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|image=[[File:Painted carving of St Alphege in Canterbury Cathedral.jpg|220px]]
|image=[[File:Painted carving of St Alphege in Canterbury Cathedral.jpg|220px]]
|caption='''The painted carving of the martyrdom of St Alphege, in [[Canterbury Cathedral]]'''
|caption='''The painted carving of the martyrdom of St Alphege, in [[Canterbury Cathedral]]'''
|birth_name = Ælfheah
|birth_name = Ælfheahloper
|consecration = 1006
|consecration = 1006
|began=unknown
|began=unknown

Revision as of 14:05, 30 April 2009

Ælfheah of Canterbury
The painted carving of the martyrdom of St Alphege, in Canterbury Cathedral
Installedunknown
Term ended19 April 1012
PredecessorÆlfric of Abingdon
SuccessorLyfing
Orders
Consecration1006
Personal details
Born
Ælfheahloper

954
Died19 April 1012
Greenwich, Kent, England
BuriedCanterbury Cathedral
Sainthood
Feast day19 April
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church;[1] Anglican Communion[2]
Canonized1078
Rome
by Pope Gregory VII
AttributesArchbishop holding an axe[3]
PatronageGreenwich; Solihull; kidnap victims[4]

Ælfheah (954 – 19 April 1012; Template:Lang-ang, "elf-high"), officially remembered by the name Alphege within the Church, and sometimes called Alfege, was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester, later Archbishop of Canterbury. He became an anchorite before being elected abbot of Bath Abbey. His perceived piety and sanctity led to his promotion to the episcopate, and eventually to his becoming archbishop. Ælfheah furthered the cult of St Dunstan and also encouraged learning. He was captured by Viking raiders in 1011 and killed by them the following year, after refusing to allow himself to be ransomed. Ælfheah was canonized as a saint in 1078. Thomas Becket, a later Archbishop of Canterbury (and himself canonized), prayed to him just before his own slaying in Canterbury Cathedral.

Life

Ælfheah became a monk early in life. He first entered the monastery of Deerhurst, but then moved to Bath, where he became an anchorite. He was noted for his piety and austerity, and rose to become abbot of Bath Abbey.[5] Probably due to the influence of Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury (959–988), Ælfheah was elected Bishop of Winchester in 984,[6][7] and was consecrated on 19 October that year.[8] While bishop he was largely responsible for the construction of a large organ in the Old Minster, audible from over a mile away and said to require more than 24 men to operate it. He also built and enlarged the city's churches,[9] and promoted the cult of St Swithun and Swithun's predecessor, Æthelwold of Winchester.[8]

Following a Viking raid in 994, a peace treaty was agreed with one of the raiders, Olaf Tryggvason. Besides receiving danegeld, Olaf converted to Christianity[10] and undertook never to raid or fight the English again.[11] Ælfheah may have played a part in the treaty negotiations, and it is certain that he confirmed Olaf in his new faith.[8]

In 1006 Ælfheah succeeded Aelfric as Archbishop of Canterbury,[12][13] taking St Swithun's head with him as a relic for the new location.[8] He went to Rome in 1007 to receive his pallium—symbol of an archbishop's authority—from Pope John XVIII, but was robbed during his journey.[14] While at Canterbury he promoted the cult of St Dunstan,[8] ordering the writing of the second Life of Dunstan, which Adelard composed between 1006 and 1011.[15] He also introduced new practices into the liturgy, and was instrumental in the Witenagemot's recognition of Wulfsige of Sherborne as a saint in about 1012.[16]

Ælfheah sent Ælfric of Eynsham to Cerne Abbey to take charge of its monastic school.[17] He was present at the council of May 1008 at which Wulfstan II, Archbishop of York, preached his Sermo Lupi ad Anglos (The Sermon of the Wolf to the English), castigating the English for their moral failings and blaming the latter for the tribulations afflicting the country.[18]

In 1011 the Danes again raided England, and from 8–29 September they laid siege to Canterbury. Aided by the treachery of Ælfmaer, whose life Ælfheah had once saved, the raiders succeeded in sacking the city.[19][notes 1] Ælfheah was taken prisoner and held captive for seven months.[20] Godwine (Bishop of Rochester), Leofrun (abbess of St Mildrith's), and the king's reeve, Ælfweard were captured also, but the abbot of St Augustine's Abbey, Ælfmaer, managed to escape.[19] Canterbury Cathedral was plundered and burned by the Danes following Ælfheah's capture.[21]

Death

Ælfheah refused to allow a ransom to be paid for his freedom, and as a result was killed on 19 April 1012 at Greenwich[20] (then in Kent, now London), reputedly on the site of St Alfege's Church.[12][13] The account of Ælfheah's death appears in the E version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:

