Eadberht | |
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Bishop of London | |
Appointed | between 772 and 782 |
Term ended | between 787 and 789 |
Predecessor | Wigheah |
Successor | Eadgar |
Orders | |
Consecration | between 772 and 782 |
Personal details | |
Died | between 787 and 789 |
Denomination | Christian |
Eadberht [lower-alpha 1] (died between 787 and 789) was a medieval Bishop of London.
Eadberht was consecrated between 772 and 782. He died between 787 and 789. [1]
Eadberht of Lindisfarne, also known as Saint Eadberht, was Bishop of Lindisfarne, England, from 688 until his death on 6 May 698. He is notable as having founded the holy shrine to his predecessor Saint Cuthbert on the island of Lindisfarne, a place that was to become a centre of great pilgrimage in later years.
Eadfrith of Lindisfarne, also known as Saint Eadfrith, was Bishop of Lindisfarne, probably from 698 onwards. By the twelfth century it was believed that Eadfrith succeeded Eadberht and nothing in the surviving records contradicts this belief. Lindisfarne was among the main religious sites of the kingdom of Northumbria in the early eighth century, the resting place of Saints Aidan and Cuthbert. He is venerated as a Saint in the Roman Catholic Church, and in the Eastern Orthodox Church, as also in the Anglican Communion.
Cynewulf of Lindisfarne was appointed as Bishop of Lindisfarne in either 737 or 740. He resigned the see in 779 or 780 and died in 782 or 783.
Eadberht of Selsey was an abbot of Selsey Abbey, later promoted to become the first Bishop of Selsey. He was consecrated sometime between 709 and 716, and died between 716 and 731. Wilfrid has occasionally been regarded as a previous bishop of the South Saxons, but this is an insertion of his name into the episcopal lists by later medieval writers, and Wilfrid was not considered the bishop during his lifetime or Bede's.
Eolla, Bishop of Selsey, was the successor of Eadberht, and seems to have previously been Abbot of Selsey, as he witnessed a charter of Noðhelm together with Osric and Eadberht. He seems to have succeeded as bishop in either 716 or 717. His date of death is sometime between 716 and 731.
Gislhere was an English Bishop of Selsey in the eighth century.
Tota was a Bishop of Selsey when Sussex was being ruled by Offa of Mercia.
Wihthun was an early medieval Bishop of Selsey.
Æthelhard was a Bishop of Winchester then an Archbishop of Canterbury in medieval England. Appointed by King Offa of Mercia, Æthelhard had difficulties with both the Kentish monarchs and with a rival archiepiscopate in southern England, and was deposed around 796 by King Eadberht III Præn of Kent. By 803, Æthelhard, along with the Mercian King Coenwulf, had secured the demotion of the rival archbishopric, once more making Canterbury the only archbishopric south of the Humber in Britain. Æthelhard died in 805, and was considered a saint until his cult was suppressed after the Norman Conquest in 1066.
Esne was a medieval Bishop of Hereford. He was consecrated between 781 and 786 and died between 786 and 788.
Burgheard was a medieval Bishop of Lindsey.
Leofwine was a medieval Bishop of Lindsey.
Eadgar was a medieval Bishop of London.
Coenwalh was a medieval Bishop of London.
Waermund was a medieval Bishop of Rochester.
Æthelmod was a medieval Bishop of Sherborne.
Tilbeorht was a medieval Bishop of Hexham.
Eadbeorht was a medieval Bishop of Leicester. He was consecrated in 764. He died between 781 and 785.
Eadberht was a medieval Bishop of Lichfield.
Eadbald was a medieval Bishop of Lindsey.
Christian titles | ||
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Preceded by Wigheah | Bishop of London c. 776–c. 788 | Succeeded by Eadgar |