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      • Biscop had traveled to Rome several times and had seen the benefits of a classical education. He wanted to bring this type of education to England and believed that the best way to do this was by founding monasteries where young boys could be educated.
      historymedieval.com/saint-bedes-life-and-legacy/
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  2. Aug 9, 2024 · Bede’s influence was perpetuated at home through the school founded at York by his pupil Archbishop Egbert of York and was transmitted to the rest of Europe by Alcuin, who studied there before becoming master of Charlemagne’s palace school at Aachen.

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      (672/673–735). English Roman Catholic saint Bede (also...

    • Nothing Certain Is Known of His Family Background
    • Bede Became A Benedictine Monk at St Paul’s Monastery
    • He Survived A Plague That Struck in 686
    • Bede Was A Polymath
    • Bede’s Capacity to Write in The Early Medieval Period Was A Feat in Itself
    • His Most Famous Work Was Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum
    • He Popularised The Use of The Ad Dating System
    • The Venerable Bede Never Ventured Further Than York
    • Bede Died at St Paul’s Monastery on 27 May 735 Ad
    • Bede Was Declared ‘Venerable’ by The Church in 836 and Canonised in 1899

    Bede was most likely born in Monkton, Durham, to a reasonably wealthy family. At age 7 he was entrusted into the care of Benedict Biscop, who in 674 AD founded the monastery of St Peter at Wearmouth. Biscop, a Northumbrian nobleman who later became Bede’s abbot, was given the land at Jarrow by King Ecgrith of Northumbria. He was sent 10 monks and 1...

    The 12-year-old Bede attended the consecration of the new St Paul’s monastery on 23 April 685. He remained a Benedictine monk there until his death in 735 AD. St Paul’s was noted for its impressive library boasting some 700 volumes, which Bede put to scholarly use: “I was entrusted by my family first to the reverend Abbot Benedict and later to Abbo...

    Disease was rampant in medieval Europe, as people lived closely with animals and vermin with little understanding of how illness spread. Although this episode of plague killed the majority of the population of Jarrow, Bede was spared.

    During his lifetime, Bede found time to study. He wrote and translated some 40 books on topics such as natural history, astronomy and occasionally some poetry. He also studied theology extensively and wrote the first martyrology, a chronicle of the lives of the saints.

    The level of education and literacy that Bede acquired in his lifetime would have been an immense and rare luxury in early medieval England. As well as possessing the capacity to write, finding the tools to do so also would have presented challenges at the time. Rather than using pencils and paper, Bede would have written with hand-crafted tools on...

    Also known as the ‘The Ecclesiastical History of the English People’, Bede’s text starts with Caesar’s invasion of Britainand covers some 800 years of British history, exploring political and social life. His account also documents the rise of the early Christian church, touching on the martyrdom of St Alban, the coming of the Saxons and St Augusti...

    Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum was completed in 731 and became the first work of history to use the AD system of dating to measure time based on the birth of Christ. AD stands for anno domini, or ‘in the year of our lord’. Bede was engrossed by the study of computus, the science of calculating calendar dates. Bede’s efforts to decipher the ...

    In 733, Bede went to York to visit Ecgbert, Bishop of York. The church seat of York was elevated to an archbishopric in 735 and it is likely that Bede visited Ecgbert to discuss the promotion. This visit to York would be the furthest Bede ventured from his monastic home in Jarrow during his lifetime. Bede hoped to visit Ecgbert again in 734 but was...

    He continued working right up until the end of his life and his final work was a translation of the Gospel of St John, which he dictated to his assistant.

    The title ‘Venerable Bede’ comes from the Latin inscription on his tomb at Durham Cathedral, reading: HIC SUNT IN FOSSA BEDAE VENERABILIS OSSA, meaning ‘here are buried the bones of the Venerable Bede’. His bones have been kept at Durham since 1022 when they were brought from Jarrow by a monk called Alfred who had them buried alongside Cuthbert’s r...

  3. Jun 26, 2023 · The Venerable Bede was belatedly canonised by Pope Leo XIII in 1899, as St Bede the Venerable, and he is often considered the patron saint of scholars and historians. There are many churches, monasteries, and schools around the world that are dedicated to Bede and his legacy continues to serve as an inspiration to Christians around the world.

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BedeBede - Wikipedia

    It was for his theological writings that he earned the title of Doctor Anglorum and why he was declared a saint. [4] Bede synthesised and transmitted the learning from his predecessors, as well as made careful, judicious innovation in knowledge (such as recalculating the age of the Earth—for which he was censured before surviving the heresy ...

  5. May 30, 2019 · Little is known of Bede's childhood, other than he was born in March of 672 to parents living on land belonging to the newly founded Monastery of St. Peter, based in Wearmouth, to which Bede was given by relatives for a monastic education when he was seven.

  6. Dec 6, 2013 · The Venerable Bede, or Saint Bede, was an English monk who lived in a monastery in Northumberland. He is best known for writing the Ecclesiastical History of the English. He was born in 673 and taken to a monastery at 7 years old.

  7. At the age of seven he was entrusted to the care of Benedict Biscop, who is 674 AD had founded the monastery of St Peter at Wearmouth. In 682 AD, Bede moved the monastery at Jarrow, where he...