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Topic: Deusdedit of Canterbury


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In the News (Wed 11 Nov 09)

  
  CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. Deusdedit
He was the sixth Archbishop of Canterbury (655-664), and was the first Anglo-Saxon to hold the
Honorius, thus commencing the long line of English archbishops, which was broken but once, and that by his immediate successor, Theodore.
Deusdedit died on the same day as Erconbert, King of Kent, and was
www.newadvent.org /cathen/04760b.htm   (259 words)

  
 EBK: St. Deusdedit, Archbishop of Canterbury   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Deusdedit was the first Saxon Archbishop of Canterbury.
The See of Canterbury seems, at this time, to have been passing through a period of comparative obscurity; for during the nine years of the pontificate of Deusdedit, all the new English Bishops, with one exception, were consecrated by Celtic or foreign Bishops.
Deusdedit, however, did found a nunnery in the Isle of Thanet and had some share in the foundation of Medshamstead Abbey (Peterborough Cathedral) in AD 657.
www.earlybritishkingdoms.com /adversaries/bios/deusdedit.html   (160 words)

  
 The Archbishop of Canterbury
The Archbishopric of Canterbury is the oldest ecclesiastical authority in all of Britain.
The Archbishop of Canterbury is appointed by the Crown (the English Crown, in the end, won that argument), and Queen Elizabeth II appointed the Most Revd.
The Archbishop is the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Canterbury.
www.southbear.com /Archbishop_Canterbury.html   (2354 words)

  
 Archbishop of Canterbury - OrthodoxWiki
The Archbishop of Canterbury is the primate of the Church of England and the spiritual head of the Anglican Communion.
The current Archbishop of Canterbury is the Right Honorable and Most Reverend Rowan Williams, 104th successor to the Chair of St. Augustine of Canterbury.
He chose a to send a group of Benedictine monks, under the leadership of St. Augustine of Canterbury (not to be confused with Augustine of Hippo).
orthodoxwiki.org /Archbishop_of_Canterbury   (587 words)

  
 Deusdedit of Canterbury - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
July 14, 664) was the sixth (and first Saxon) Archbishop of Canterbury.
Also called Adeodatus, he was known as Frithona until his consecration by Ithamar, Bishop of Rochester, on 26th March AD 655 according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle.
 This article about an Archbishop of Canterbury is a stub.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Deusdedit_of_Canterbury   (145 words)

  
 Domestic-Church.Com: Saint Profile: Saint Adrian of Canterbury
Saint Adrian was an Abbot of a monastery near Naples, Italy when the Archbishop of Canterbury died in 664.
Saint Adrian, having rejected the position of Archbishop of Canterbury for himself, accompanied Saint Theodore of Tarsus as an assistant and advisor.
After some adventures in France, when Adrian was arrested by the mayor of Neustria as an agent of the Eastern Emperor, and Theodore had to travel on alone, the two were reunited in England.
www.domestic-church.com /CONTENT.DCC/19990101/SAINTS/stadrian.htm   (700 words)

  
 Saints of July 14
In 1241, Boniface was elected archbishop of Canterbury through the influence of his niece, Eleanor, wife of King Henry III of England, but did not enter his see until 1244.
Deusdedit was a South Saxon, who became the first Anglo-Saxon primate when he succeeded Saint Honorius as archbishop of Canterbury in 653.
Nothing further is known of him except that he died during the great pestilence, on the same day as King Erconbert of Kent, and was buried in the monastery church of Saints Peter and Paul (later Saint Augustine's) in Canterbury.
www.saintpatrickdc.org /ss/0714.htm   (3827 words)

