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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain by Allen, Grant - CHAPTER X.

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Early Britain Anglo-Saxon Britain

CHAPTER X.

ROME AND IONA.

It was not the Ro­man mis­sion which fi­nal­ly suc­ceed­ed in con­vert­ing the North and the Mid­lands. That suc­cess was due to the Scot­tish and Pic­tish Church. At the end of the sixth cen­tu­ry, Colum­ba, an Irish mis­sion­ary, crossed over to the soli­tary rock of Iona, where he es­tab­lished an abbey on the Irish mod­el, and quick­ly evan­ge­lised the north­ern Picts. From Iona, some gen­er­ations lat­er, went forth the de­vot­ed mis­sion­ar­ies who fi­nal­ly con­vert­ed the north­ern half of Eng­land.

The na­tive church­es of the west, cut off from di­rect in­ter­course with the main body of Latin Chris­ten­dom, had re­tained cer­tain habits which were now re­gard­ed by Rome as schis­mat­ical. Chief among these were the date of cel­ebrat­ing East­er, and the un­canon­ical method of cut­ting the ton­sure in a cres­cent in­stead of a cir­cle. Au­gus­tine, short­ly af­ter his ar­rival, en­deav­oured to ob­tain uni­ty be­tween the two church­es on these mat­ters of dis­ci­pline, to which great im­por­tance was at­tached as tests of sub­mis­sion to the Latin rule. He ob­tained from Æthel­ber­ht a safe-​con­duct through the hea­then West-​Sax­on ter­ri­to­ries as far as what is now Worces­ter­shire; and there, “on the bor­ders of the Huiccii and the West-​Sax­ons,” says Bæ­da, “he con­vened to a col­lo­quy the bish­ops and doc­tors of the near­est province of the Britons, in the place which, to the present day, is called in the En­glish lan­guage, Au­gus­tine's Oak.” Such open-​air meet­ings by sa­cred trees or stones were uni­ver­sal in Eng­land both be­fore and af­ter its con­ver­sion. “He be­gan to ad­mon­ish them with a broth­er­ly ad­mo­ni­tion to em­brace with him the Catholic faith, and to un­der­take the com­mon task of evan­ge­lis­ing the pa­gans. For they did not ob­serve East­er at the prop­er pe­ri­od: more­over, they did many oth­er things con­trary to the uni­ty of the Church.” But the Welsh were jeal­ous of the in­trud­ers, and re­fused to aban­don their old cus­toms. There­upon, Au­gus­tine de­clared that if they would not help him against the hea­then, they would per­ish by the hea­then. A few years lat­er, af­ter Au­gus­tine's death, this pre­dic­tion was ver­ified by Æthel­frith of Northum­bria, whose mas­sacre of the monks of Ban­gor has al­ready been no­ticed.

It was in re­turn for the de­struc­tion of Chester and the slaugh­ter of the monks that Cad­wal­la joined the hea­then Pen­da against his fel­low Chris­tian Ead­wine. But the death of Ead­wine left the throne open for the house of Æthel­frith, whose place Ead­wine had tak­en. Af­ter a year of re­newed hea­then­dom, how­ev­er, dur­ing part of which the Welsh Cad­wal­la reigned over Northum­bria, Os­wald, son of Æthel­frith, again unit­ed Deira and Ber­ni­cia un­der his own rule. Os­wald was a Chris­tian, but he had learnt his Chris­tian­ity from the Scots, amongst whom he had spent his ex­ile, and he favoured the in­tro­duc­tion of Pic­tish and Scot­tish mis­sion­ar­ies in­to Northum­bria. The Ital­ian monks who had ac­com­pa­nied Au­gus­tine were men of for­eign speech and man­ners, rep­re­sen­ta­tives of an alien civil­isa­tion, and they at­tempt­ed to con­vert whole king­doms _en bloc_ by the pre­vi­ous con­ver­sion of their rulers. Their method was po­lit­ical and sys­tem­at­ic. But the Pic­tish and Irish preach­ers were men of more Bri­tan­nic feel­ings, and they went to work with true mis­sion­ary earnest­ness to con­vert the half Celtic peo­ple of Northum­bria, man by man, in their own homes. Aidan, the apos­tle of the north, car­ried the Pic­tish faith in­to the Loth­ians and Northum­ber­land. He placed his bish­op-​stool not far from the roy­al town of Bam­bor­ough, at Lind­is­farne, the Holy Is­land of the Northum­bri­an coast. Oth­er Celtic mis­sion­ar­ies pen­etrat­ed fur­ther south, even in­to the hea­then realm of Pen­da and his trib­utary princes. Cead­da or Chad, the pa­tron saint of Lich­field, car­ried Chris­tian­ity to the Mer­cians. Di­uma preached to the Mid­dle En­glish of Le­ices­ter with much suc­cess, Pea­da, their eal­dor­man, son of Pen­da, hav­ing him­self al­ready em­braced the new faith. Pen­da had slain Os­wald in a great bat­tle at Maser­feld in 641; but the mar­tyr on­ly brought in­creased glo­ry to the Chris­tians: and Os­wiu, who suc­ceed­ed him, af­ter an in­ter­val of an­ar­chy, as king of Deira (for Ber­ni­cia now chose a king of its own), was al­so a zeal­ous ad­her­ent of the Celtic mis­sion­ar­ies. Thus the het­ero­dox Church made rapid strides through­out the whole of the north.

