Augustine of Canterbury Converting the Anglo-Saxons

A Contribution to the Identity of the Medieval Missionary

Mots-clés : Æthelberht of Kent, Anglo-Saxons, Apostle, Augustine of Canterbury, Baptism, Bede the Venerable, Christianization, Conversion, Evangelization, Kingdom of Kent, Miracles, Mission, Missionary, Pope Gregory the Great

Résumé

Augustine of Canterbury, who came from Rome to Kingdom of Kent in 597, is considered a founder of the English Church. This paper tries to describe his identity as a missionary preaching the Word to pagan Anglo-Saxons. The identity is discovered by analyzing descriptions of Augustine’s activity presented in the works of Gregory the Great and the Venerable Bede.

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Publiée
2013-01-01
Comment citer
Sas, Maksymilian. 2013. « Augustine of Canterbury Converting the Anglo-Saxons: A Contribution to the Identity of the Medieval Missionary ». De Medio Aevo 2 (1): 213-30. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/DMAE/article/view/75751.
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Miscelánea