2 August 914 A.D. or 932 A.D. Plegmund Died—19th of
105 Archbishops of Canterbury
Bevans,
G. M. “Plegmund (Died 923 A.D.)” Brittania.com. N.d. http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/plegmund.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
Plegmund
(Died AD 923)
Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 2nd August AD 923
(Died AD 923)
Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 2nd August AD 923
A Mercian by birth, Plegmund lived as a hermit on a marsh
surrounded island in Cheshire until he was summoned by the youthful King Alfred
the Great to his Court. Alfred wished him to take part in the great work which
he had at heart, that of promoting learning amongst his people.
In AD890, at King Alfred's insistence, Plegmund was elected
to the Archiepiscopate of Canterbury and was consecrated in Rome by Pope Formosas.
The King styled him "Plegmund, my Archbishop," in the preface of a
translation of Pope Gregory'sRegula Pastoralis, a copy of which was sent
to every Bishop throughout the kingdom. The copy presented by the King to
Plegmund is still preserved in the British Library.
"Plegmund was chosen of God and of all the people
Archbishop of Canterbury" in the year AD 890. In AD 908, he consecrated
the New Minster which King Edward the Elder had founded at Winchester. During
his pontificate, the West Saxon episcopate was subdivided with the creation of
the Bishoprics of Wells and of Crediton. Many bishoprics had also become vacant
due to Viking ravages and Plegmund threatened to excommunicate King Edward the
Elder and place an interdict on the whole country if they were not filled as
soon as possible. He got his way, and it is said that he consecrated seven
Bishops in one day, in AD 909, of whom five were for Wessex. His death took
place in AD 923.
Edited from G.M. Bevan's "Portraits of the
Archbishops of Canterbury" (1908).
No comments:
Post a Comment