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Oswald of Worcester

Oswald of Worcester (died 29 February 992) was Archbishop of York from 972 to his death in 992. He was of Danish ancestry, but brought up by his uncle, Oda, who sent him to France to the abbey of Fleury to become a monk. After a number of years at Fleury, Oswald returned to England at the request of his uncle, who died before Oswald returned. With his uncle's death, Oswald needed a patron and turned to another kinsman, Oskytel, who had recently become Archbishop of York. His activity for Oskytel attracted the notice of Archbishop Dunstan who had Oswald consecrated as Bishop of Worcester in 961. In 972, Oswald was promoted to the see of York, although he continued to hold Worcester also.

Oswald
Archbishop of York
Appointed972
Term ended29 February 992
PredecessorEdwald
SuccessorEaldwulf
Other post(s)Bishop of Worcester
Orders
Consecration961
Personal details
Died29 February 992
Worcester
BuriedWorcester
Sainthood
Feast day29 February (leap years)[citation needed]
28 February (common years)
19 May (POCSP)
Venerated inCatholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Anglican Communion

As bishop and archbishop, Oswald was a supporter and one of the leading promoters (together with Æthelwold) of Dunstan's reforms of the church, including monastic reforms.[1] Oswald founded a number of monasteries, including Ramsey Abbey, and reformed another seven, including Winchcombe in Gloucestershire and Pershore and Evesham in Worcestershire. Oswald also switched the cathedral chapter of Worcester from secular clergy to monks. While archbishop, he brought the scholar Abbo of Fleury to teach, and he spent two years in England, mostly at Ramsey. Oswald died in 992, while washing the feet of the poor. A hagiographical life was written shortly after his death, and he was quickly hailed as a saint.

Early life edit

Oswald, of Danish parentage, was brought up by his uncle Oda, Archbishop of Canterbury, and was also related to Oskytel, later Archbishop of York.[2] He was also related to the cniht Osulf, who received land while Oswald was bishop of Worcester.[3] Oswald was instructed by a Frankish scholar Frithegod.[4] He held the office of dean of Winchester, but he was sent by his uncle to France and entered the monastery of Fleury about 950,[2] where he was ordained in 959. While at Fleury he met Osgar of Abingdon and Germanus of Winchester.[2] The influence of Fleury was to be evident later in Oswald's life, when it was one of the inspirations for the Regularis Concordia, the English code of monastic conduct agreed to in 970.[5]

Return to England edit

Oswald returned to England in 958 at the behest of his uncle, but Oda died before Oswald returned. Lacking a patron, Oswald turned to Oskytel, recently named Archbishop of York. It is possible that Oswald along with Oskytel travelled to Rome for Oskytel's pallium, but this story is only contained in a 12th-century Ramsey Abbey chronicle, so it may not be authentic.[4] Even if he did not travel to Rome, Oswald was active in ecclesiastical affairs at York until Dunstan obtained Oswald's appointment to the see, or bishopric, of Worcester.[2] He was consecrated as Bishop of Worcester in 961.[6] Soon after his consecration, he persuaded Germanus to come back to England and made him head of a small religious community near Westbury-on-Trym.[2] After the establishment of this group about 962, Oswald grew worried that because the monastery was located on lands owned by the see of Worcester, his successors in the see might disrupt the community. He was offered the site of Ramsey Abbey in Huntingdonshire by Æthelwine, son of Æthelstan Half-King, and Oswald established a monastery there about 971 that attracted most of the members of the community at Westbury. This foundation at Ramsey went on to become Ramsey Abbey.[7] Ramsey was Oswald's most famous foundation,[8] with its church dedicated in 974. Later, Oswald invited Abbo of Fleury to come and teach at Ramsey.[9] Oswald directed the affairs of Ramsey Abbey until his death, when the dean Eadnoth became the first abbot.[4] He gave a magnificent Bible to Ramsey, which was important enough to merit a mention in Oswald's Life.[10] Alongside the gift of the book, Oswald also contributed wall hangings and other textiles to the abbey.[11]

