either Carriden or Edinburgh (Rhŷs, “Celtic
Britain”).
75 Alcluith is the Welsh name (Ail = a rock). The Goidels called it
Dúnbrettan = the fortress of the Britons. Hence its modern name,
Dumbarton. The river is, of course, the Clyde.
76 This is the earthen rampart, about thirty-five miles in length,
between the Clyde and the Forth, now attributed to Antoninus Pius.
Little is known about it, and it is probable that it was soon
abandoned.
77 Abercorn, a village on the south bank of the Firth of Forth.
78 The name is probably Celtic (Goidelic), though, if the view which
regards the Picts as a non-Celtic people be correct, it may show
traces of Pictish influence. It seems to be connected with the Latin
term “penna valli” = wing of (_i. e. _, pinnacle or turret at end of)
the _vallum_.
