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Earconwald

Saint Earconwald or Erkenwald[a] (died 693) was a Saxon prince[1] and Bishop of London between 675 and 693.[2] He is the eponymous subject of one of the most important poems in the foundations of English literature[3] (thought to be by the Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl Poet). He was called Lundoniae maximum sanctus, 'the most holy figure of London',[4][5] and Lux Londonie, "the light of London".[6] Peter Ackroyd has said of him, "we may still name him as the patron saint of London, [his]... cult survived for over eight hundred years, before entering the temporary darkness of the last four centuries".[4]


Earconwald
Bishop of London
The lost shrine of St Erkenwald in St Paul's Cathedral: desecrated in the Reformation and destroyed in the Great Fire of London
ProvinceCanterbury
Installed675
Term ended693
PredecessorWine
SuccessorWaldhere
Other post(s)Prince, Abbot of Chertsey
Orders
Consecrationc. 675
Personal details
Bornc. 630
Died693
Barking Abbey
BuriedOld St Paul's Cathedral, London through the location and survival of his relics are debated
DenominationRoman Catholic Church
Sainthood
Feast day13 May
24 April
30 April
14 November in England
Attributesbishop in a small chariot, which he used for travelling his diocese; with Saint Ethelburga of Barking
Patronageagainst gout, London
ShrinesSt. Paul's, London: relics removed 1550, lost in the Great Fire of London

He is associated with a very early Anglo Saxon phase of building at St Paul's Cathedral, and William Dugdale says he began the building.[7]

In recent times he has been portrayed in novels and films, for example in the work of Bernard Cornwell.

The diocese of London was coterminous with the Kingdom of Essex, making the Bishop of London the Bishop of the East Saxons.[8]

Life edit

 
Earconwald teaching monks in a historiated initial from the Chertsey Breviary (c.1300)

Origins edit

Earconwald was of royal ancestry.[9] William Dugdale states that he was a prince, a son of the house of King Offa, King of the Essex or the East Saxons;[10]

He may have been born in the Kingdom of Lindsey in modern Lincolnshire.[11]

Career edit

In 666, he established two Benedictine abbeys, Chertsey Abbey in Surrey[12] for men, and Barking Abbey for women.[11][13] His sister, Æthelburh, was Abbess of Barking.[11][14] Earconwald is said to have engaged Hildelith to instruct Æthelburh in the role of abbess.[15]

Earconwald himself served as Abbot of Chertsey.[16] A charter states that in the late seventh century, he and Frithwald gave land in Streatham and Tooting Graveney to Chertsey Abbey; this grant was confirmed in the time of Athelstan in 933.[17]

A legend says that he often preached to the woodmen in the wild forests that lay to the north of London.[18]

 
A window in Wells Cathedral. Mostly original glass; the heads depict Pope Stephen, St Blaise, St Earconwald, and Pope Marcellus.

Bishop edit

In 675, Earconwald became Bishop of London, succeeding Bishop Wine.[19] He was the choice of Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury.[16] It is also said that his selection as Bishop of London was at the insistence of King Sebbi.[20] An ancient epitaph says that Earconwald served as bishop of London for eleven years.[20]

He was granted the manor (landholding) of Fulham about the year 691 for himself and his successors as Bishop of London. The manor house was Fulham Palace. Nine centuries later, it was the summer residence of the Bishops of London.[21]

Earconwald was an important contributor to the reconversion of Essex, and the fourth Bishop of London since the restoration of the diocese, and he was present at the reconciliation between Archbishop Theodore and Wilfrith.[20]

While bishop, he contributed to King Ine of Wessex's law code, and is mentioned specifically in the code as a contributor.[22] King Ine named Earconwald as an advisor on his laws[23] and called Earconwald "my bishop" in the preface to his laws.[20]

Current historical scholarship credits Earconwald with a major role in the evolution of Anglo-Saxon charters, and it is possible that he drafted the charter of Caedwalla to Farnham.[14]

When St Fursey (a Celtic cleric who did much to establish Christianity throughout the British Isles and particularly in East Anglia) died in 650 he was buried in a church built specially by Earconwald in Péronne which has claimed Fursey as patron ever since.[24]

Building works edit

 
The now lost Bishops Gate: a Roman gate in the walls of Roman London, repaired by St Earconwald and then named after him

Bishopsgate, one of the eastern gates on London's largely lost Roman and medieval city wall, was said to have been repaired by Earconwald, and to have taken its name from him.[25]

Earconwald is said to have bestowed great cost on the fabric of the early building of St Paul's,[clarification needed] and in later times he almost occupied the place of a traditionary founder; the veneration paid to him was second only to that which was rendered to St. Paul.[26]

 
Archbishop Matthew Parker, who had the most important records on Earconwald at the end of the Counter-Reformation when they may otherwise have been lost

Death and legacy edit

Earconwald died in 693[19] while on a visit to Barking Abbey. His remains were buried at a pilgrimage shrine in St Paul's Cathedral.

For a period immediately after the Norman Conquest, St Earconwald was marginalised in religious practice.[Explain why][27]

The most important collection of early materials concerning Earconwald is the Miracula Sancti Erkenwaldi, preserved as a 12th-century manuscript in the Matthew Parker collection (Parker 161) at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.[28] The miracle in the poem is not in these materials, suggesting that the story post-dates this manuscript.

The poem of St Erkenwald edit

 
Priorslee Hall, one of the Shropshire addresses occupied by Sir Humphrey Pitt from whom the only known copy of the poem 'Erkenwald' was recovered

Earconwald was the subject of the alliterative St Erkenwald Poem, written in the fourteenth century[29] by a poet from the Cheshire/Shropshire/Staffordshire area.[30] The text is thought to be the work of the Pearl Poet[31] whose identity is debated and uncertain. If it is true that it is within the set of this author's work, that would mean that text shares its author with:

 
Manuscript text in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
 
An illustration in the oldest copy of the same poem
The text and an illustration from the only surviving manuscript or that work: St Erkenwald may have provided inspiration for the same writer as for this text

The poem is significant in the way it deals with the spiritual welfare of people who could not hear the Christian message, and critics have compared it to the Beowulf poem in this regard.[32]

