| 27. The Venerable Bede (673-735) |
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St Bede was a monk, an historian and a scholar whose delight it was to impart to others something of his great knowledge, and and he did so with a humility and an ease that endeared him to his fellow monks. His best known work is "The Ecclesiastical History of the English People". Fr John Murray PP tells his story.
Anno Domini The practice of dividing time into BC ('Before Christ') and AD ('Anno Domini') (in the year of the Lord) wasn't actually invented by Bede. He, like the good scholar that he was, attributed this to Dionysius, a Roman abbot, who lived between 500 and 550. However the system lay relatively unused for two hundred years until Bede started to popularize it. Soon it spread to Europe and was taken up by the Holy Roman Emperor Charlemagne and later by the Popes. Pupil of Benedict Biscop His works show that he had at his command all the learning of the time. It was thought that the library at Jarrow had about 500 books, making it one of the most extensive in the whole of England. Bede's mentor, Benedict, did his best to ensure that the library continued to be well stocked and added to it from his travels within the realm and to the continent of Europe. Indeed, even within Bede's own lifetime he was regarded as one of the most intelligent men of his age, and the Council of Aachen in 835 referred to Bede as a contemporary doctor of the Church. Many of his commentaries on scripture were read extensively during the Middle Ages. He lived for eternity It was this standard which guided his historical writings. He did not actually begin writing until he was ordained a priest at the age of thirty and then only at the behest of Ceolfrid, an abbot, whom he revered. His effort then for the rest of his life was to bring to his fellow countrymen the teachings of the four great Western doctors: Jerome, Augustine, Ambrose and Gregory. A modern historian has praised his contribution: 'First among English scholars, first among English theologians, first among English historians, it is in the monk of Jarrow that English literature strikes its roots. In the six hundred scholars who gathered around him for instruction, he is the father of our national education.' His access to the great library of Jarrow ensured that his research and study of the sources was as comprehensive as it could be at the time. The Ecclesiastical History of the English People Bede too, was always scrupulous in recording the sources of his information - and in asking those who copied and edited his work to preserve these references (a practice which they did not always obey). Even today modern scholars regard his History as the authoritative account of Christianity in England from its inception to Bede's own time. A man of one place Death and feastday The title 'Venerable' began to be applied within a couple of generations of his death as the influence of his writings spread. However it wasn't until 1899 that Pope Leo XIII gave him the title `Doctor of the Church'. His feast day is kept on 25th May each year. This article first appeared in The Messenger (May 2008), a publication of the Irish Jesuits. |







