St Wilfrid of Hexham and York

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘St Wilfrid of Hexham and York’

1
Eddi’s Service Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling’s poem about St Wilfrid’s chaplain and an unusual Christmas congregation.

Kipling firmly believed that Christianity should embrace the animal kingdom, and this poem precedes a tale in which a seal plays a key role in the conversion of the South Saxons. That story and this poem are pure fiction, though Eddi (Eddius Stephanus, Stephen of Ripon) really was St Wilfrid’s chaplain.

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2
St Wilfrid and the Fishers of Men Clay Lane

Driven out of Northumbria, Bishop Wilfrid goes to the south coast and saves a kingdom from starvation.

In 681 St Wilfrid, exiled from Northumbria by King Ecgfrith, arrived in Sussex, the still-pagan Kingdom of the South Saxons, where he and his monks had an instant impact.

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3
St Wilfrid’s Debt Clay Lane

The Blessed Virgin Mary adds four years to the life of Bishop Wilfrid, and an angel suggests a suitable thank-you.

Wilfrid, bishop of Hexham, visited Rome in 703-704, to resolve an ongoing dispute with the King of Northumbria. On his way back, he fell ill.

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4
St Wilfrid and the Sheriff’s Wife Clay Lane

St Wilfrid brings healing to the wife of his own gaoler.

Having fallen foul of Ecgfrith, King of Northumbria, in 680 Wilfrid found himself in prison, and under very unpleasant conditions. His gaoler was the King’s sheriff, Osfrith.

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5
St Wilfrid and the Angel of Light Clay Lane

St Wilfrid finds comfort during his tussle with the King of Northumbria

St Wilfrid was made Bishop of York, capital of the ancient Kingdom of Northumbria, in 665. He was involved in constant controversy as he resented King Ecgfrith’s interference, but he was also a key figure in keeping the English Church in close contact with the Orthodox churches of Rome and Greece, for which Bede praises him.

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