The poem has survived in only one manuscript, British Library MS Harley 2250.[33] The document was discovered in 1757 by Thomas Percy; the manuscript had been in the possession of Sir Humphrey Pitt of Balcony House, Shifnal, and Priorslee, Shropshire.[34] Other important ancient literary materials narrowly avoided being burnt as kindling by household staff in the circumstances in which Percy was discovering this important cultural survival.[35]

The poem has been linked thematically and in plot terms with the Legend of Trajan and the Miracle of St Gregory; that legend itself being referred to in the Divine Comedy by Dante (Purgatorio (x. 73-75) and Paradiso (xx 106-117)).[28]

Another possible inspiration for the plot in the poem is found in Kaiserchronik, the Middle High German history of Roman and German emperors dating to around 1150.[28] Some familiarity with the story is also contended for St Thomas Aquinas.[28]

Within pictorial art, the Berne tapestry (copied from paintings by Roger van der Wayden of the Brussels Town Hall in the mid-1400s, which were lost in the conflicts of the 1600s) and apparently repeated in the Cologne Town Hall in the High Medieval period, provides a visual expression of the themes.[28] The intention of this art was to remind judges to dispense impartial justice.

Feast day and translation day edit

 
Statue of Erkenwald at St Albans Cathedral

His feast day is 30 April, with successive translations (see below) being celebrated on 1 February, 13 May and 14 November.[9][36][37] He is a patron saint of London.[38]

Prior to the Reformation, the anniversaries of his death as well as his translation were observed at St Paul's as feasts of the first class, by an ordinance of Bishop Braybroke in 1386.[20]

The following Antiphon and Collect for the Feast of St Erkenwald is recorded:

"De Sancto Erkenwaldo Episcopo. Antipho: O decus insigne, nostrum pastorumque benigne, O lux Londonie, pater Erkenwalde beate, Quem super astra Deum gaudes spectare per eum, Aspice letantes tua gaudia nos celebrantes, Et tecum vite fac participes sine fine. V. Ora pro nobis beate Erkenwalde. R. Ut digni efficiamur. "Oratio. Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, apud quem est continua semper Sanctorum festivitas Tuorum, presta, quesumus, ut qui memoriam beati Erkenwaldi pontificis agimus, ab hostium nostrorum eruamur nequitia: et ad eternorum nos provehi concedas premiorum beneficia. Per. Pater noster. Ave Ma"

(Concerning Saint Erkenwald the Bishop.

Antiphon: O distinguished God, our kind shepherd, O light of London, blessed father Erkenwald, Whom above the stars you rejoice to behold God through him, Look upon us celebrating your joys, and live with you without end.

V. Pray for us blessed Erkenwald.

R. That we may become worthy.

Prayer. Almighty and everlasting God, with whom is the continual festival of Thy Saints, grant, we beseech, that we who commemorate the blessed high priest Erkenwald, may be delivered from the wickedness of our enemies: and grant us to advance to the eternal blessings of the first. Through [Jesus Christ]. Our Father. Ave Maria)[6]

Relics and shrine edit

The old St Paul's Cathedral's "greatest glory was the Shrine of St Erkenwald".[39] The shrine rivalled that of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey.[40]

 
Shrine of St Erkenwald, relics removed 1550, lost as a monument in the Great Fire of London

It is said that on the death of St Erkenwald, there was a struggle between the canons of St. Paul's and the monks of Chertsey as to who should bury him, during which the people of London brought his body to St. Paul's. The people of London, bringing the body to the city, are supposed to have said:

"We are like strong and vigorous men who will... undermine and overturn cities heavily fortified with men and weapons before we give up the servant of God, our protector... we ourselves intend that such a glorious city and congregation shall be strengthened and honoured by such a patron."[4]

On the journey to London with the body, the River Lee is said to have parted to make way for the dead saint.[18]

After a great fire in 1087 (one of several Erkenwald's relics are said to have survived)[clarification needed] the relics were put in a silver shrine.[4] This shrine was put in a new, vast crypt, specially built to hold the "valuable remains of St. Erkenwald" in the wider new building which was built to replace the lost St. Paul's by Bishop Maurice.[18] The body was transferred to a shrine in the cathedral in 1140.[41] In 1314, Bishop Gilbert de Segrave laid the first stone of a new shrine to which the relics of St. Erkenwald were translated twelve years later.[42]

By accounts,[clarification needed] the relics were sealed in a leaden casket fashioned in the form of "a gabled house or church".[4] By the time his relics were placed behind the high altar of St Paul's they were supposed to have been with the couch in which he was carried in his declining years, fragments of which were associated with miracles.[4] In the time of Bede, it was recorded that miracles were effected by this couch.[43]

It is recorded that the servants of the church could only move the relics of St Erkenwald "clandestinely at night" because to do otherwise would have created hysteria among the crowds.[4]

 
The Curfew Tower of Barking Abbey. This was one of the three gateways to Barking Abbey, founded in 666 by Erkenwald, later Bishop of London.

The shrine was constantly enriched by canons and by the merchants of London, well into the 15th century, and miracles were reported at the site of the shrine into the 16th century.[43] The citizens of London took special pride in the magnificent shrine, and had a special devotion to St Erkenwald.[20]

Amongst the Ashmole manuscripts in the Bodleian Library is the following entry in Ashmole's own hand that concerns work on the shrine in 1448:

"Pondus Cancelli ferrei ante Altare Sancti Erkenwaldi facti Ao Dni. 1448 per manus Stephani Clampard, fabri, sumptibus Decani et Capituli elevati ibidem vi. die Junii anno predicto, 3438 lb. precii cujuslibet lb. cum ferra 4d. Summa 641. 2s.[Suspect this is 64 l. 2.s, ie £64/2/0, but the sums still don't work.]

Expens. in ferro 3438 lb. precio cujuslibet vs. Summa 8 li. 16 s. 8 d.

Item in vasos ferri ixc precio ut supra. Summa xlv s.

Item in Stannum ad dealban. Summa viij. li.

(The weight of the iron chancel in front of the Altar of St. Erkenwald made AD 1448 by the hands of Stephen Clampard, carpenter, at the expense of the Dean and Chapter raised there on 6 June of the aforesaid year, 3438 lb. the price of each lb. with iron 4d. Total 641. 2s.

Expense. in iron 3438 lb.[dubious ] price of each vs.[clarification needed] Total £8 16s. 8d.