 
A medieval manuscript of Abbo of Fleury's work

Oswald supported Dunstan and Æthelwold, Bishop of Winchester, in their efforts to purify the Church from secularism. Aided by King Edgar, he took a prominent part in the revival of monastic discipline along the precepts of the Rule of Saint Benedict. His methods differed from Æthelwold's, who often violently ejected secular clergy from churches and replaced them with monks.[12] Oswald also organised the estates of his see into administrative hundreds known as the Oswaldslow, which helped stabilise the ecclesiastical revenues.[9] He constantly visited the monasteries he founded, and was long remembered as father of his people both as bishop and archbishop.[12] It was Oswald who changed the cathedral chapter of Worcester from priests to monks,[13] although the exact method that he employed is unclear. One tradition says that Oswald used a slow approach in building up a new church of monks next to the cathedral, allowing the cathedral's priests to continue performing services in the cathedral until the monastic foundation was strong enough to take over the cathedral.[8] Another tradition claims that, instead, Oswald expelled any of the clergy in the cathedral that would not give up their wives and replaced them with monks immediately. Oswald also reformed Winchcombe Abbey, along with the monasteries of Westbury Priory, Pershore Abbey, and Evesham Abbey. It is also possible that monasteries were established in Gloucester and Deerhurst, but evidence is lacking for their exact foundation dates.[4]

Archbishop of York edit

In 972 Oswald was made Archbishop of York[6] and journeyed to Rome to receive a pallium from Pope John XIII. It is possible that he also travelled on Edgar's behalf to the court of the Emperor Otto I, and that these two journeys had been combined.[4] He continued to hold the see of Worcester in addition to York.[6] The holding of Worcester in addition to York became traditional for almost the next fifty years. Although it was uncanonical, it had many advantages for York in that it added a much richer diocese to their holdings, and one which was more peaceful as well.[14] When Edgar died in 975, Ælfhere, Ealdorman of Mercia, broke up many monastic communities, some of which were Oswald's foundations.[15] Ramsey, however, was not disturbed, probably due to the patronage of Æthelwine, Ealdorman of East Anglia, son of Æthelstan Half-King. Ælfhere was a supporter of Ethelred the Unready, the son of Edgar's third marriage, while Oswald supported the son of Edgar's first marriage, Edward the Martyr,[4] in the dispute over who would succeed King Edgar.[16]

In 985, Oswald invited Abbo of Fleury to come to Ramsey to help found the monastic school there. Abbo was at Ramsey from 985 to 987, where he taught computus, or the methods for calculating Easter. It was also often used in trying to calculate the date of the Last Judgment.[17] A surviving manuscript gives a list compiled by Oswald, setting forth estates that had been taken from the diocese of York.[18]

Death and sainthood edit

Oswald died on 29 February 992 in the act of washing the feet of the poor at Worcester,[12] as was his daily custom during Lent, and was buried in the Church of St Mary at Worcester. He promoted the education of the clergy and persuaded scholars to come from Fleury and teach in England.[15] A Life of Oswald was written after his death, probably by Byrhtferth, a monk of Ramsey Abbey.[19] Two manuscripts, a psalter (Harley MS 2904 in the British Library) and a pontifical (MS 100, part 2 from Sidney Sussex College of Cambridge University), probably belonged to Oswald and would have been used in his daily devotions.[4]

Almost immediately after his death miracles were reported at his funeral and at his tomb. His remains were translated to a different burial spot in Worcester Cathedral ten years after his death. His feast day is celebrated on 28 February[20] or on 19 May in the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter.[21]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Lawrence Medieval Monasticism p. 101
  2. ^ a b c d e Knowles Monastic Order p. 40
  3. ^ Richardson and Sayles Governance of Mediaeval England p. 57
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Brooks "Oswald (St Oswald)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  5. ^ Lawrence Medieval Monasticism pp. 102–103
  6. ^ a b c Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 224
  7. ^ Knowles Monastic Order p. 51
  8. ^ a b Stenton Anglo Saxon England p. 450
  9. ^ a b Knowles Monastic Order p. 488
  10. ^ Dodwell Anglo-Saxon Art p. 95
  11. ^ Dodwell Anglo-Saxon Art p. 129
  12. ^ a b c Knowles Monastic Order p. 55
  13. ^ Knowles Monastic Order p. 621
  14. ^ Stenton Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed. p. 436
  15. ^ a b Knowles Monastic Order p. 53
  16. ^ Williams Æthelred the Unready p. 9
  17. ^ Fletcher Bloodfeud p. 92
  18. ^ Wormald Making of English Law p. 186
  19. ^ Knowles Monastic Order p. 494
  20. ^ Walsh New Dictionary of Saints p. 459
  21. ^ Divine Worship: The Missal p. 734

