Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

ALPHEGE


'Saint Alphege' is the commonly used name for 'Ælfheah' (95419 April 1012), the Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester and, later, Archbishop of Canterbury.

Contents
Life
Death
Veneration
Records
Notes
See also
External links
References

Life


Alphege was born in Weston in Somerset, of a noble family, but in early life gave up everything to devote himself to his faith. Having assumed the monastic habit in the monastery of Deerhurst, he passed thence to Bath, where he became an anchorite and ultimately abbot of the abbey there, distinguishing himself by his piety and the austerity of his life.Knowles ''Heads of Religious Houses'' p. 28 In 984, he was appointed, through Dunstan's influence, to the Bishopric of WinchesterPowicke ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 257 and, in 1006, he succeeded Aelfric as Archbishop of Canterbury.Powicke ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 210Walsh ''A New Dictionary of Saints'' p. 28
At the sack of Canterbury by the Danes in 1011, Alphege was captured and kept in prison for seven months. Refusing to allow a ransom to be paid, he was murdered at Greenwich, Kent (now London), reputedly on the site of St Alfege's Church there, on 19 April 1012.

Death



An account of his death appears in The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle:
. . . for there was wine brought them from the south. Then took they the bishop . . . on the eve of the Sunday after Easter . . . They overwhelmed him with bones and horns of oxen; and one of them smote him with an axe-iron on the head; so that he sunk downwards with the blow; and his holy blood fell on the earth, whilst his sacred soul was sent to the realm of God.

Some sources record the final blow, with the back of an axe, being dealt by one ''Thrum'' as an act of kindness by a Christian convert. He was buried in St Paul's Cathedral, whence his body was removed by King Canute to Canterbury, with all the ceremony of a great act of state, in 1023.

Veneration


Alphege was canonised in 1078. An incised paving slab to the north of the present High Altar of Canterbury Cathedral marks the place where the medieval shrine is believed to have stood. His feast day is 19 April.
Church dedications include: St Alphege the Martyr in Canterbury (now used as an urban studies centre), St Alfege's Church, Greenwich, the twin churches of St Alphege Whitstable and St Alphege Seasalter (chancel only surviving) and St Alphege in Solihull, the main town of the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull. There is also an unexpectedly charming 1930s Catholic church of St Alphege, closely modelled on a Roman basilica, at Oldfield Park, Bath.
There is also an altar dedicated to St Alphege in Bath Abbey with a fine modern frontal designed by Jane Lemon

Records


''Lives of St. Alphege'' in prose—which survives—and in verse were written by command of Lanfranc by the Canterbury monk, Osborn (d. c. 1090), who says that his account of the solemn translation to Canterbury in 1023 was received from the dean, Godric, one of Alphege's own scholars.

Notes



See also


List of Archbishops of Canterbury
List of bishops of Winchester

External links



Early British Kingdoms: St. Aelfheah of Canterbury

The Martyrdom of Ælfheah, from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

Catholic Encyclopedia: St Alphege

Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England: Ælfheah

References





Knowles, David; Brooke C. N. L.; and London, Vera C. M. ''The Heads of Religious Houses: England and Wales 940-1216'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1972 ISBN 0-521-08367-2

Powicke, F. Maurice and E. B. Fryde ''Handbook of British Chronology'' 2nd. ed. London:Royal Historical Society 1961

★ Walsh, Michael ''A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West'' London: Burns & Oats 2007 ISBN 0-8601-2438-X

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.