Also in vessels of iron at the same price as above. Total 45 shillings.

Also for tin for whitewash. The sum of £8[6]

Ackroyd notes[44] that:

"successful lawyers of London…on nomination as serjeants of law, would walk in procession to St Paul’s in order to venerate the physical presence of the saint."[45]

 
Catherine of Aragon made an offering at St Erkenwald's shirne as an act of diplomacy ahead of her first marriage into the House of Tudor.

When Catherine of Aragon made her entry into London, two days before her marriage to Prince Arthur, heir to the throne, she visited St Paul's[46] and made an offering there at the shrine of St Erkenwald.[47] The couple were married on St Erkenwald's Day, with the date likely selected to be in alignment with the saint's day.[48]

The St Paul's shrine had the relics removed during the Reformation; the empty shrine survived until the Great Fire of London.[49] In late 1549, at the height of the iconoclasm of the Reformation, Sir Rowland Hill altered the route of his Lord Mayor's day procession and said a de profundis at the tomb of Erkenwald.[50]

There are differing accounts of what happened to his relics, with suggestions the relics were plundered[51] or incinerated,[52] or that he was reburied in St Paul's Cathedral at the east end of the choir,[20] or that they might have been "hidden to be recovered later".[53]

One commentary on the location of his relics summarises the understanding of this point as follows:

"his relics were either destroyed or hidden in a secure place by the faithful from the bloodthirsty iconoclasts. There is a modern speculation that the relics... may still rest at the east end of the present Cathedral choir next to the east altar. Perhaps one day... will reveal the fate of this holy man’s bodily remains."[54]

One commentator has observed that "destruction of this major shrine, located behind the high altar, severed the last connection between St Paul’s and its Saxon predecessor ... (the precise whereabouts have yet to be discovered)."[55]

The burials of both Earconwald and Sebbi quickly became the focus of saints’ cults and pilgrimages. This local mania for miracles and relics has been described as the first evidence that Londoners were becoming enthusiastic about Christianity and that newly returned religion had found its footing in the area.[56]

Erkenwald's grave was a popular place of pilgrimage[57] up to the reformation.[58]

After the Great Fire of London, Christopher Wren made archaeological investigations into the ruins to St Paul's Cathedral looking for the Saxon building Erkenwald had had built.[18]

State events edit

So far back as 1431, the Masters of the Lincoln's Inn Bench restricted the number of annual revels to four: the feast of St. Erkenwald, alongside the feast of the Purification of our Lady; Midsummer and Halloween.[59]

There were other examples of statecraft being associated with St Erkenwald in the Tudor period: in 1522, there was a state visit to London by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, hosted by Henry VIII The entertainments included a pageant near Cheapside, where Charlemagne greeted the two heads of state and gave them gifts; Erkenwald was incorporated into the performance, with St Dunstan, Thomas Becket, John the Baptist, John of Gaunt all also featured.[60] Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn are understood to have married on St Erkenwald's Day.

[61]

 
Sir Rowland Hill of Soulton, in office as Lord Mayor of London, spoke in anguish at the shrine of Erkenwald when it was being desecrated.

Memorialization of St Erkenwald edit

 
Cross in Battersea Park, erected to mark the year 2000. It stands on the site of a manor granted by King Caedwalla to St Erkenwald which is believed to have been the home of St Ethelburga.
 
St Erkenwald's Church

St Erkenwald has also been commemorated in the following ways:

In contemporary culture edit

In 1997 the Royal Shakespeare Company performed a play called Erkenwald[73] in The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon.

Erkenwald is a supporting character in the Bernard Cornwell stories:

and in the associated 2018 television series.

In that fictional world he is in service to King Alfred. The actor Kevin Eldon has portrayed him.[74]

The British children's writer Abi Elphinstone chose "Erkenwald" as the name of a mythical kingdom in her 2021 book Sky Song.[75]

Erkenwald Neumann is the name of a musical artist with 2022 releases.[76]

One contemporary travel writer has said of St Erkenwald: "It's high time for a London icon to resurface, 1300 years on."[77]

Miracles edit

 
A 2000 stone plaque in London honouring St Erkenwald

There are 19 miracles associated with Erkenwald:[27]

  • a boy, who took refuge from his angry school master at the tomb of St Erkenwald, received a message he had not known until then
  • a man punished with sudden death for scoring the feast day of the saint
  • concerning a prisoner who was set free
  • how, amid the great burning of the city and church the pall on hid tomb survived unharmed
  • concerning the building of a more splendid church in London, and concerning the mobility impaired person, who after journeying to many tombs of famous saints throughout the world, obtained healing from St Erkenwald
  • concerning the man who prevented his wife from honouring the saint, his punishment, and the restoration of his health in accordance with the saint's instructions
  • how he demonstrated, with the wonderful largesse of his merciful acts, that he was pleased with the honour being shown to him
  • concerning the blind girl whose sight was speedily restored
  • concerning the death of the drunken buffoon who got inside the shrine of Erkenwald when it was under construction
  • concerning the doctor, healed of deadly sickness
  • concerning the blind woman who received her sight
  • concerning the man who was cured of hid fever by the saint, who visited him in person
  • how one of the saint's painter's (from when his body was in the crypt) violated his festival, was punished, the saint himself appertaining to him and declaring the reason for the punishment
  • concerning the deformed nun who was visited by St Ethelburga and St Erkenwald and made whole and undeformed
  • concerning the deaf girl whose hearing was restored
  • Other miracles associated with an invisible wheel and growing a construction beam are recorded.[78]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also Ercenwald, Eorcenwald or Erconwald

Further reading edit

  • Pearl and St. Erkenwald: Some Evidence for Authorship C. J. Peterson The Review of English Studies. New Series, Vol. 25, No. 97 (Feb., 1974), pp. 49–53
  • BROWETT, R. (2017). Touching the Holy: The Rise of Contact Relics in Medieval England. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 68(3), 493–509. doi:10.1017/S0022046916001494
  • E. Gordon Whatley, 'The Saint of London: The Life and Miracles of St. Erkenwald'. 1989, Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies.
  • Mary Boyle, 'Converting Corpses: The Religious Other in the Munich Oswald and St Erkenwald'. Merton College, Oxford University
  • OLD ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL By WILLIAM BENHAM, D.D., F.S.A.
  • Hagiography into Art: A Study of "St. Erkenwald", T. McAlindon. Studies in Philology. Vol. 67, No. 4 (Oct., 1970), pp. 472–494.
  • Heathens and Saints: St. Erkenwald in Its Legendary Context, Gordon Whatley. Speculum Vol. 61, No. 2 (Apr., 1986), pp. 330–363
  • "New Werke": St. Erkenwald, St. Albans, and the medieval sense of the past. Monica Otta.
  • Saint Erkenwald: Bishop and London archaeologist, John Clark. Published 1980

