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Benedict Biscop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Benedict Biscop
Biscop Baducing
Saint Benedict Biscop
Bornc. 628
Northumbria
Died(690-01-12)12 January 690
St Peter's, Wearmouth (Sunderland)
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Church of England
Orthodox Church[1]
Major shrineWearmouth 690 – c. 980;
translated c. 980 from there to
Thorney Abbey (Glastonbury Abbey
also claims his relics)
Feast12 January (Anglican & Catholic)
PatronageEnglish Benedictines,[2] musicians, painters, and (since 24 March 2004) the City of Sunderland[3] St Benet Biscop Catholic Academy in Northumberland

Benedict Biscop (c. 628 – 690), also known as Biscop Baducing, was an Anglo-Saxon abbot and founder of Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Priory (where he also founded the famous library) and was considered a saint after his death.

It has been suggested that Baducing appears as Biscop Beding the son of Beda Bubbing, King of Mercia in the Lyndsey/Lindfearnan lists of geneaologies held by the Anglian Collection and great-grandfather of Alfred The Great.[4]

Life

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Early career

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Benedict, born of a noble Northumbrian family, was for a time a thegn of King Oswiu of Bernicia[5] (r. 642–670) At the age of 25 (c. 653) Benedict made the first of his five trips to Rome, accompanying his friend Saint Wilfrid the Elder. However Wilfrid was detained in Lyon en route. Benedict completed the journey on his own, and when he returned to England was "full of fervour and enthusiasm ... for the good of the English Church".[6]

Benedict made a second journey to Rome twelve years later. Alchfrith of Deira, a son of King Oswiu, intended to accompany him, but the king refused to grant permission. On this trip Biscop met Acca and Wilfrid. On his return journey to England Benedict stopped at Lérins, a monastic island off the Mediterranean coast of Provence, which had by then adopted the Rule of St. Benedict. During his two-year stay there, from 665 to 667, he underwent a course of instruction, taking monastic vows[7] and the name of "Benedict".

Following the two years in Lérins Benedict made his third trip to Rome. At this time Pope Vitalian commissioned him to accompany Archbishop Theodore of Tarsus back to Canterbury in 669. On their return Archbishop Theodore appointed Benedict as abbot of SS. Peter and Paul's, Canterbury, a role he held for two years.[8]

Bibliophile

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Benedict Biscop, the Bibliophile, assembled a library from his travels. His second trip to Rome had been a book-buying trip. Overall, the collection had an estimated 250 titles of mostly service books. The library included scripture, classical, and secular works.[9]

Founder

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Ecgfrith of Northumbria granted Benedict land in 674 for the purpose of building a monastery. He went to the Continent to bring back masons who could build a monastery in the Pre-Romanesque style. Benedict made his fifth and final trip to Rome in 679 to bring back books for a library, saintly relics, stonemasons, glaziers, and a grant from Pope Agatho granting his monastery certain privileges. Benedict made five overseas voyages in all to stock the library.[10][11]

In 682 Benedict appointed Eosterwine as his coadjutor and the King was so delighted at the success of St Peter's, he gave him land in Jarrow and urged him to build a second monastery. Benedict erected a sister foundation (St Paul) at Jarrow. He appointed Ceolfrid as the superior, who left Wearmouth with 20 monks to start the foundation in Jarrow. Bede, one of Benedict's pupils, tells us that he brought builders and glass-workers from Francia to erect the buildings in stone.[11][12]

He drew up a rule for his community, based on that of Benedict and the customs of seventeen monasteries he had visited. He also engaged Abbot John, Arch-cantor of St. Peter's in Rome, to teach Roman chant at these monasteries.[7]

In 685, Ecgfrith granted the land south of the River Wear to Biscop. Separated from the monastery, this would be known as the "sundered land," which in time would become the name of the wider urban area.[13]

Benedict's idea was to build a model monastery for England, sharing his knowledge of the experience of the Church in Europe. It was the first ecclesiastical building in Britain to be built in stone, and the use of glass was a novelty for many in 7th-century England. It eventually possessed what was a large library for the time – several hundred volumes – and it was here that Benedict's student Bede wrote his famous works. The library became world-famous and manuscripts that had been copied there became prized possessions throughout Europe,[14] including especially the Codex Amiatinus, the earliest surviving manuscript of the complete Bible in the Latin Vulgate version.

Death

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For the last three years of his life Benedict was bed-ridden. He suffered his affliction with great patience and faith.[11] He died on 12 January 690.[15]

Veneration

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A sermon of Bede (Homily 17) indicates that there was a very early public cult of Biscop; for his feast, but it became more widespread only after the translation of his relics to Thorney under Ethelwold c. 980.[16] He is recognised as a saint by the Christian Church, which holds his feast day on 12 January.

Benedict is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 12 January.[17] The parish church in Wombourne, Staffordshire is the only one in England dedicated to Benedict.

The Eastern Orthodox Church venerates him as a saint and celebrates his feast day on 12th January on the New Calendar.[1]


See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b Hutchison-Hall 2013, p. 47.
  2. ^ English Benedictine Congregation – January Ordo Archived 10 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Sunderland City Council minutes, 24 March 2004 Archived 14 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ The Anglian collection of royal genealogies and regnal lists, DAVID N. DUMVILLE, 1976, Cambridge University Press
  5. ^ HAbb, I; Blair, p. 155. Biscop, while unusual, is not a unique Northumbrian byname. Blair notes the possibility that, given the proximity of Benedict's birth and King Edwin of Deira's conversion, some unusual circumstances his birth, or perhaps baptism, may account for this byname.
  6. ^ St. Benedict Biscop (AD 628–689) Archived 29 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine. An edition of Gibson, E.C.S., Northumbrian Saints, S.P.C.K., 1884. Britannia.com. Retrieved on 26 May 2008.
  7. ^ a b Ott, Michael. "St. Benedict Biscop." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 23 January 2020Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. ^ HAbb, II–III; Blair, pp. 156–159
  9. ^ Olley, L. (2014). Benedict Biscop: Benedictine, Builder, Bibliophile. Theological Librarianship, 7(1), pp. 30-37
  10. ^ Woods Tomas E. Jr. (2005). How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization. Regnery. ISBN 0895260387.
  11. ^ a b c Attwater, Donald and Catherine Rachel John. The Penguin Dictionary of Saints. 3rd edition. New York: Penguin Books, 1993. ISBN 0-14-051312-4.
  12. ^ HAbb, IV–VI; Blair, p. 161.
  13. ^ "Old Sunderland History". englandsnortheast.co.uk. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  14. ^ HAbb, IV & VI; Blair, pp. 165ff.
  15. ^ AVCeol, 18; Blair, p. 177.
  16. ^ "Benedict Biscop", The Oxford Dictionary of Saints
  17. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "St. Benedict Biscop". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Sources

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Preceded by
Abbot of
Monkwearmouth

674–681
Succeeded by