... the raiding-army became much stirred up against the bishop, because he did not want to offer them any money, and forbade that anything might be granted in return for him. Also they were very drunk, because there was wine brought from the south. Then they seized the bishop, led him to their "hustings"[notes 2] on the Saturday in the octave of Easter, and then pelted him there with bones and the heads of cattle; and one of them struck him on the head with the butt of an axe, so that with the blow he sank down and his holy blood fell on the earth, and sent forth his holy soul to God's kingdom.[22]

Ælfheah was the first Archbishop of Canterbury to die a violent death.[23] A contemporary report tells that Thorkell the Tall attempted to save Ælfheah from the mob about to kill him by offering them everything he owned except for his ship, in exchange for Ælfheah's life; Thorkell's presence is not mentioned in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, however.[24] Some sources record that the final blow, with the back of an axe, was delivered as an act of kindness by a Christian convert known as Thrum. Ælfheah was buried in St Paul's Cathedral,[8] but in 1023 his body was removed by King Canute to Canterbury, with great ceremony.[25] Thorkell the Tall was appalled at the brutality of his fellow raiders, and switched sides to the English king Ethelred the Unready following Ælfheah's death.[26]

Veneration

Pope Gregory VII canonized St Ælfheah in 1078, with a feast day of 19 April.[1] Lanfranc, the first post-conquest Norman archbishop, was dubious about some of the saints venerated at Canterbury. He was persuaded of Ælfheah's sanctity,[27] but Ælfheah and Augustine of Canterbury were the only pre-conquest Anglo-Saxon archbishops kept on Canterbury's calendar of saints.[28] Ælfheah's shrine, which had become neglected, was rebuilt and expanded under St Anselm of Canterbury in the early twelfth century.[29] After the 1174 fire in Canterbury Cathedral, Ælfheah's remains together with those of Saint Dunstan were placed around the High Altar, at which Thomas Becket is said to have commended his life into Ælfheah's care shortly before his martyrdom.[8] An incised paving slab to the north of the present High Altar marks the spot where the medieval shrine is believed to have stood.[1] A Life of St. Alphege in prose and verse was written by a Canterbury monk named Osbern, at Lanfranc's request. The prose version has survived, but the Life is very much a hagiography: many of the stories it contains have obvious Biblical parallels, making them suspect as a historical record.[8]

Notes

  1. ^ How exactly Ælfheah had saved Ælfmaer's life is not recorded in any source.[8]
  2. ^ "Hustings" derives from an Old Norse word that has the meaning of assembly or council, so there may have been some sort of trial that condemned Ælfheah.[22]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Delaney Dictionary of Saints pp. 29–30
  2. ^ Holford-Strevens, et al Oxford Book of Days pp. 160–161
  3. ^ "St. Alphege". Catholic Online. Accessed on 18 February 2009
  4. ^ "Saint Alphege of Winchester". Saints. SPQN. Accessed on 18 February 2009
  5. ^ Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses, England and Wales pp. 28, 241
  6. ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 223
  7. ^ Barlow English Church 1000–1066 p. 109 footnote 5
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Leyser "Ælfheah (d. 1012) (subscription required)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  9. ^ Hindley A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons pp. 304–305
  10. ^ Stenton Anglo-Saxon England p. 378
  11. ^ Williams Æthelred the Unready p. 47
  12. ^ a b Walsh A New Dictionary of Saints p. 28
  13. ^ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 214
  14. ^ Barlow English Church 1000–1066 pp. 298–299 footnote 7
  15. ^ Barlow English Church 1000–1066 p. 62
  16. ^ Barlow English Church 1000–1066 p. 223
  17. ^ Stenton Anglo-Saxon England p. 458
  18. ^ Fletcher Bloodfeud p. 94
  19. ^ a b Williams Æthelred the Unready pp. 106–107
  20. ^ a b Hindley A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons p. 301
  21. ^ Barlow English Church 1000–1066 pp. 209–210
  22. ^ a b Swanton Anglo-Saxon Chronicle p. 142
  23. ^ Fletcher Bloodfeud p. 78
  24. ^ Williams Æthelred the Unready pp. 109–110
  25. ^ Hindley A Brief History of the Anglo-Saxons pp. 309–310
  26. ^ Stenton Anglo-Saxon England p. 383
  27. ^ Williams English and the Norman Conquest p. 137
  28. ^ Stenton Anglo-Saxon England p. 672
  29. ^ Brooke Popular Religion in the Middle Ages p. 40

References

Further reading

  • McDougal, I. (1993). "Serious Entertainments: An Examination of a Peculiar Type of Viking Atrocity". Anglo-Saxon England XXII. pp. 201–225.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of Winchester
984–1006
Succeeded by
Preceded by Archbishop of Canterbury
1006–1012
Succeeded by

Template:Persondata