Citations edit

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  12. ^ Kirby Earliest English Kings p. 83
  13. ^ Yorke "Adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon Royal Courts" Cross Goes North pp. 250–251
  14. ^ a b Kirby Earliest English Kings p. 102
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  70. ^ "Erkenwald School - GOV.UK". www.get-information-schools.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 10 September 2023.
  71. ^ Hope, W. H. St John; Lethaby, W. R. (January 1904). "IX.—The Imagery and Sculptures on the West Front of Wells Cathedral Church". Archaeologia. 59 (1): 143–206. doi:10.1017/S026134090001153X. ISSN 2051-3186.
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References edit

  • Andrew, Malcolm. "The Saint of London: The Life and Miracles of St. Erkenwald." Notes and Queries, vol. 41, no. 4, Dec. 1994, pp. 541+.
  • Farmer, David Hugh (2004). Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Fifth ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860949-0.
  • Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
  • Kirby, D. P. (2000). The Earliest English Kings. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-24211-8.
  • Thornbury, Walter (1887). Old and New London. Volume 1. London: Cassell.
  • Walsh, Michael J. (2007). A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West. London: Burns & Oats. ISBN 978-0-86012-438-2.
  • Yorke, Barbara (2003). Martin Carver (ed.). The Adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon Royal Courts to Christianity. The Cross Goes North: Processes of Conversion in Northern Europe AD 300–1300. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. pp. 244–257. ISBN 1-84383-125-2.
  • Yorke, Barbara (2006). The Conversion of Britain: Religion, Politics and Society in Britain c. 600–800. London: Pearson/Longman. ISBN 0-582-77292-3.