  
 Northvegr - The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
And the minster was hallowed by Archbishop Deusdedit of Canterbury; and the Bishop of Rochester, Ithamar; and the Bishop of London, who was called Wina; and the Bishop of the Mercians, whose name was Jeruman; and Bishop Tuda.
Afterwards came another archbishop to Canterbury, who was called Theodorus; a very good man and wise; and held his synod with his bishops and with his clerk.
There was Wilfrid, bishop of the Mercians, deprived of his bishopric; and Saxulf, abbot, was there chosen bishop; and Cuthbald, monk of the same minster, was chosen abbot.
www.northvegr.org /lore/anglo/001_05.php   (1052 words)

  
 September 30: Honorius of Canterbury
Whether he traveled there with St. Augustine of Canterbury in 596 or was sent with the second group in 601 is not certain.
When Archbishop Justus of Canterbury died around 627 or 628, Honorius was chosen to fill his place.
After a wait of eighteen months, his place was taken by Deusdedit, the first English-born Archbishop of Canterbury.
chi.gospelcom.net /DAILYF/2003/09/daily-09-30-2003.shtml   (679 words)

  
 Bede's Ecclesiastical History of England   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Deusdedit, archbishop of Canterbury, dying, Wighard was sent to Rome to succeed him in that dignity; but he dying there, Theodore - was ordained archbishop, and sent into Britain with the Abbot Hadrian.
IN the above­mentioned year of the aforesaid eclipse, which was presently followed by the pestilence, in which also Bishop Colman, being overcome by the unanimous consent of the Catholics, returned home, Deusdedit, the sixth bishop of the church of Canterbury, died on the I4th of July.
But at the time when Deusdedit died, and a bishop for the church of Canterbury was by request ordained and sent, Wilfrid was also sent out of Britain into Erance to be ordained; and because he returned before Theodore, he ordained priests and deacons i¢ Kent till the archbishop should come to his see.
www.believeonjesus.com /articles/bede/bede4.asp   (10924 words)

  
 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: Part 1: A.D. 1 - 748
A.D. This year was King Edwin baptized at Easter, with all his people, by Paulinus, who also preached baptism in Lindsey, where the first person who believed was a certain rich man, of the name of Bleek, with all his people.
At this time Honorius succeeded Boniface in the papacy, and sent hither to Paulinus the pall; and Archbishop Justus having departed this life on the tenth of November, Honorius was consecrated at Lincoln Archbishop of Canterbury by Paulinus; and Pope Honorius sent him the pall.
And the pope sent then his writ to England, thus saying: "I Agatho, Pope of Rome, greet well the worthy Ethelred, king of the Mercians, and the Archbishop Theodorus of Canterbury, and Saxulf, the bishop of the Mercians, who before was abbot, and all the abbots that are in England; God's greeting and my blessing.
omacl.org /Anglo/part1.html   (10113 words)

  
 Anglican Communion: Archbishops of Canterbury
The Archbishop of Canterbury is the Focus for Unity for the three Instruments of Communion of the Anglican Communion, and is therefore a unique focus for Anglican unity.
He was enthroned at Canterbury Cathedral on 27th February 2003.
George Carey was the 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury, from 1991 until 2002.
www.aco.org /archbishops   (169 words)

  
 Chapter2
Ethelbert also gave Mellitus the bishopric of London; and to Justus he gave the bishopric of Rochester, which is twenty-fourmiles from Canterbury.
At this time Honorius succeeded Boniface in the papacy, and sent hither to Paulinus thepall; and Archbishop Justus having departed this life on the tenth of November, Honorius was consecrated at Lincoln Archbishop of Canterbury by Paulinus; and Pope Honorius sent him the pall.
Afterwards came another archbishop to Canterbury, who was called Theodorus; avery good man and wise; and held his synod with his bishops and with his clerk.
www.ealdriht.org /ASCHron2.html   (3362 words)

  
 Famous Anglicans and Episcopalians | Notable Anglicans
Additional U.S. Supreme Court Justices who were Episcopalians:
Archbishop of Canterbury and one of the three Anglican Bishops martyred in Oxford in the sixteenth century under Queen Mary Tudor.
Cranmer is best known for being the primary architect of the Book of Common Prayer as well as the author of the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion (orginally Forty-two Articles).
www.adherents.com /largecom/fam_anglican.html   (1767 words)

