Æthelwine of Lindsey

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Æthelwine
Bishop of Lindsey
Appointedc. 680
Term endedc. 700
PredecessorEadhæd
SuccessorEdgar
Orders
Consecrationc. 680
Personal details
Diedc. 700
DenominationChristian
Sainthood
Feast day3 May or 20 June

Æthelwine[a] (died c. 700) was the second bishop of Lindsey from around 680,[1] and is regarded as a saint.[2]

Other than a couple of references in

Historia to Æthelwine and his family, very little is known of him. One brother, named Edilhun (i.e. Æthelhun), a "youth of great capacity of the English nobility", is said by Bede to have died of the plague while visiting a monastery in Ireland in the year 664.[3][4] Another brother, Aldwin, was abbot at Partney, and a sister, Æthelhild, was an abbess. Bede tells of her visiting Queen Osthryth at Bardney Abbey in about 697. She was still alive when Bede was writing in the 720s.[5]

Æthelwine probably died around 700. His feast day is 3 May or 29 June.

Saint Aldwyn
is sometimes identified with his brother.

Notes

  1. ^ Or Ethelwine or Elwin

Citations

  1. ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 219
  2. ^ a b Farmer Oxford Dictionary of Saints p. 182
  3. ^ "Æthelhun 2". Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England.
  4. ^ Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People, book 3.27
  5. ^ Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People, book 3.11

References

External links

Christian titles
Preceded by Bishop of Lindsey
c. 680-c. 700
Succeeded by