External links edit

Christian titles
Preceded by Bishop of London
675–693
Succeeded by

earconwald, saint, erkenwald, died, saxon, prince, bishop, london, between, eponymous, subject, most, important, poems, foundations, english, literature, thought, gawain, green, knight, pearl, poet, called, lundoniae, maximum, sanctus, most, holy, figure, lond. Saint Earconwald or Erkenwald a died 693 was a Saxon prince 1 and Bishop of London between 675 and 693 2 He is the eponymous subject of one of the most important poems in the foundations of English literature 3 thought to be by the Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl Poet He was called Lundoniae maximum sanctus the most holy figure of London 4 5 and Lux Londonie the light of London 6 Peter Ackroyd has said of him we may still name him as the patron saint of London his cult survived for over eight hundred years before entering the temporary darkness of the last four centuries 4 SaintEarconwaldBishop of LondonThe lost shrine of St Erkenwald in St Paul s Cathedral desecrated in the Reformation and destroyed in the Great Fire of LondonProvinceCanterburyInstalled675Term ended693PredecessorWineSuccessorWaldhereOther post s Prince Abbot of ChertseyOrdersConsecrationc 675Personal detailsBornc 630 Kingdom of LindseyDied693Barking AbbeyBuriedOld St Paul s Cathedral London through the location and survival of his relics are debatedDenominationRoman Catholic ChurchSainthoodFeast day13 May24 April30 April14 November in EnglandAttributesbishop in a small chariot which he used for travelling his diocese with Saint Ethelburga of BarkingPatronageagainst gout LondonShrinesSt Paul s London relics removed 1550 lost in the Great Fire of LondonHe is associated with a very early Anglo Saxon phase of building at St Paul s Cathedral and William Dugdale says he began the building 7 In recent times he has been portrayed in novels and films for example in the work of Bernard Cornwell The diocese of London was coterminous with the Kingdom of Essex making the Bishop of London the Bishop of the East Saxons 8 Life edit nbsp Earconwald teaching monks in a historiated initial from the Chertsey Breviary c 1300 Origins edit Earconwald was of royal ancestry 9 William Dugdale states that he was a prince a son of the house of King Offa King of the Essex or the East Saxons 10 He may have been born in the Kingdom of Lindsey in modern Lincolnshire 11 Career edit In 666 he established two Benedictine abbeys Chertsey Abbey in Surrey 12 for men and Barking Abbey for women 11 13 His sister AEthelburh was Abbess of Barking 11 14 Earconwald is said to have engaged Hildelith to instruct AEthelburh in the role of abbess 15 Earconwald himself served as Abbot of Chertsey 16 A charter states that in the late seventh century he and Frithwald gave land in Streatham and Tooting Graveney to Chertsey Abbey this grant was confirmed in the time of Athelstan in 933 17 A legend says that he often preached to the woodmen in the wild forests that lay to the north of London 18 nbsp A window in Wells Cathedral Mostly original glass the heads depict Pope Stephen St Blaise St Earconwald and Pope Marcellus Bishop edit In 675 Earconwald became Bishop of London succeeding Bishop Wine 19 He was the choice of Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury 16 It is also said that his selection as Bishop of London was at the insistence of King Sebbi 20 An ancient epitaph says that Earconwald served as bishop of London for eleven years 20 He was granted the manor landholding of Fulham about the year 691 for himself and his successors as Bishop of London The manor house was Fulham Palace Nine centuries later it was the summer residence of the Bishops of London 21 Earconwald was an important contributor to the reconversion of Essex and the fourth Bishop of London since the restoration of the diocese and he was present at the reconciliation between Archbishop Theodore and Wilfrith 20 While bishop he contributed to King Ine of Wessex s law code and is mentioned specifically in the code as a contributor 22 King Ine named Earconwald as an advisor on his laws 23 and called Earconwald my bishop in the preface to his laws 20 Current historical scholarship credits Earconwald with a major role in the evolution of Anglo Saxon charters and it is possible that he drafted the charter of Caedwalla to Farnham 14 When St Fursey a Celtic cleric who did much to establish Christianity throughout the British Isles and particularly in East Anglia died in 650 he was buried in a church built specially by Earconwald in Peronne which has claimed Fursey as patron ever since 24 Building works edit nbsp The now lost Bishops Gate a Roman gate in the walls of Roman London repaired by St Earconwald and then named after himBishopsgate one of the eastern gates on London s largely lost Roman and medieval city wall was said to have been repaired by Earconwald and to have taken its name from him 25 Earconwald is said to have bestowed great cost on the fabric of the early building of St Paul s clarification needed and in later times he almost occupied the place of a traditionary founder the veneration paid to him was second only to that which was rendered to St Paul 26 nbsp Archbishop Matthew Parker who had the most important records on Earconwald at the end of the Counter Reformation when they may otherwise have been lostDeath and legacy edit Earconwald died in 693 19 while on a visit to Barking Abbey His remains were buried at a pilgrimage shrine in St Paul s Cathedral For a period immediately after the Norman Conquest St Earconwald was marginalised in religious practice Explain why 27 The most important collection of early materials concerning Earconwald is the Miracula Sancti Erkenwaldi preserved as a 12th century manuscript in the Matthew Parker collection Parker 161 at Corpus Christi College Cambridge 28 The miracle in the poem is not in these materials suggesting that the story post dates this manuscript The poem of St Erkenwald edit nbsp Priorslee Hall one of the Shropshire addresses occupied by Sir Humphrey Pitt from whom the only known copy of the poem Erkenwald was recoveredEarconwald was the subject of the alliterative St Erkenwald Poem written in the fourteenth century 29 by a poet from the Cheshire Shropshire Staffordshire area 30 The text is thought to be the work of the Pearl Poet 31 whose identity is debated and uncertain If it is true that it is within the set of this author s work that would mean that text shares its author with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Pearl Patience Cleanness nbsp Manuscript text in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight nbsp An illustration in the oldest copy of the same poemThe text and an illustration from the only surviving manuscript or that work St Erkenwald may have provided inspiration for the same writer as for this text The poem is significant in the way it deals with the spiritual welfare of people who could not hear the Christian message and critics have compared it to the Beowulf poem in this regard 32 The poem has survived in only one manuscript British Library MS Harley 2250 33 The document was discovered in 1757 by Thomas Percy the manuscript had been in the possession of Sir Humphrey Pitt of Balcony House Shifnal and Priorslee Shropshire 34 Other important ancient literary materials narrowly avoided being burnt as kindling by household staff in the circumstances in which Percy was discovering this important cultural survival 35 The poem has been linked thematically and in plot terms with the Legend of Trajan and the Miracle of St Gregory that legend itself being referred to in the Divine Comedy by Dante Purgatorio x 73 75 and Paradiso xx 106 117 28 Another possible inspiration for the plot in the poem is found in Kaiserchronik the Middle High German history of Roman and German emperors dating