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The Ecclesiastical History of the English People

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The Ecclesiastical History of the English People

By: The Venerable Bede
Narrated by: Peter Wickham
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About this listen

The Ecclesiastical History of the English People was written in Latin by the Venerable Bede (673-735), a Benedictine monk living in Northumbria, an important Christian centre in the eighth century. It is a remarkable document, tracing, in general, early Anglo-Saxon history, and in particular, as the title proclaims, the growth and establishment of Christianity against the backdrop of the political life.

Bede finished it in 731 and immediately sent it to its dedicatee Ceolwulf, the king of Northumbria, who had expressed strong interest in the project. Bede starts his history, after a brief geographic description of the island, with the arrival of the Romans - first of all Caesar and then Claudius, through to Severus and Diocletian. He comments on the Christian persecution during Roman rule and recounts in some detail the martyrdom of St Alban.

Bede explains how the withdrawal of Roman rule in the fifth century ushered in a period of great instability with incursions by the Scots and Picts, then the Germanic peoples, Angles, Saxons and Jutes. But he notes the important turning points in the sixth century, Augustine’s mission to convert the Anglo-Saxons, the continuing influence of Pope Gregory the Great; and in the seventh century, the decision at the Council of Whitby (in 664) that ecclesiastical rule would come from Rome rather than the monks in Ireland.

Thereafter, the religious course of England was set. While religious developments are important to Bede - including his noted obsession with the timing of Easter - he does catalogue secular events and developments as well, and historians of our time regard his account as accurate and fascinating, giving us a fair picture of life in England in the days before Alfred the Great (847-899).

This recording uses the classic revised translation by A.M. Sellar. It opens with a biography of the Venerable Bede himself - clearly a remarkable individual - including the contemporaneous account of Bede’s death in 735, written by Cuthbert to Cuthwin.

The recording closes with a short account of the history of the early manuscripts and translations of the Ecclesiastical History.

Public Domain (P)2019 Ukemi Productions Ltd
Christianity Great Britain History England Ireland
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very detailed

had to keep rewinding but has enabled me to take hold of such a history of Ecclesiasm and analistics. learnt alot about the kings through saxon patronage and first beginnings of the church in England

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Brilliant narration

Not an easy listen but a brilliant writing of its time and worth it for its historic value. Fantastic narration. Perfect voice for this narration

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well worth for early English history

it ok just some of places are in old English not in modern English, if wanted to later to go and visit them. but would get the book again

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Peter Wickham's reading of Bede is superb

Bede's history is of a very different time and his concerns (the correct date of Easter, the correct style of tonsure , together with the chasteness of noble women, the veracity of the miracles that god uses to communicate with her people) are not the principal concerns of most today. So this text will always be potential hard work.
But Wickham supplies the listener with a highly credible/credulous performance of the text such that inflexion, intonation, pronunciation are executed and delivered with the clearest enunciation. Indeed I thought that if Bede had been able to consider the possibility of rendering his history with his own voice he would have sought to emulate Mr. Wickham's example.

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