12
August 792 A.D. Janebert
Dies—13th of 105 Archbishops of Canterbury
Bevans, G. M. “St. Jaenbert (Died AD 792).” Brittania.com. N.d. http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/jaenbert.html.
Accessed 7 May 2014.
Bevans,
Portraits of the Archbishops of
Canterbury. Toronto, ONT: University
of Toronto Libraries, 2011. Available here: http://www.amazon.com/Portraits-Archbishops-Canterbury-Gladys-Bevan/dp/B005HI57FS/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1399493248&sr=8-1&keywords=bevans+portraits+of+archbishops+of+canterbury
St.
Jaenbert
(Died AD 792)
Abbot of St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 12th August AD 792
(Died AD 792)
Abbot of St. Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 12th August AD 792
Jaenbert was a native Kentishman was became the Abbot of St.
Augustine's, Canterbury. At the death of Archbishop Bregowine, a contest took
place between the monks of St. Augustine's and the monks of Christ Church
(Canterbury Cathedral) with regard to his place of burial. Eventually the monks
of Christ Church retained the body, but they elected Jaenbert to the
Archbishopric, on 2nd February AD 765, at a church council at which King Offa
of Mercia was apparently present. The following year, he was consecrated, in
Rome, by Pope Paul I.
It may be that Jaenbert encouraged the people of Kent to rebel
against Mercian domination, which they did at the Battle of Otford in AD 776.
He certainly quarrelled with King Offa and began to spread rumours that the
monarch was plotting with the Emperor Charlemagne to have the Pope deposed. In
retaliation, Offa formed a scheme for abolishing the primatial dignity of
Canterbury by converting Lichfield into a Metropolitan See. He obtained the consent
of Pope Hadrian II and, at the Synod of Chelsea in AD 787, Jaenbert was
compelled to relinquish several Dioceses which belonged to the Province of
Canterbury. Jaenbert held a number of other synods at Brentford and Aclea,
as well as Chelsea; but he shunned Clofesho (possibly Brixworth in
Northamptonshire) because of its strong connections with the Mercian monarchy.
One of his major objectives seems to have been the recovery of the monastery at
Cookham (Berkshire) from Royal control.
He died in AD 792 and was buried in his old Monastery, St.
Augustine's.
Edited from G.M. Bevan's "Portraits of the Archbishops of
Canterbury" (1908).
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