to around 1150 28 Some familiarity with the story is also contended for St Thomas Aquinas 28 Within pictorial art the Berne tapestry copied from paintings by Roger van der Wayden of the Brussels Town Hall in the mid 1400s which were lost in the conflicts of the 1600s and apparently repeated in the Cologne Town Hall in the High Medieval period provides a visual expression of the themes 28 The intention of this art was to remind judges to dispense impartial justice Feast day and translation day edit nbsp Statue of Erkenwald at St Albans CathedralHis feast day is 30 April with successive translations see below being celebrated on 1 February 13 May and 14 November 9 36 37 He is a patron saint of London 38 Prior to the Reformation the anniversaries of his death as well as his translation were observed at St Paul s as feasts of the first class by an ordinance of Bishop Braybroke in 1386 20 The following Antiphon and Collect for the Feast of St Erkenwald is recorded De Sancto Erkenwaldo Episcopo Antipho O decus insigne nostrum pastorumque benigne O lux Londonie pater Erkenwalde beate Quem super astra Deum gaudes spectare per eum Aspice letantes tua gaudia nos celebrantes Et tecum vite fac participes sine fine V Ora pro nobis beate Erkenwalde R Ut digni efficiamur Oratio Omnipotens sempiterne Deus apud quem est continua semper Sanctorum festivitas Tuorum presta quesumus ut qui memoriam beati Erkenwaldi pontificis agimus ab hostium nostrorum eruamur nequitia et ad eternorum nos provehi concedas premiorum beneficia Per Pater noster Ave Ma Concerning Saint Erkenwald the Bishop Antiphon O distinguished God our kind shepherd O light of London blessed father Erkenwald Whom above the stars you rejoice to behold God through him Look upon us celebrating your joys and live with you without end V Pray for us blessed Erkenwald R That we may become worthy Prayer Almighty and everlasting God with whom is the continual festival of Thy Saints grant we beseech that we who commemorate the blessed high priest Erkenwald may be delivered from the wickedness of our enemies and grant us to advance to the eternal blessings of the first Through Jesus Christ Our Father Ave Maria 6 Relics and shrine editThe old St Paul s Cathedral s greatest glory was the Shrine of St Erkenwald 39 The shrine rivalled that of Edward the Confessor at Westminster Abbey 40 nbsp Shrine of St Erkenwald relics removed 1550 lost as a monument in the Great Fire of LondonIt is said that on the death of St Erkenwald there was a struggle between the canons of St Paul s and the monks of Chertsey as to who should bury him during which the people of London brought his body to St Paul s The people of London bringing the body to the city are supposed to have said We are like strong and vigorous men who will undermine and overturn cities heavily fortified with men and weapons before we give up the servant of God our protector we ourselves intend that such a glorious city and congregation shall be strengthened and honoured by such a patron 4 On the journey to London with the body the River Lee is said to have parted to make way for the dead saint 18 After a great fire in 1087 one of several Erkenwald s relics are said to have survived clarification needed the relics were put in a silver shrine 4 This shrine was put in a new vast crypt specially built to hold the valuable remains of St Erkenwald in the wider new building which was built to replace the lost St Paul s by Bishop Maurice 18 The body was transferred to a shrine in the cathedral in 1140 41 In 1314 Bishop Gilbert de Segrave laid the first stone of a new shrine to which the relics of St Erkenwald were translated twelve years later 42 By accounts clarification needed the relics were sealed in a leaden casket fashioned in the form of a gabled house or church 4 By the time his relics were placed behind the high altar of St Paul s they were supposed to have been with the couch in which he was carried in his declining years fragments of which were associated with miracles 4 In the time of Bede it was recorded that miracles were effected by this couch 43 It is recorded that the servants of the church could only move the relics of St Erkenwald clandestinely at night because to do otherwise would have created hysteria among the crowds 4 nbsp The Curfew Tower of Barking Abbey This was one of the three gateways to Barking Abbey founded in 666 by Erkenwald later Bishop of London The shrine was constantly enriched by canons and by the merchants of London well into the 15th century and miracles were reported at the site of the shrine into the 16th century 43 The citizens of London took special pride in the magnificent shrine and had a special devotion to St Erkenwald 20 Amongst the Ashmole manuscripts in the Bodleian Library is the following entry in Ashmole s own hand that concerns work on the shrine in 1448 Pondus Cancelli ferrei ante Altare Sancti Erkenwaldi facti Ao Dni 1448 per manus Stephani Clampard fabri sumptibus Decani et Capituli elevati ibidem vi die Junii anno predicto 3438 lb precii cujuslibet lb cum ferra 4d Summa 641 2s Suspect this is 64 l 2 s ie 64 2 0 but the sums still don t work Expens in ferro 3438 lb precio cujuslibet vs Summa 8 li 16 s 8 d Item in vasos ferri ixc precio ut supra Summa xlv s Item in Stannum ad dealban Summa viij li The weight of the iron chancel in front of the Altar of St Erkenwald made AD 1448 by the hands of Stephen Clampard carpenter at the expense of the Dean and Chapter raised there on 6 June of the aforesaid year 3438 lb the price of each lb with iron 4d Total 641 2s Expense in iron 3438 lb dubious discuss price of each vs clarification needed Total 8 16s 8d Also in vessels of iron at the same price as above Total 45 shillings Also for tin for whitewash The sum of 8 6 Ackroyd notes 44 that successful lawyers of London on nomination as serjeants of law would walk in procession to St Paul s in order to venerate the physical presence of the saint 45 nbsp Catherine of Aragon made an offering at St Erkenwald s shirne as an act of diplomacy ahead of her first marriage into the House of Tudor When Catherine of Aragon made her entry into London two days before her marriage to Prince Arthur heir to the throne she visited St Paul s 46 and made an offering there at the shrine of St Erkenwald 47 The couple were married on St Erkenwald s Day with the date likely selected to be in alignment with the saint s day 48 The St Paul s shrine had the relics removed during the Reformation the empty shrine survived until the Great Fire of London 49 In late 1549 at the height of the iconoclasm of the Reformation Sir Rowland Hill altered the route of his Lord Mayor s day procession and said a de profundis at the tomb of Erkenwald 50 There are differing accounts of what happened to his relics with suggestions the relics were plundered 51 or incinerated 52 or that he was reburied in St Paul s Cathedral at the east end of the choir 20 or that they might have been hidden to be recovered later 53 One commentary on the location of his relics summarises the understanding of this point as follows his relics were either destroyed or hidden in a secure place by the faithful from the bloodthirsty iconoclasts There is a modern speculation that the relics may still rest at the east end of the present Cathedral choir next to the east altar Perhaps one day will reveal the fate of this holy man s bodily remains 54 One commentator has observed that destruction of this major shrine located behind the high altar severed the last connection between St Paul s and its Saxon predecessor the precise whereabouts have yet to be discovered 55 The burials of both Earconwald and Sebbi quickly became the focus of saints cults and pilgrimages This local mania for miracles and relics has been described as the first evidence that Londoners were becoming enthusiastic about Christianity