10 November 627 A.D. Justus Dies—4th Archbishop of
Canterbury
Bevans,
G. M. “St. Justus: Died AD 627.” Brittania.com. N.d. http://www.britannia.com/bios/abofc/justus.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. Justus
(Died AD 627)
Bishop of Rochester
Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 10th November AD 627
(Died AD 627)
Bishop of Rochester
Archbishop of Canterbury
Died: 10th November AD 627
By birth a Roman, Justus was one of the
missionaries who came to England at the request of St. Augustine of
Canterbury in AD 601. He was appointed to be the first Bishop of Rochester.
When persecution broke out after the death of King Aethelbert of Kent, he fled
to Gaul; but, a year later, he was reinstated in his bishopric, which he
governed with diligence and care until, in AD 624, he became Archbishop of
Canterbury, receiving the pallium from Pope Boniface V.
Justus is known to have written to the British and
Irish Christians, asking them to conform to the ways of the Church of Rome. An
extract from one of his letters is included in Bede. He does not come across as
terribly tactful and the letter was largely ignored. The most notable event of
his brief archiepiscopate was the evangelization of Northumbria. Paulinus was
consecrated by Justus to be the first Archbishop of York and, within two years,
King Edwin of Northumbria was baptised, with many of his people, in a little
church which he had built at York, near where now York Minster, stands. The
good news was conveyed to Justus not long before his death, which is believed to
have taken place in AD 627.
Edited from G.M. Bevan's "Portraits of the
Archbishops of Canterbury" (1908).
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