Ecclesiastical history of the English nation, books IV and V ; Lives of the abbots ; Letter to Egbert
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Ecclesiastical history of the English nation, books IV and V ; Lives of the abbots ; Letter to Egbert
(The Loeb classical library, 248 . Opera historica : in two volumes / Baedae ; with an English translation by J.E. King ; 2)
Harvard University Press , W. Heinemann, 1930
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- : uk
- Other Title
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Bede : Historical works
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum
Historia abbatum
Epistola ad Ecgberctum
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Note
Latin text and parallel English translation on opposite pages
"Based on the version of Thomas Stapleton, 1565"
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Abbatial annals of medieval England.
Bede “the Venerable,” English theologian and historian, was born in AD 672 or 673 in the territory of the single monastery at Wearmouth and Jarrow. He was ordained deacon (691–2) and priest (702–3) of the monastery, where his whole life was spent in devotion, choral singing, study, teaching, discussion, and writing. Besides Latin he knew Greek and possibly Hebrew.
Bede’s theological works were chiefly commentaries, mostly allegorical in method, based with acknowledgment on Jerome, Augustine, Ambrose, Gregory, and others, but bearing his own personality. In another class were works on grammar and one on natural phenomena; special interest in the vexed question of Easter led him to write about the calendar and chronology. But his most admired production is his Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation. Here a clear and simple style united with descriptive powers to produce an elegant work, and the facts diligently collected from good sources make it a valuable account. Historical also are his Lives of the Abbots of his monastery, the less successful accounts (in verse and prose) of Cuthbert, and the Letter (November 734) to Egbert his pupil, so important for our knowledge about the Church in Northumbria.
The Loeb Classical Library edition of Bede’s historical works is in two volumes.
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