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Bede, commonly known as the Venerable Bede, (c. 672
– May 25, 735) was a monk at the Northumbrian monastery of Saint Peter at Wearmouth (today part of Sunderland), and of its daughter monastery, Saint Paul's, in modern Jarrow. He is well as an author and scholar, whose best-known work is Historia ecclesiastica gentis
Anglorum (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People). Bede wrote on many other topics, from music and
metrics to scripture commentaries.
Almost all that is known of his life is contained in a notice added by himself to his Historia (v. 24), which states
that he was placed in the monastery at Wearmouth at the age of seven, that he became deacon in his nineteenth year, and priest in
his thirtieth. He was trained by the abbots Benedict Biscop and
Ceolfrid, and probably accompanied the
latter to Jarrow in 682. There he spent his life, finding his chief pleasure in being always
occupied in learning, teaching, or writing, and zealous in the performance of monastic duties.
His works show that he had at his command all the learning of his time. He was proficient in patristic literature, and quotes from Pliny
the Younger, Vergil, Lucretius,
Ovid, Horace, and other classical writers, but
with some disapproval. He knew Greek and a little Hebrew. His Latin
is clear and without affectation, and he is a skilful story-teller.
Bede practiced the allegorical method of interpretation, and was by modern standards credulous concerning the miraculous; but
in most things his good sense is conspicuous, and his kindly and broad sympathies, his love of truth and fairness, his unfeigned
piety, and his devotion to the service of others combine to make him an exceedingly attractive character.
Bede's writings are classed as scientific, historical, and theological. The scientific include treatises on grammar (written
for his pupils), a work on natural phenomena (De rerum natura), and two on chronology (De temporibus and De
temporum ratione). Interestingly, Bede wrote that the Earth was round "like a playground ball", contrasting that with being
"round like a shield".
The most important and best known of his works is the Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, giving in five books
the history of England, ecclesiastical and political, from the time of Caesar to the date of its completion (731). The first twenty-one chapters, treating of the period before the mission of Augustine, are compiled from earlier writers such as Orosius, Gildas, Prosper of Aquitaine, the letters of Pope Gregory I, and others, with the insertion of legends and traditions. After 596, documentary
sources, which Bede took pains to obtain, are used, and oral testimony, which he employed not without critical consideration of
its value.
His other historical works were lives of the abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow, and lives in verse and prose of St. Cuthbert of Lindisfarne. The most numerous of his
writings are theological, and consist of commentaries on the books of the Old and New Testaments, homilies, and treatises on
detached portions of Scripture.
His last work, completed on his death-bed, was a translation into Anglo-Saxon of the Gospel of John.
Bede became known as Venerable Bede soon after his death, but this was not linked to consideration for sainthood by the Roman Catholic
Church. His scholarship and importance to Catholicism were recognised in 1899 when he
was declared a Doctor of the Church as St Bede
The Venerable.
External Link
Ecclesiastical History of the English People
This article includes content derived from the public domain
Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 1914.
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