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Egbert, Archbishop of York
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Egbert, Archbishop of York
Archbishop of York, England, son of Eata, brother of the Northumbrian King
Eadbert and cousin of King Ceolwulf, to whom the Venerable Bede dedicated his
history; date of birth unknown; d. 19 November, 766. He received his early
education in a monastery, and then went to Rome with his brother Ecgred, where
he was ordained a deacon. Ecgred died in Rome and Egbert immediately returned to
Northumbria. On the resignation of the Bishopric of York by Wilfrid II in 732,
King Ceolwulf appointed Egbert his successor. Shortly after his accession Bede
wrote a long letter to him advising him to give much time to study and prayer,
to ordain more priests for the administration of the sacraments, and to
translate the Creed and the Lord's Prayer into the Saxon tongue. He also urged
him to strive to obtain the subdivision of many of the dioceses of the North in
order that episcopal visitations might be more frequently made. He called his
attention to many disorders that were prevalent and particularly urged him to
secure the pallium for himself. Acting upon this advice Egbert obtained the
pallium from Gregory III at Rome in 735, and thus became the second Archbishop
of York, that title having been lost to the Church of York ever since Paulinus
had fled into Kent more than a century before. During all those years no one
sought for the restoration of that lost dignity, and this neglect was afterwards
used as a strong argument in favour of the precedence of Canterbury, when the
well-known controversy arose between the two sees. The restoration of the
pallium to Egbert increased his power and authority over the Northern bishops,
who thus became his suffragans; and his power was still more strengthened in 738
when his brother Eadbert succeeded to the throne of Northumbria. Egbert was thus
placed in a position which enabled him to carry out many reforms, and in the
performance of these he proved himself a strict disciplinarian; but though stern
when correction and rebuke were justly deserved, he was remarkable for his
sweetness and gentleness. His pupil Alcuin frequently speaks of his piety and
energy and always refers to him in terms of the deepest affection. He is said
to have been the first prelate who possessed a mint at York. He paid great
attention to the services and music of his church, introducing the observance of
the Hours. He was also a benefactor to the fabric of the minster, bestowing upon
his cathedral the choice work of the jeweller and the goldsmith, and giving to
it figured curtains of silk of foreign workmanship. He was, in all probability,
the first introducer of the parochial system into the North
(Fasti Ebor.). One
of his greatest works, perhaps, was the foundation of the famous School of York
and its celebrated library. The renown of its masters and scholars soon spread
through every Christian country, and noble youths from all parts flocked to York
to be taught by the great archbishop. He himself taught divinity, whilst his
assistant Albert, who afterwards succeeded him as archbishop, gave lessons in
grammar and in the arts and sciences. The fact that the illustrious Alcuin was
Egbert's pupil, sheds no little lustre on this famous school. The archbishop's
daily work has been thus described by Alcuin himself: As soon as he was at
leisure in the morning, he sent for some young clerks, and sitting on his couch
taught them successively till noon, at which time he retired to his private
chapel and celebrated Mass. After dinner, at which he ate sparingly, he amused
himself with hearing his pupils discuss literary questions in his presence. In
the evening he recited with them the service of complin, and then calling them
in order, he gave his blessing to each as they knelt in succession at his feet
(Mabillon, Acta SS. Ord. S. B., ad an. 815). Towards the end of his life he left
the care of the school to Albert and Alcuin, giving himself more time and
opportunity to prepare for his end in peace and tranquillity. In this life of
retirement and prayer he was joined by his brother King Eadbert, who voluntarily
resigned his throne to enter the monastery in 757. Egbert died before his
brother, having ruled over the Diocese of York nearly thirty-four years. He was
buried in one of the porches of his cathedral at York. His best-known work is
the De Jure Sacerdotali
, a collection of canonical regulations. Extracts from
it made in the eleventh century, under the title of Excerptiones e dictis et
canonibus SS. patrum
(Mansi, XII, 411-32; Wilkins, I, 101-12), were long
current as a work of Egbert. Among the writings attributed to him are a
Pontificale
, or series of special offices for the use of a bishop; a Dialogus
Ecclesiastic¾ Institutionis
; a Confessionale
, and a PÏnitentiale
, both of
which were written in the vernacular as well as in Latin. The Pontificale
, an
important liturgical text, has been published by the Surtees Society, and his
other works may be found in the second volume of Thorpe's Ancient Laws and
Institutes of England
. In its present shape the PÏnitentiale Egberti
(P.L.,
LXXXIX, 411 sqq.) contains but little from the hand of Egbert, and is a
ninth-century Frankish compilation, put together mostly from Halitgar. Similarly,
the Dialogus Eccl. Institutionis
(Mansi, XII, 482-88) is said not to be from
Egbert in its present form (see YORK; PENITENTIAL BOOKS; LIBER PONTIFICALIS).
For the writings of EGBERT see P.L., LXXXIX. Cf. RAINE, Fasti Eboracenses (London, 1863), I, 94 sqq.; MABILLON, Acta SS. Ord. S. B. (Venice, 1733), s¾c. III, 548-9, and s¾c. IV, 148-9; IDEM, Annales O.S.B. (Paris, 1703-1739), II, 97-8; Historians of York in Rolls Series, I, 386; SYMEON OF DURHAM, Hist. Eccles. Dunelm. in Rolls Series; HAHN, Bonifaz und Lul (1882), 189 sqq.; WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY, Gesta Pontif. in Rolls Series, 245; SCHNEIDER, Kirchenrechtsquellen (2d ed., 1892), 70; WASSERSCHLEBEN, Bussordnungen (1851), 231 sqq,; SCHMITZ, Bussbcher (1883), 565 sqq.
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