enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Vita Sancti Cuthberti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vita_Sancti_Cuthberti

    The Vita Sancti Cuthberti (English: "Life of Saint Cuthbert") is a prose hagiography from early medieval Northumbria.It is probably the earliest extant saint's life from Anglo-Saxon England, and is an account of the life and miracles of Cuthbert (died 687), a Bernician hermit-monk who became bishop of Lindisfarne.

  3. Cuthbert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuthbert

    The school badge features a bishop's crook in reference to St Cuthbert's time as a bishop, as well as ducks, reflecting his love of the animals. Another Roman Catholic secondary school to bear the name of St Cuthbert is St Cuthbert's RC High School in Rochdale. Founded in 1968 as Bishop Henshaw School it was renamed to its current name in the ...

  4. Common eider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Eider

    Common eiders (Somateria mollissima) in the breeding season on Texel, the Netherlands. The common eider (pronounced / ˈ aɪ. d ər /) (Somateria mollissima), also called St. Cuthbert's duck or Cuddy's duck, is a large (50–71 cm (20–28 in) in body length) sea-duck that is distributed over the northern coasts of Europe, North America and eastern Siberia.

  5. Cult of saints in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult_of_saints_in_Anglo...

    Bede recorded that during the disinterments of both St Æthelthryth and St Cuthbert, their bodies were found to have been miraculously preserved and undecayed. [84] In the nineteenth century, a medical examination of St Cuthbert's remains found that there was still some evidence of fleshly preservation, thus lending credence to the Anglo-Saxon ...

  6. Historia de Sancto Cuthberto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historia_de_Sancto_Cuthberto

    The Historia de Sancto Cuthberto ("History of St Cuthbert") is a historical compilation finished some time after 1031. It is an account of the history of the bishopric of St Cuthbert—based successively at Lindisfarne, Norham, Chester-le-Street and finally Durham—from the life of St Cuthbert himself onwards.

  7. List of works by Bede - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_works_by_Bede

    Life of St. Felix. An adaptation into prose of four poems on St Felix by Paulinus of Nola. [24] Life of St. Cuthbert (verse) Bede wrote two lives of St Cuthbert; this one is in verse and was probably composed between 705 and 716. [25] The first printed edition was by Canisius, in his Antiquae Lectiones, which appeared between 1601 and 1604.

  8. Ælfflæd of Whitby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ælfflæd_of_Whitby

    A late hagiography, the Vita sanctae Elfledae, survives, collected in John Capgrave's Nova Legenda Angliae of 1516. Excavations in the 1920s by Radford and Peers found several building foundations and two inscribed memorial stones believed to record the deaths of St. Ælfflaed, Abbess of Whitby, and Cyneburgh, queen of King Oswald. [10]

  9. Cuncacestre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuncacestre

    A stone chapel was built to receive the remains of St. Cuthbert's body and Aldhun began a great church on the site of Durham Cathedral, which was finished and consecrated in 999. The see and diocese of Lindisfarne (and Cuncacestre) was moved to Durham and the bishop's title became Bishop of Durham , with Aldhun becoming the first Bishop of Durham.