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Bishop of
London Barking Abbey St Æthelburg
Chertsey Abbey Also Ercenwald,
Eorcenwald or
Erconwald Pearl and St. Erkenwald: Some
Evidence for
Authorship C....
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Surrey comes from the
introduction to his laws, in
which he
refers to
Eorcenwald,
bishop of London, as "my bishop". Ine's
subsequent relations with the...
-
there is also
subsequent evidence that Cædwalla
worked with
Wilfrid and
Eorcenwald, a
bishop of the East Saxons, to
establish an
ecclesiastical infrastructure...
- 675 See
vacant c. 675 693
Saint Earconwald Also
recorded as Erconwald,
Eorcenwald and Erkenwald.
Formerly Abbot of
Chertsey Abbey.
Became bishop circa 675...
- the
former site of the Péronne monastery,
founded by the Anglo-Saxon
Eorcenwald. Its site
became the
resting place for St. Fursa,
celebrated by the famous...
- 670s, when a
charter shows Wulfhere confirming a
grant made to
Bishop Eorcenwald by Frithuwold, a sub-king in Surrey,
which may have
extended north into...
- of
Barking was the site of
Barking Abbey, a
nunnery founded in 666 by
Eorcenwald,
Bishop of London, destro**** by the
Danes and
reconstructed in 970 by...
- all
sides but the
north around Chertsey Abbey,
founded in 666 A.D. by
Eorcenwald,
Bishop of London,
using a
donation by Frithwald.
Until the end of use...
- the
plague in 664. A charter,
believed genuine and
drafted by
Bishop Eorcenwald in the
reign of King
Sebbi of Es**** (reigned c. 664–c. 694),
records a...
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leaving Ireland, had
first gone to Peronne, the
monastery founded by
Eorcenwald, and
there won the
patronage of Hersendis, the wife of
Count Eilbert....