19
September 690 A.D. Theodore
of Canterbury Dies—7th of 105 Archbishops of Canterbury, a Greek
Born at Tarsus
Bevans, G. M. “St. Theodore of Canterbury (AD
602-690).” Brittania.com. N.d. http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/theodore.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. Theodore
of Canterbury
(AD 602 - 690)
Archbishop of Canterbury
Born: AD 602
Died: 19th September AD 690
of Canterbury
(AD 602 - 690)
Archbishop of Canterbury
Born: AD 602
Died: 19th September AD 690
A native
of Tarsus in Cilicia, Theodore was born about AD 602. Having studied in Athens,
he visited Rome and, whilst there, was appointed by Pope Vitalian to the See of
Canterbury, which had been vacant for four years. Theodore arrived in England
in AD 669 and was well received everywhere. He was the first Archbishop whose
authority the whole English Church was willing to acknowledge.
The aims
which Theodore set before himself were the organization of the Church and the
encouragement of learning. He therefore consecrated Bishops to fill the vacant
Sees and subdivided the existing Dioceses.
Wilfrid,
who at this time ruled all the Church north of the Humber, resisted the attempt
to deprive him of any part of his Diocese; but although on his appeal to Rome,
the papal decision was given in his favour, Theodore proceeded with the
subdivision of the Northumbrian episcopate. Shortly before his death, he was
reconciled to Wilfrid, who was restored to his See.
The
diocesan system which Theodore sought to establish was accepted by a Synod of
the united English Church held at Hertford in AD 673. Another Synod, held at
Hatfield in 680, affirmed the adhesion of the English Church to the Catholic
Faith.
The
enlightened zeal of Theodore allowed learning to flourish in England. Under his
direction, and with the able help of Hadrian and Benedict Biscop, seminaries
were founded at many of the Monasteries. Theodore died in AD 690.
Edited
from G.M. Bevan's "Portraits of the Archbishops of Canterbury"
(1908).
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