Botwine | |
|---|---|
| Abbot of Ripon | |
| Died | c. 785 |
| Major shrine | Ripon and Peterborough |
| Feast | unknown |
Botwine (died 785 or 786) was a Northumbrian saint venerated at Ripon and Peterborough. He is well documented as a priest, [1] and latter Abbot of Ripon. [2] [3] [4] [5] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle recension E, recorded his death in the 780s (probably for 786) in one of three Ripon abbatial obits derived from a chronicle of Northumbrian origin. [6] Following the death of St Botwine in 786AD, his replacement, Ealdberht was elected and consecrated Abbot. Ealdberht died in 788AD, [7] and was himself succeeded as Abbot by St. Sigered of Ripon. [8] [9]
The late 10th- and early 11th-century writer Byrhtferth of Ramsey in his Vita sancti Oswaldi claimed that Oswald of Worcester, Archbishop of York, discovered Botwine's relics at the monastery of Ripon. Oswald made a magnificent reliquary in which he placed the relics of Botwine with Wilfrid, Tiatberht, Alberht, Sigered and Vilden. [10] This account is described by historian Michael Lapidge as "problematical" on other points. [11] as it is known that in the 12th-century Peterborough Abbey also possessed some relics of Botwine. [12]