  
 The Shire of Vanished Wood   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
The first is Alcuinus or Albinus, an abbot of Canterbury, at whose instigation he undertook the work; who sent by Nothelm, afterwards archbishop of that province, a full account of all ecclesiastical transactions in Kent, and in the contiguous districts, from the first conversion of the Saxons.
It is probable, therefore, that he left some proofs of this attention to his native language and as he died within a few years of Bede, the latter would naturally avail himself of his labours.
by the archbishops of Canterbury, or by their direction (28), at least as far as the year 1001, or by even 1070; for the Benet MS., which some call the Plegmund MS., ends in the latter year; the rest being in Latin.
www.vanishedwood.org /castle/library/book.php?id=AngloSaxonChronicle   (20009 words)

  
 Believing Thomas -September 2004
Not long after that meeting the Archbishop of Canterbury, Deusdedit, died and the British flock selected Wighard, who had been sponsored by King Oswald of Northumbria, to serve in that post.
He first turned to an African abbot named Adrian (some authorities call him Hadrian), but the abbot politely declined on the grounds that he was not sufficiently worthy.
Upon the death of Theodore, September 19, 690, Adrian finally accepted the title of Archbishop of Canterbury he had so often refused before.
www.sfcsa.org /church/bt_2004_09.htm   (576 words)

  
 Northvegr - Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation
CHAPTER I: IN the above­mentioned year of the aforesaid eclipse, which was presently followed by the pestilence, in which also Bishop Colman, being overcome by the unanimous consent of the Catholics, returned home, Deusdedit, the sixth bishop of the church of Canterbury, died on the I4th of July.
Erconbert, also, king of Kent, departed this life the same month and day; leaving his kingdom to his son Egbert, which he held nine years.
Theodore, visiting all parts, ordained bishops in proper places, and with their assistance corrected such things as he found faulty.
www.northvegr.org /lore/bede/022.php   (1915 words)

  
 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle 601-699
This year was King Edwin baptized at Easter, with all his people, by Paulinus, who also preached baptism in Lindsey, where the first person who believed was a certain rich man, of the name of Bleek, with all his people.
This year was Peada slain; and Wulfhere, son of Penda, succeeded to the kingdom of the Mercians.
This year Oswy and Egbert sent Wighard, a priest, to Rome, that he might be consecrated there Archbishop of Canterbury; but he died as soon as he came thither.
www.chrisbutterworth.com /hist/asc0601.htm   (4866 words)

  
 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: Part 2: A.D. 646 - 754
Afterwards came another archbishop to Canterbury, who was called Theodorus; a
Now bid I thee, brother Theodorus, that thou let it be proclaimed through all England, that a synod be gathered, and this writ be read and
A.D. This year died Cuthred, king of the West-Saxons; and Sebright, his relative, succeeded to the kingdom, which he held one year; Cyneard succeeded Humferth in the see of Winchester; and Canterbury was this year on fire.
www.celtic-twilight.com /anglosaxon/asc/asc_p02.htm   (4445 words)

  
 Britannia: The AngloSaxon Chronicle
by Archbishop Deusdedit of Canterbury; and the Bishop of
Pope of Rome and the Archbishop of Canterbury.
another archbishop to Canterbury, who was called Theodorus; a
www.britannia.com /history/docs/645-56.html   (1601 words)

  
 The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle - Part 1: A.D. 1 - 748
And Ethelbert gave Mellitus a bishop's see in London, and to Justus he gave Rochester, which is twenty-four miles from Canterbury.
A.D. This year Wighard went to Rome, even as King Oswy, and Egbert had sent him.
A.D. This year Archbishop Theodore, who had been bishop twenty-two winters, departed this life, and was buried within the city of Canterbury.
www.electricscotland.com /history/england/saxons1.htm   (9447 words)

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