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ÆTHELWOLD OF WINCHESTER

:''For the second Bishop of Winchester of this name and all other homonyms see Æthelwold''

'Saint Æthelwold of Winchester' (also spelled 'Aethelwald', 'Ethelwold', etc) (909-984) was a 10th century Bishop of Winchester and leader of the monastic reform movement in Anglo-Saxon England.

Contents
Life
Veneration
Notes
References
See Also

Life


Æthelwold was born in Winchester of good parentage in about 909. After a youth spent at the court of King Athelstan, Æthelwold placed himself under Alphege the Bald, Bishop of Winchester, who gave him the tonsure and ordained him priest along with Saint Dunstan. Æthelwold became a monk at Glastonbury Abbey, where he was dean during Dunstan's abbacy, until about 955 when he was appointed Abbot of Abingdon.[1][2]
On 29 November 963, he was consecrated Bishop of WinchesterPowicke ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 257 by Saint Dunstan, and with Oswald of Worcester, he worked zealously in combating the general corruption occasioned by the Danish inroads into the country. At Winchester, both in the Old and the New Minster, he replaced the evil-living seculars with monks and refounded the ancient nunnery known as Nunnaminster. His labours extended to Chertsey, Milton, Ely, Peterborough, Thorney and elsewhere; expelling the unworthy, rebuilding and restoring.Walsh ''A New Dictionary of Saints'' p. 184 The epithets "father of monks" and "benevolent bishop" summarize Æthelwold's character as reformer and friend of Christ's poor.Catholic Online Saints and Angels: St. Ethelwold accessed on September 5, 2007 Though he suffered much from ill-health, his life as scholar, teacher, prelate and Royal counsellor was ever austere, said to be "terrible as a lion" to the rebellious, yet "gentler than a dove" to the meek. He is said to have written a treatise on the circle and to have translated the "Regularis Concordia". He died on 1 August 984 at Beddington in Surrey.

Veneration


He was buried in the Old Minster at Winchester, his body being translated by Alphege, his successor, and then again into the new Cathedral. By the 12th century, Abingdon Abbey had acquired an arm and a leg [1].
His liturgical feast is kept on 1 August.

Notes


1. Anglo-Saxons.net Charter S567 accessed on September 5, 2007
2. Kelly "Charters of Abingdon, part 1" ''Anglo-Saxon Charters''

References



Anglo-Saxons.net Charter S567 accessed on September 5, 2007

Britannia Bios St. Aethelwold

Catholic Encyclopedia, 1909: St. Ethelwold

[2]

Catholic Online Saints and Angels: St. Ethelwold accessed on September 5, 2007

Detail of St. Æthelwold, The Benedictional of St. Æthelwold

Early British Kingdoms: St. Aethelwold, Bishop of Winchester (AD 909-984)

Early British Kingdoms for Kids: Aethelwold & Monastic Reforms

★ Fryde, E. B. and others, 1986. ''Handbook of British Chronology'', 3rd edition.

★ Kelly, S. E. 2000. Charters of Abingdon, part 1. ''Anglo-Saxon Charters'' 7.

★ Lapidge, M and Winterbottom, M, 1991. Wulfstan of Winchester: Life of St AEthelwold.

★ Lambertson, Reader Isaac. Commemoration of Our Father among the Saints Æthelwold, Bishop of Winchester

★ London, British Library, MS. Add. 49598 (''The Benedictional of St. Æthelwold'')

Powicke, F. Maurice and E. B. Fryde ''Handbook of British Chronology'' 2nd. ed. London:Royal Historical Society 1961

★ Walsh, Michael ''A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West'' London: Burns & Oates 2007 ISBN 0-8601-2438-X

★ Yorke, Barbara 1997. Bishop Aethelwold: His Career and Influence

See Also



List of bishops of Winchester

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