References edit

  • Brooks, N. P. (2004). "Oswald (St Oswald) (d. 992)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 April 2008. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  • Dodwell, C. R. (1985). Anglo-Saxon Art: A New Perspective. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-9300-5.
  • Fletcher, R. A. (2003). Bloodfeud: Murder and Revenge in Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-516136-X.
  • 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.
  • Knowles, David (1976). The Monastic Order in England: A History of its Development from the Times of St. Dunstan to the Fourth Lateran Council, 940–1216 (Second reprint ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-05479-6.
  • Lawrence, C. H. (2001). Medieval Monasticism: Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages (Third ed.). New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-40427-4.
  • Lutz, Cora E. (1977). Schoolmasters of the Tenth Century. Archon Books. ISBN 0-208-01628-7.
  • Richardson, H. G.; Sayles, G. O. (1963). The Governance of Mediaeval England: From the Conquest to Magna Carta. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. OCLC 504298.
  • Stenton, F. M. (1971). Anglo-Saxon England (Third ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280139-5.
  • Walsh, Michael J. (2007). A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West. London: Burns & Oats. ISBN 0-86012-438-X.
  • Williams, Ann (2003). Æthelred the Unready: The Ill-Counselled King. London: Hambledon & London. ISBN 1-85285-382-4.
  • Wormald, Patrick (1999). The Making of English Law: King Alfred to the Twelfth Century. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 0-631-22740-7.

Further reading edit

  • Lapidge, Michael, ed. (2009). Byrhtferth of Ramsey: The Lives of St Oswald and St Ecgwine. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-955078-4.

External links edit

  • Oswald 8 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
  • Anonymous life of Oswald (in Latin), pg. 399 ff.
  • 2 more lives of St Oswald, plus relevant extracts of the Historia Rameseiensis, pg. 1 ff.
  • St. Oswald and the Church of Worcester (1919)
Christian titles
Preceded by Bishop of Worcester
961–?
Succeeded by
Preceded by Archbishop of York
971–992