and that newly returned religion had found its footing in the area 56 Erkenwald s grave was a popular place of pilgrimage 57 up to the reformation 58 After the Great Fire of London Christopher Wren made archaeological investigations into the ruins to St Paul s Cathedral looking for the Saxon building Erkenwald had had built 18 State events editSo far back as 1431 the Masters of the Lincoln s Inn Bench restricted the number of annual revels to four the feast of St Erkenwald alongside the feast of the Purification of our Lady Midsummer and Halloween 59 There were other examples of statecraft being associated with St Erkenwald in the Tudor period in 1522 there was a state visit to London by Charles V Holy Roman Emperor hosted by Henry VIII The entertainments included a pageant near Cheapside where Charlemagne greeted the two heads of state and gave them gifts Erkenwald was incorporated into the performance with St Dunstan Thomas Becket John the Baptist John of Gaunt all also featured 60 Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn are understood to have married on St Erkenwald s Day 61 nbsp Sir Rowland Hill of Soulton in office as Lord Mayor of London spoke in anguish at the shrine of Erkenwald when it was being desecrated Memorialization of St Erkenwald edit nbsp Cross in Battersea Park erected to mark the year 2000 It stands on the site of a manor granted by King Caedwalla to St Erkenwald which is believed to have been the home of St Ethelburga nbsp St Erkenwald s ChurchSt Erkenwald has also been commemorated in the following ways In the 1932 Barking Pageant 62 in the Chapel of St Erkenwald and St Ethelburga at St Paul s Cathedral with a cross in Battersea Park erected in the year 2000 which was placed on the site of a manor granted to St Erkenwald by King Ceadwalla believed to the site of the home of St AEthelburg 63 St Erkenwald s Church Barking 64 St Erkenwald s Church Southend on Sea demolished 65 66 St Erconwald s Catholic Church Walton on Thames 67 St Erconwald s Roman Catholic Church Wembley With a banner in Soulton Hall the house of Tudor statesman Sir Rowland Hill who published the Geneva Bible a building which the historian James D Wenn has suggested was built to reference the shrine 68 St Paul s Cathedral holds a sung Eucharist for Erkenwald conducted by the Bishop of London 69 Between 1931 and 1990 a senior school in Barking was called Erkenwald School 70 It is now a campus of Mayesbrook Park School In a statue in Wells Cathedral 71 In a window at St Albans Cathedral In an imaginatively named Essex League Basketball team 72 In contemporary culture editIn 1997 the Royal Shakespeare Company performed a play called Erkenwald 73 in The Other Place Stratford upon Avon Erkenwald is a supporting character in the Bernard Cornwell stories The Saxon Stories novel series The Last Kingdom booksand in the associated 2018 television series In that fictional world he is in service to King Alfred The actor Kevin Eldon has portrayed him 74 The British children s writer Abi Elphinstone chose Erkenwald as the name of a mythical kingdom in her 2021 book Sky Song 75 Erkenwald Neumann is the name of a musical artist with 2022 releases 76 One contemporary travel writer has said of St Erkenwald It s high time for a London icon to resurface 1300 years on 77 Miracles edit nbsp A 2000 stone plaque in London honouring St ErkenwaldThere are 19 miracles associated with Erkenwald 27 a boy who took refuge from his angry school master at the tomb of St Erkenwald received a message he had not known until then a man punished with sudden death for scoring the feast day of the saint concerning a prisoner who was set free how amid the great burning of the city and church the pall on hid tomb survived unharmed concerning the building of a more splendid church in London and concerning the mobility impaired person who after journeying to many tombs of famous saints throughout the world obtained healing from St Erkenwald concerning the man who prevented his wife from honouring the saint his punishment and the restoration of his health in accordance with the saint s instructions how he demonstrated with the wonderful largesse of his merciful acts that he was pleased with the honour being shown to him concerning the blind girl whose sight was speedily restored concerning the death of the drunken buffoon who got inside the shrine of Erkenwald when it was under construction concerning the doctor healed of deadly sickness concerning the blind woman who received her sight concerning the man who was cured of hid fever by the saint who visited him in person how one of the saint s painter s from when his body was in the crypt violated his festival was punished the saint himself appertaining to him and declaring the reason for the punishment concerning the deformed nun who was visited by St Ethelburga and St Erkenwald and made whole and undeformed concerning the deaf girl whose hearing was restored Other miracles associated with an invisible wheel and growing a construction beam are recorded 78 See also editSt Erkenwald poem St Paul s Cathedral Bishop of London Barking Abbey St AEthelburg Chertsey AbbeyNotes edit Also Ercenwald Eorcenwald or ErconwaldFurther reading editPearl and St Erkenwald Some Evidence for Authorship C J Peterson The Review of English Studies New Series Vol 25 No 97 Feb 1974 pp 49 53 BROWETT R 2017 Touching the Holy The Rise of Contact Relics in Medieval England The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 68 3 493 509 doi 10 1017 S0022046916001494 E Gordon Whatley The Saint of London The Life and Miracles of St Erkenwald 1989 Medieval amp Renaissance Texts amp Studies Mary Boyle Converting Corpses The Religious Other in the Munich Oswald and St Erkenwald Merton College Oxford University OLD ST PAUL S CATHEDRAL By WILLIAM BENHAM D D F S A Hagiography into Art A Study of St Erkenwald T McAlindon Studies in Philology Vol 67 No 4 Oct 1970 pp 472 494 Heathens and Saints St Erkenwald in Its Legendary Context Gordon Whatley Speculum Vol 61 No 2 Apr 1986 pp 330 363 New Werke St Erkenwald St Albans and the medieval sense of the past Monica Otta Saint Erkenwald Bishop and London archaeologist John Clark Published 1980Citations edit St Erkenwald St Erkenwald Lodge 2808 Retrieved 12 September 2023 Gollancz Israel 23 April 2018 St Erkenwald Forgotten Books ISBN 978 0 331 84084 1 Middle English Alliterative Poetry mediakron bc edu Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b c d e f g Ackroyd Peter 1 January 1900 London The Biography Illustrated ed New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 385 49771 8 London in the Not so Dark Ages www gresham ac uk Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b c Statutes Baldock and Lisieux Pars sexta British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 18 September 2023 William Dugdale The History of St Paul s Cathedral in London London 2nd ed 1716 p115 On the Diocese of London originally serving the East Saxons Our History London Diocesan Board for Schools 7 May 2023 Retrieved 7 May 2023 a b Farmer Oxford Dictionary of Saints p 175 William Dugdale The History of St Paul s Cathedral in London London 2nd ed 1716 p 115 a b c Walsh A New Dictionary of Saints p 182 Kirby Earliest English Kings p 83 Yorke Adaptation of the Anglo Saxon Royal Courts Cross Goes North pp 250 251 a b Kirby Earliest English Kings p 102 Kingsford Charles Lethbridge 1891 Hildilid Dictionary of National Biography Vol 26 p 386 a b Kirby Earliest English Kings pp 95 96 Parishes Tooting Graveney British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 19 February 2023 a b c d St Paul s To the Great Fire British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 19 September 2023 a b Fryde et al Handbook of British Chronology p 219 a b c d e f g St Erconwald Encyclopedia Volume Catholic Encyclopedia Catholic