Ebook
Ecclesiastical History of the English People by Bede is a key work for historians, church historians and intelligent lay readers. Here is the perfect introduction.
Bede's best known work, An Ecclesiastical History of the English People, was written in Latin and is not immediately easy to understand and follow. Yet it is a key text for any student of English history. Rowan Williams shows in his introduction how Bede works to create a sense of national destiny for the new English kingdoms of the seventh century, a sense that has helped to shape English self-awareness through the centuries, by using the imagery both of imperial Rome and of biblical Israel.
But Bede also wrestles with the difficult question of how the Church relates to and serves the political order. The attraction and fascination of his work is partly in seeing the tension between the strategic use of wealth and political power for religious ends and the example of self-effacing service and simplicity of life offered by some of Bede's greatest Christian heroes. The issues around these questions are not academic or antiquarian.
Understanding Bede is a key to understanding British society in the present as well as the past.
Ecclesiastical History of the English People by Bede is a key work for historians, church historians and intelligent lay readers. Here is the perfect introduction.
The Archbishop of Canterbury explores how Bede opens up deep issues around national identity, and the role of the Church in its construction
Perfect introduction to the Venerable Bede for students and interested lay readers
Introduction
Extracts from The Ecclesiastical History of the English People, translated by Benedicta Ward SLG
Bibliography
This modest (in the best sense) volume achieves admirably and precisely what it sets out to do: to give an integrated introduction to Bede's History. Lucid and attractive (because it is highly readable), this is an excellent short lead-in to later study of the work as a whole.
Rowan Williams is Archbishop of Canterbury. He was formerly Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford and Archbishop of Wales.
Sister Benedicta Ward is a member of the Community of the Sisters of the Love of God. She is Reader in the History of Christian Spirituality at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Harris Manchester College.