oswald, worcester, died, february, archbishop, york, from, death, danish, ancestry, brought, uncle, sent, france, abbey, fleury, become, monk, after, number, years, fleury, oswald, returned, england, request, uncle, died, before, oswald, returned, with, uncle,. Oswald of Worcester died 29 February 992 was Archbishop of York from 972 to his death in 992 He was of Danish ancestry but brought up by his uncle Oda who sent him to France to the abbey of Fleury to become a monk After a number of years at Fleury Oswald returned to England at the request of his uncle who died before Oswald returned With his uncle s death Oswald needed a patron and turned to another kinsman Oskytel who had recently become Archbishop of York His activity for Oskytel attracted the notice of Archbishop Dunstan who had Oswald consecrated as Bishop of Worcester in 961 In 972 Oswald was promoted to the see of York although he continued to hold Worcester also OswaldArchbishop of YorkAppointed972Term ended29 February 992PredecessorEdwaldSuccessorEaldwulfOther post s Bishop of WorcesterOrdersConsecration961Personal detailsDied29 February 992WorcesterBuriedWorcesterSainthoodFeast day29 February leap years citation needed 28 February common years 19 May POCSP Venerated inCatholic ChurchEastern Orthodox ChurchAnglican CommunionAs bishop and archbishop Oswald was a supporter and one of the leading promoters together with AEthelwold of Dunstan s reforms of the church including monastic reforms 1 Oswald founded a number of monasteries including Ramsey Abbey and reformed another seven including Winchcombe in Gloucestershire and Pershore and Evesham in Worcestershire Oswald also switched the cathedral chapter of Worcester from secular clergy to monks While archbishop he brought the scholar Abbo of Fleury to teach and he spent two years in England mostly at Ramsey Oswald died in 992 while washing the feet of the poor A hagiographical life was written shortly after his death and he was quickly hailed as a saint Contents 1 Early life 2 Return to England 3 Archbishop of York 4 Death and sainthood 5 Citations 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editOswald of Danish parentage was brought up by his uncle Oda Archbishop of Canterbury and was also related to Oskytel later Archbishop of York 2 He was also related to the cniht Osulf who received land while Oswald was bishop of Worcester 3 Oswald was instructed by a Frankish scholar Frithegod 4 He held the office of dean of Winchester but he was sent by his uncle to France and entered the monastery of Fleury about 950 2 where he was ordained in 959 While at Fleury he met Osgar of Abingdon and Germanus of Winchester 2 The influence of Fleury was to be evident later in Oswald s life when it was one of the inspirations for the Regularis Concordia the English code of monastic conduct agreed to in 970 5 Return to England editOswald returned to England in 958 at the behest of his uncle but Oda died before Oswald returned Lacking a patron Oswald turned to Oskytel recently named Archbishop of York It is possible that Oswald along with Oskytel travelled to Rome for Oskytel s pallium but this story is only contained in a 12th century Ramsey Abbey chronicle so it may not be authentic 4 Even if he did not travel to Rome Oswald was active in ecclesiastical affairs at York until Dunstan obtained Oswald s appointment to the see or bishopric of Worcester 2 He was consecrated as Bishop of Worcester in 961 6 Soon after his consecration he persuaded Germanus to come back to England and made him head of a small religious community near Westbury on Trym 2 After the establishment of this group about 962 Oswald grew worried that because the monastery was located on lands owned by the see of Worcester his successors in the see might disrupt the community He was offered the site of Ramsey Abbey in Huntingdonshire by AEthelwine son of AEthelstan Half King and Oswald established a monastery there about 971 that attracted most of the members of the community at Westbury This foundation at Ramsey went on to become Ramsey Abbey 7 Ramsey was Oswald s most famous foundation 8 with its church dedicated in 974 Later Oswald invited Abbo of Fleury to come and teach at Ramsey 9 Oswald directed the affairs of Ramsey Abbey until his death when the dean Eadnoth became the first abbot 4 He gave a magnificent Bible to Ramsey which was important enough to merit a mention in Oswald s Life 10 Alongside the gift of the book Oswald also contributed wall hangings and other textiles to the abbey 11 nbsp A medieval manuscript of Abbo of Fleury s workOswald supported Dunstan and AEthelwold Bishop of Winchester in their efforts to purify the Church from secularism Aided by King Edgar he took a prominent part in the revival of monastic discipline along the precepts of the Rule of Saint Benedict His methods differed from AEthelwold s who often violently ejected secular clergy from churches and replaced them with monks 12 Oswald also organised the estates of his see into administrative hundreds known as the Oswaldslow which helped stabilise the ecclesiastical revenues 9 He constantly visited the monasteries he founded and was long remembered as father of his people both as bishop and archbishop 12 It was Oswald who changed the cathedral chapter of Worcester from priests to monks 13 although the exact method that he employed is unclear One tradition says that Oswald used a slow approach in building up a new church of monks next to the cathedral allowing the cathedral s priests to continue performing services in the cathedral until the monastic foundation was strong enough to take over the cathedral 8 Another tradition claims that instead Oswald expelled any of the clergy in the cathedral that would not give up their wives and replaced them with