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Eadfrith of
Lindisfarne (died 721), also
known as
Saint Eadfrith, was
Bishop of Lindisfarne,
probably from 698 onwards. By the
twelfth century it was believed...
- elements. The
Lindisfarne Gospels are
presumed to be the work of a monk
named Eadfrith, who
became Bishop of
Lindisfarne in 698 and died in 721.
Current scholarship...
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Eadfrith of
Leominster also
known as
Eadridus (died 675) was a
seventh century Catholic saint from Anglo-Saxon England.
Although very
little is
known of...
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important centre of
Celtic Christianity under Saints Aidan, Cuthbert,
Eadfrith, and
Eadberht of Lindisfarne. The
island was
originally home to a monastery...
-
British Isles. Vol. IV - October–December.
United States of America: St.
Eadfrith Press. ISBN 978-1-5427-1822-6. Jackson, F I (January 1992). "Letter to...
- have
killed Eadfrith for his own reasons. It has been
suggested that
Penda was
concerned that
Eadfrith could be a
threat to him
because Eadfrith might s****...
- Mercians"
while he was in exile, and with her had two sons,
Osfrith and
Eadfrith.
Historians have
noted the
marriage as
evidence for Cearl's independence...
-
degree after Heavenfield. It may have been to
appease Oswald that
Penda had
Eadfrith, a
captured son of
Edwin (and thus a
dynastic rival of Oswald), killed...
-
scale of
detail as small.
Lindisfarne Gospels Produced in
Lindisfarne by
Eadfrith,
Bishop of Lindisfarne,
between about 690 and his
death in 721 (perhaps...
-
region is the
Lindisfarne Gospels,
thought to be the work of a monk
named Eadfrith, who
became Bishop of
Lindisfarne in 698. This body of work is thought...