Eadberht of Selsey

This article is about the 8th century Bishop of Selsey. For other uses, see Eadberht.
Eadberht
Bishop of Selsey
Appointed between 709 and 716
Term ended between 716 and 731
Predecessor new foundation
Successor Eolla
Orders
Consecration between 709 and 731
Personal details
Died between 716 and 731
Denomination Christian

Eadberht of Selsey (died circa 716) was an abbot of Selsey Abbey, later promoted to become the first Bishop of Selsey.[1] He was consecrated sometime between 709 and 716, and died between 716 and 731.[2] Wilfrid has occasionally been regarded as a previous bishop of the South Saxons, but this is an insertion of his name into the episcopal lists by later medieval writers, and Wilfrid was not considered the bishop during his lifetime or Bede's.[3][4]

As abbot Eadberht received, around 700, a grant of land from Bryni, Ealdorman of Sussex, that was witnessed by Kings Nothelm of Sussex and Watt of Sussex.[5]

In a charter dated by Birch about 725, Eadberht was named as the beneficiary of land from King Nothelm, witnessed by King Watt.[6][7][8] But this charter is now believed to be a forgery from the late 10th century or early 11th century.[9][10]

Eadberht also appears as a witness to an undated charter of Nothelm, together with Osric and Eolla. The charter can be approximately dated to some point between about 705 and 717.[11] Eadberht last appearance is as a witness to a confirmation, dated 716, of a charter of Wihtred, King of Kent.[12]

Citations

  1. Kelly "Charters of Selsey" p. 6
  2. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 221
  3. Kelly "Charters of Selsey" pp. lxi–lxii
  4. Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People Book IV.13. Referring to the land grant at Selsey, Bede wrote: "Wilfrid..having built a monastery there established the regular life, most of the monks being his own companions.."
  5. Anglo-Saxon Charters S1173 accessed on 25 August 2007
  6. Birch Cartularium Saxonicum p. 211
  7. Kelly "Charters of Selsey" p. 26. Birch's emendation (of the date) to 725 is still unsatisfactory since it is too late for Bishop Eadberht.
  8. Anglo-Saxon Charters S43 accessed on 25 August 2007
  9. Kelly "Charters of Selsey" p. 26. "..is without doubt a forgery and not an innocent 10th century copy of a genuine eighth-century charter"
  10. Diocese of Chichester Capitular Records for Cap. I/17/1 (S43) With Professor H.L. Rogers findings on why manuscript is forgery. Accessed 22 February 2010
  11. Anglo-Saxons.net Charters S44 accessed on 25 August 2007
  12. Anglo-Saxons.net Charters S22 accessed on 25 August 2007

References

  • Bede (1988). Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Translated by Leo Sherley-Price. Revised by R. E. Latham. Penguin Classics. ISBN 0-14-044565-X. 
  • Birch, Walter de Gray (1885). Cartularium Saxonicum:a collection of Charters relating to Anglo-Saxon History Volume I. London: Whiting and Company. 
  • Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X. 
  • Kelly, S. E. (1998). Charters of Selsey. Anglo-Saxon Charters VI. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-726175-2. 
  • Miller, Sean. "England c.450–1066 in a Nutshell". Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 28 March 2011. 

External links

Christian titles
New title
new foundation
Bishop of Selsey
flourished around 715
Succeeded by
Eolla
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