monks immediately Oswald also reformed Winchcombe Abbey along with the monasteries of Westbury Priory Pershore Abbey and Evesham Abbey It is also possible that monasteries were established in Gloucester and Deerhurst but evidence is lacking for their exact foundation dates 4 Archbishop of York editIn 972 Oswald was made Archbishop of York 6 and journeyed to Rome to receive a pallium from Pope John XIII It is possible that he also travelled on Edgar s behalf to the court of the Emperor Otto I and that these two journeys had been combined 4 He continued to hold the see of Worcester in addition to York 6 The holding of Worcester in addition to York became traditional for almost the next fifty years Although it was uncanonical it had many advantages for York in that it added a much richer diocese to their holdings and one which was more peaceful as well 14 When Edgar died in 975 AElfhere Ealdorman of Mercia broke up many monastic communities some of which were Oswald s foundations 15 Ramsey however was not disturbed probably due to the patronage of AEthelwine Ealdorman of East Anglia son of AEthelstan Half King AElfhere was a supporter of Ethelred the Unready the son of Edgar s third marriage while Oswald supported the son of Edgar s first marriage Edward the Martyr 4 in the dispute over who would succeed King Edgar 16 In 985 Oswald invited Abbo of Fleury to come to Ramsey to help found the monastic school there Abbo was at Ramsey from 985 to 987 where he taught computus or the methods for calculating Easter It was also often used in trying to calculate the date of the Last Judgment 17 A surviving manuscript gives a list compiled by Oswald setting forth estates that had been taken from the diocese of York 18 Death and sainthood editOswald died on 29 February 992 in the act of washing the feet of the poor at Worcester 12 as was his daily custom during Lent and was buried in the Church of St Mary at Worcester He promoted the education of the clergy and persuaded scholars to come from Fleury and teach in England 15 A Life of Oswald was written after his death probably by Byrhtferth a monk of Ramsey Abbey 19 Two manuscripts a psalter Harley MS 2904 in the British Library and a pontifical MS 100 part 2 from Sidney Sussex College of Cambridge University probably belonged to Oswald and would have been used in his daily devotions 4 Almost immediately after his death miracles were reported at his funeral and at his tomb His remains were translated to a different burial spot in Worcester Cathedral ten years after his death His feast day is celebrated on 28 February 20 or on 19 May in the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Saint Peter 21 Citations edit Lawrence Medieval Monasticism p 101 a b c d e Knowles Monastic Order p 40 Richardson and Sayles Governance of Mediaeval England p 57 a b c d e f g Brooks Oswald St Oswald Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Lawrence Medieval Monasticism pp 102 103 a b c Fryde et al Handbook of British Chronology p 224 Knowles Monastic Order p 51 a b Stenton Anglo Saxon England p 450 a b Knowles Monastic Order p 488 Dodwell Anglo Saxon Art p 95 Dodwell Anglo Saxon Art p 129 a b c Knowles Monastic Order p 55 Knowles Monastic Order p 621 Stenton Anglo Saxon England 3rd ed p 436 a b Knowles Monastic Order p 53 Williams AEthelred the Unready p 9 Fletcher Bloodfeud p 92 Wormald Making of English Law p 186 Knowles Monastic Order p 494 Walsh New Dictionary of Saints p 459 Divine Worship The Missal p 734References editBrooks N P 2004 Oswald St Oswald d 992 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Retrieved 22 April 2008 subscription or UK public library membership required Dodwell C R 1985 Anglo Saxon Art A New Perspective Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 9300 5 Fletcher R A 2003 Bloodfeud Murder and Revenge in Anglo Saxon England Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 516136 X 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 Knowles David 1976 The Monastic Order in England A History of its Development from the Times of St Dunstan to the Fourth Lateran Council 940 1216 Second reprint ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 05479 6 Lawrence C H 2001 Medieval Monasticism Forms of Religious Life in Western Europe in the Middle Ages Third ed New York Longman ISBN 0 582 40427 4 Lutz Cora E 1977 Schoolmasters of the Tenth Century Archon Books ISBN 0 208 01628 7 Richardson H G Sayles G O 1963 The Governance of Mediaeval England From the Conquest to Magna Carta Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press OCLC 504298 Stenton F M 1971 Anglo Saxon England Third ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280139 5 Walsh Michael J 2007 A New Dictionary of Saints East and West London Burns amp Oats ISBN 0 86012 438 X Williams Ann 2003 AEthelred the Unready The Ill Counselled King London Hambledon amp London ISBN 1 85285 382 4 Wormald Patrick 1999 The Making of English Law King Alfred to the Twelfth Century Cambridge MA Blackwell Publishers ISBN 0 631 22740 7 Further reading editLapidge Michael ed 2009 Byrhtferth of Ramsey The Lives of St Oswald and St Ecgwine Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 955078 4 External links editOswald 8 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England Anonymous life of Oswald in Latin pg 399 ff 2 more lives of St Oswald plus relevant extracts of the Historia Rameseiensis pg 1 ff St Oswald and the Church of Worcester 1919 Christian titlesPreceded byDunstan Bishop of Worcester961 Succeeded byEaldwulfPreceded byEdwald Archbishop of York971 992 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oswald of Worcester amp oldid 1105368691, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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