Online Retrieved 10 September 2023 Walford Edward 1878 Fulham Introduction in Old and New London British History Online pp 504 521 Archived from the original on 24 October 2016 Retrieved 23 October 2016 Yorke Conversion of Britain p 235 Kirby Earliest English Kings p 103 Who Was Fursey Furseypilgrims co uk Retrieved 1 March 2015 Ben Weinreb and Christopher Hibbert 1983 The London Encyclopedia Secular canons Cathedral of St Paul British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 27 August 2023 a b Whatley E Gordon ed 1 January 1989 The Saint of London The Life and Miracles of St Erkenwald Text and Translation v 58 Binghamton NY State University of New York at Binghamton Medieval amp Renaissance Texts amp Studies ISBN 978 0 86698 042 5 a b c d e Gollancz Sir Israel 1923 Selected Early English Poems IV St Erkenwald Oxford University Press Savage Henry Lyttleton Gollancz Israel 1926 St Erkenwald a Middle English Poem Edited with Introduction Notes and Glossary Yale University Press Austin Sue 23 February 2024 Shropshire Day Natural beauty and culture help county celebrate its own patron saint s day www shropshirestar com Retrieved 23 February 2024 Benson Larry D 1965 The Authorship of St Erkenwald The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 64 3 393 405 ISSN 0363 6941 JSTOR 27714679 Weiskott Eric ed 2016 The Erkenwald Poet s Sense of History English Alliterative Verse Poetic Tradition and Literary History Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 127 147 doi 10 1017 9781316718674 007 ISBN 978 1 316 76834 1 retrieved 10 September 2023 London British Library MS Harley 2250 ff 72v to 75v Middle English Alliterative Poetry mediakron bc edu Retrieved 10 September 2023 Hales John W Furnivall Frederick J eds 1867 Percy s Folio Manuscript Ballads and Romances Vol I London N Trubner amp Co Retrieved 20 November 2017 Erkenwald Oxford Reference Retrieved 25 June 2022 Ridgway Claire 14 November 1532 Archives The Tudor Society www tudorsociety com Retrieved 25 June 2022 Farmer Oxford Dictionary of Saints p 494 Maclean Margaret The destruction of Old St Paul s Retrieved 19 September 2023 Upon Paul s steeple www churchtimes co uk Retrieved 19 September 2023 Registrum S Pauli ed W St Simpson 11 52 81 393 5 Newcourt Repert ii 7 Historyfish net British Shrines Wall Chapter Four part two www historyfish net Retrieved 18 September 2023 a b Erkenwald Oxford Reference Retrieved 10 September 2023 The Street in late medieval London Trades and Noise Carol McGrath Writer carolcmcgrath co uk Retrieved 3 October 2023 London By Peter Ackroyd Used 9780099422587 World of Books www wob com Retrieved 18 September 2023 Grose Francis 1808 The Antiquarian Repertory a Miscellaneous Assemblage of Topography History Biography Customs and Manners Intended to Illustrate and Preserve Several Valuable Remains of Old Times Adorned with Numerous Views Portraits and Monuments A New Edition with a Great Many Valuable Additions In Four Volumes Jeffery Two days before the royal wedding a medieval wedding story History News Network historynewsnetwork org Retrieved 18 September 2023 Tudor Times Tudor Times Retrieved 20 September 2023 St Paul s Cathedral in the early Middle Ages The History of London 18 January 2015 Retrieved 18 September 2023 Sharpe Reginald R Reginald Robinson 13 November 2006 London and the Kingdom Volume 1A History Derived Mainly from the Archives at Guildhall in the Custody of the Corporation of the City of London St Paul s Cathedral Triforium Tour programme openhouse org uk Retrieved 19 September 2023 St Erkenwald Light of London englishlanguageandhistory com Retrieved 10 September 2023 Page 47 AECA org uk Koinonia 63 www aeca org uk Retrieved 18 September 2023 Dmitry Lapa Holy Hierarch Erconwald Bishop of London OrthoChristian Com Retrieved 17 September 2023 Schofield John St Paul s before Wren a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dvdmason 9 June 2019 Christianising London or the strange story of St Erkenwald s corpse Chronicle of London Retrieved 18 September 2023 Sir Christopher Wren Page 3 The Freelance History Writer 15 September 2012 Retrieved 19 September 2023 Thornbury Old and New London Volume 1 p 248 A BOOK ABOUT LAWYERS BY JOHN CORDY JEAFFRESON Denton Spalding Grace Catherine 2015 From Court to Countryside Aristocratic Women s Networks in Early Tudor England 1509 1547 Thesis Wesleyan University doi 10 14418 wes01 1 1187 theanneboleynfiles 14 November 2010 St Erkenwald s Day 1532 The Marriage of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn The Anne Boleyn Files Retrieved 20 September 2023 www google com https valencehousecollections co uk wp content uploads Infosheet8BarkingPageant doc amp ved 2ahUKEwigqbn0kbqBAxX4 rsIHXoJCz4QFnoECCMQAQ amp usg AOvVaw1QuR fa3Tl0JfKgTOWhm7h Retrieved 20 September 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Millennium Cross at Battersea manor London Remembers Retrieved 13 September 2023 Church St Erkenwald s church Barking mysite Retrieved 13 September 2023 St Erkenwald Southend on Sea Church Essex www essexchurches info Retrieved 28 August 2023 Sir Walter Tapper amp The Forgotten Cathedral of Southend on Sea www sir walter tapper churches co uk Retrieved 13 September 2023 St Erconwald s Walton on Thames Home Page St Erconwalds Retrieved 13 September 2023 Garnet as Emblem of Goodness Philosophical architecture from Henry III to George III retrieved 13 September 2023 Sung Eucharist for the Feast of Erkenwald Bishop of London St Paul s Cathedral Retrieved 10 September 2023 Erkenwald School GOV UK www get information schools service gov uk Retrieved 10 September 2023 Hope W H St John Lethaby W R January 1904 IX The Imagery and Sculptures on the West Front of Wells Cathedral Church Archaeologia 59 1 143 206 doi 10 1017 S026134090001153X ISSN 2051 3186 September 2009 Tom Hall travel London other things Retrieved 3 October 2023 Search RSC Performances SAI199707 Saint Erkenwald Shakespeare Birthplace Trust collections shakespeare org uk Retrieved 13 September 2023 The Last Kingdom Episode 3 10 TV Episode 2018 IMDb retrieved 13 September 2023 Sky Song Abi Elphinstone Retrieved 13 September 2023 Erkenwald Neumann Songs MP3 Download New Songs amp Albums Boomplay September 2009 Tom Hall travel London other things Retrieved 3 October 2023 53 SAINTS ERKENWALD BISHOP OF LONDON AND ETHELBURGA ABBESS OF BARKING A century of English sanctity Vladimir Moss azbyka ru in Russian Retrieved 18 September 2023 References editAndrew Malcolm The Saint of London The Life and Miracles of St Erkenwald Notes and Queries vol 41 no 4 Dec 1994 pp 541 Farmer David Hugh 2004 Oxford Dictionary of Saints Fifth ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860949 0 Fryde E B Greenway D E Porter S Roy I 1996 Handbook of British Chronology Third revised ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56350 X Kirby D P 2000 The Earliest English Kings New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 24211 8 Thornbury Walter 1887 Old and New London Volume 1 London Cassell Walsh Michael J 2007 A New Dictionary of Saints East and West London Burns amp Oats ISBN 978 0 86012 438 2 Yorke Barbara 2003 Martin Carver ed The Adaptation of the Anglo Saxon Royal Courts to Christianity The Cross Goes North Processes of Conversion in Northern Europe AD 300 1300 Woodbridge UK Boydell Press pp 244 257 ISBN 1 84383 125 2 Yorke Barbara 2006 The Conversion of Britain Religion Politics and Society in Britain c 600 800 London Pearson Longman ISBN 0 582 77292 3 External links editEorcenwald 1 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon EnglandChristian titlesPreceded byWine Bishop of London675 693 Succeeded byWaldhere Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Earconwald amp oldid 1209850648, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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