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What Englishness Is

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

All communities tend to develop an account of their own origins. Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People has this advantage, that all but twenty-two chapters at the beginning of the first book deal with matters in his own lifetime or so near it that he could collect testimonies from eyewitnesses or from those who had seen and heard them, as well as from written materials. His history has therefore held its place as a source, despite some criticism of his selection of evidence. It remained in English libraries through the critical years of the Reformation, and was printed in the seventeenth century in England as well as on the continent, in Latin and in King Alfred’s and in another English version. This contributed something to the Anglican view of the origin of the Church of England, in tales of conflict and reconciliation between Celtic and Roman missions. On the question of Easter Bede’s details were relevant to disputes about the change in the Roman calendar in the sixteenth century. He also said that an Archbishop of Canterbury supplemented what was lacking in an ordination by bishops whose status was in doubt.

What came to be called The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was put into shape more than a century after the death of Bede, in the days of King Alfred. It was copied and continued at Peterborough until the end of the reign of Stephen, but it did not find favour with the Norman ruling class who occupied the important positions in church and state after 1066.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1993 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 By Thomas Slapleton, a recusant priest, in Antwerp 1574. The edition by Abraham Wheloc (London and Cambridge, 1643‐4) contains King Alfred's version.

2 IV, c. 2.

3 Translated by Lewis Thorpe (Penguin, 1966)

4 In Ethelwerd's Latin version of the Anglo‐Saxon Chronicle, III, c. 2.

5 William of Malmesbury, Gesta Regum II, 116Google Scholar

6 His ship‐burial, with an account of his coming, begins Beowulf.

7 Chapter 22.

8 Ecclesiastical History I, c. 4.

9 Robert Parsons S.J. Three Conversions of England (1603), pp 76–80.

10 Francis Godwin, Bishop of Hereford, A Catalogue of English Bishops (1615) pp. 19–35.

11 Ibid., pp.36–7 12. Chapter 8.

13 Bossy, John, The English Catholic Community, 1570–1850 (London, 1975) pp 62–7Google Scholar.

14 See Perkin, Harold, Origins of Modern English Society, 1780–1880 (London, 1969) pp 187–9Google Scholar on dismantling regulations.

15 See my High Church Party, 1688–718 (London, 1956) p 135.

16 See Berington, Joseph, The State and Behaviour of English Catholics from the Reformation to the year 1780 (London, 1780)Google Scholar especially pp 116–17.

17 see Bossy, op. cit., pp.295–322, and my articles on ‘John Gother and Laborious Christians’ in Heythrop Journal xxxiii, 1, 1982Google Scholar, on Walsall in Recusant History, 19, 3, May 1989Google Scholar and New Blackfriars 70, October 1989 on ‘Origins of England's Urban Catholicism’.

18 Macaulay reviewing Gladstone on Church and State in Edinburgh Review (April, 1839)