Episode 376: Venerable Bede
Listen now
Description
Generations of college students have probably imagined that his first name was Venerable, and his family name Bede. But Bede–that’s B-E-D-E–was his only name. He was a native of Northumbria, in the north of what we now think of as England. Apparently never going abroad, his life was spent within a few miles of his monastery, and probably just a few miles from where he was born. Yet this seemingly narrow and circumscribed life was full of intense intellectual activity. Bede authored dozens of works: teaching texts to be used for young boys entering the monastery, as he had done; biblical commentaries; arithmetical works; sermons and homilies; and lives of Northumbrian saints. Yet when he is remembered by historians, it is for his Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum, An Ecclesiastical History of the English People.  With me to discuss Bede as historian is Rory Naismith, Professor of Early Medieval History and Fellow of Corpus Christi College at the University of Cambridge. This is his third appearance on the podcast; he was last on Historically Thinking in Episode 343 discussing whether we should talk about the Anglo-Saxons.   For Further Investigation * This is one of our occasional podcasts on important historians. For others, see this one on Polybius, and this on another medieval historian, Princess Anna Komnene * The remnants of the monastery of Monkwearmouth-Jarrow * The historical site formerly known as "Bede's World": now Jarrow Hall Anglo-Saxon Farm Village and Bede Museum, reopened after a short closure. * FYI, in contemporary Britain it's probably true that Jarrow is best known for the "Jarrow Crusade" rather than for Bede * A good companion to Bede is, amazingly enough, J. Robert Wright, A Companion to Bede: A Reader's Commentary on The Ecclesiastical History of the English People * Rory Naismith also suggests: * Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People/Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum: "This is available in very many translations, including those of a id="m_7729202797692314531OWA549599ab-491f-2e5e-78b2-66d5662b45fe" title="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ecclesiastical-History-English-People-Classics/dp/0199537232/ref=sr_1_1?crid=HNT4RT3DSPSP&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Lsm43Cg3h-E8dPUxotzbu-1-pHsE5Ezprm8BvjHdxiip9cqLWvHKdeuIU2y2_gFIzjzAZGT3gxALpk_LBQG7zBKP9GXPsGa_glSa-7SaM1-kETlR5SAxMKPdLwK_ORBzNslxjCCsGbvN0xPrtvmmbISsF8ixg_qIEbZA0fkFGqwgDklJRx0XmIbKUFffBArxbJbLVaSUYGGS3A_wmEQYi2IVLC3w119QvZNPXj0hL1Y.xfVv_CFqZBFv2vpMwu7qeHba0mfj4_QuZ1vfDAzRkXk&dib_tag=se&keywords=bede+ecclesiastical+history&qid=1726949528&sprefix=bede+ecc%2Caps%2C83&sr=8-1" href="https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ecclesiastical-History-English-People-Classics/dp/0199537232/ref=sr_1_1?crid=HNT4RT3DSPSP&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Lsm43Cg3h-E8dPUxotzbu-1-pHsE5Ezprm8BvjHdxiip9cqLWvHKdeuIU2y2_gFIzjzAZGT3gxALpk_LBQG7zBKP9GXPsGa_glSa-7SaM1-kETlR5SAxMKPdLwK_ORBzNslxjCCsGbvN0xPrtvmmbISsF8ixg_qIEbZA0fkFGqwgDklJRx0XmIbKUFffBArxbJbLVaSUYGGS3A_wmEQYi2IVLC3w119QvZNPXj0hL1Y.xfVv_CFqZBFv2vpMwu7qeHba0mfj4_QuZ1vfDAzRkXk&dib_tag=se&keywords=bede+ecclesiastical+history&qid=1726949528&sprefix=bede+ecc%2Caps%2C83&sr=8-1" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ecclesiastical-History-English-People-Classics/dp/0199537232/ref%3Dsr_1_1?
More Episodes
It is the most influential book in the history of the world, a book that in many ways set the standard for what books would become, but it is also the book at the heart of a world spanning religion. It has never purported to be the words of God, but the result of a complex partnership between God...
Published 09/16/24
Published 09/16/24
In his long short story or very short novella entitled “The Man Without a Country,” Edward Everett Hale describes his protagonist Philip Nolan as a young man from the Mississippi Valley who “had grown up in the West of those days, in the midst of ‘Spanish plot’, ‘Orleans plot’, and all the rest....
Published 09/04/24