Mean­while, in the south the Latin mis­sion­ar­ies, urged to ac­tiv­ity, per­haps, by the Pic­tish suc­cess­es, had been mak­ing fresh progress. In the very year when Os­wald was cho­sen king by the Northum­bri­ans, Bir­inus, a priest from north­ern Italy, went by com­mand of the pope to the West Sax­ons: and af­ter twelve months he was able to bap­tise their king, Cynegils, at his cap­ital of Dorch­ester, on the Thames, his spon­sor be­ing Os­wald of Northum­bria. A year lat­er, Fe­lix, a Bur­gun­di­an, “preached the faith of Christ to the East An­glians,” who had in­deed been con­vert­ed by the Au­gus­tini­an mis­sion­ar­ies, but af­ter­wards re­lapsed. On­ly Sus­sex and Mer­cia still re­mained hea­then. But, in 655, Pen­da made a last at­tempt against Northum­bria, which he had har­ried year af­ter year, and was met by Os­wiu at Win­wid­field, near Leeds; the Chris­tians were suc­cess­ful, and Pen­da was slain, to­geth­er with thir­ty roy­al per­sons–pet­ty princes of the trib­utary Mer­cian states, no doubt. His son, Pea­da, the Chris­tian eal­dor­man of the Mid­dle En­glish, suc­ceed­ed him, and the Mer­cians be­came Chris­tians of the Pic­tish or Irish type. “Their first bish­op,” says Bæ­da, “was Di­uma, who died and was buried among the Mid­dle En­glish. The sec­ond was Cel­lach, who aban­doned his bish­opric, and re­turned dur­ing his life­time to Scot­land (per­haps Ire­land, but more prob­ably the Scot­tish king­dom in Ar­gyll­shire). Both of these were by birth Irish­men. The third was Trumhere, by race an En­glish­man, but ed­ucat­ed and or­dained by the Irish.” Thus Ro­man Chris­tian­ity spread over the whole of Eng­land south of the Wash (save on­ly hea­then Sus­sex): while the Irish Church had made its way over all the north, from the Wash to the Firth of Forth. The Ro­man in­flu­ence may be part­ly traced by the Ro­man al­pha­bet su­per­sed­ing the old En­glish runes. Runic in­scrip­tions are rare in the south, where they were re­gard­ed as hea­then­ish relics, and so de­stroyed: but they are com­par­ative­ly com­mon in the north. Runics ap­pear on the coins of the first Chris­tian kings of Mer­cia, Pea­da and Æthelred, but soon die out un­der their suc­ces­sors.

Hea­then­dom was now fair­ly van­quished. It sur­vived on­ly in Sus­sex, cut off from the rest of Eng­land by the for­est belt of the Weald. The next tri­al of strength must clear­ly lie be­tween Rome and Iona.

The north­ern bish­ops and ab­bots traced their suc­ces­sion, not to Au­gus­tine, but to Colum­ba. Cuth­ber­ht, the En­glish apos­tle of the north, who re­al­ly con­vert­ed the _peo­ple_ of Northum­bria, as ear­li­er mis­sion­ar­ies had con­vert­ed its _kings_, de­rived his or­ders from Iona. Rome or Ire­land, was now the prac­ti­cal ques­tion of the En­glish Church. As might be ex­pect­ed, Rome con­quered. To al­lay the dis­cord, King Os­wiu sum­moned a syn­od at Stre­one­shalch (now known by its lat­er Dan­ish name of Whit­by) in 664, to set­tle the vexed ques­tion as to the date of East­er. The Irish priests claimed the au­thor­ity of St. John for their cres­cent ton­sure; the Ro­mans, head­ed by Wil­frith, a most vig­or­ous priest, ap­pealed to the au­thor­ity of St. Pe­ter for the canon­ical cir­cle. “I will nev­er of­fend the saint who holds the keys of heav­en,” said Os­wiu, with the frank, half-​hea­then­dom of a re­cent con­vert; and the meet­ing short­ly de­cid­ed as the king would have it. The Irish par­ty ac­qui­esced or else re­turned to Scot­land; and thence­forth the new En­glish Church re­mained in close com­mu­nion with Rome and the Con­ti­nent. What­ev­er may be our ec­cle­si­as­ti­cal judg­ment of this de­ci­sion, there can be lit­tle doubt that its ma­te­ri­al ef­fects were most ex­cel­lent. By bring­ing Eng­land in­to con­nec­tion with Rome, it brought her in­to con­nec­tion with the cen­tre of all then-​ex­ist­ing civil­isa­tion, and en­dowed her with arts and man­ufac­tures which she could nev­er oth­er­wise have at­tained. The con­nec­tion with Ire­land and the north would have been as fa­tal, from a pure­ly sec­ular point of view, to ear­ly En­glish cul­ture as was the lat­er con­nec­tion with half-​bar­bar­ic Scan­di­navia. Rome gave Eng­land the Ro­man let­ters, arts, and or­gan­isa­tion: Ire­land could on­ly have giv­en her a more in­su­lar form of Celtic civil­isa­tion.