Anglo-Saxon period (597–1065) , is the oldest English church building still in use and was the private chapel of
Bertha of Kent, an important figure in the Christianization of Kent. There is evidence for
Christianity in Roman Britain as early as the 3rd century. After 380,
Christianity was the official religion of the
Roman Empire, and there was some sort of formal church organisation in Britain led by
bishops. In the 5th century, the end of Roman rule and invasions by
Germanic pagans led to the destruction of any formal church organisation in England. The new inhabitants, the
Anglo-Saxons, introduced
Anglo-Saxon paganism, and the Christian church was confined to Wales and Cornwall. In Ireland,
Celtic Christianity continued to thrive. The
Christianisation of the Anglo-Saxons began in 597 when
Pope Gregory I dispatched the
Gregorian Mission to convert the
Kingdom of Kent. The mission's leader,
Augustine, became the first
archbishop of Canterbury. The conversion of northern England was aided by the
Hiberno-Scottish mission, which promoted
Celtic Christianity in contrast to the
Latin Christianity of the Gregorian Mission. The Celtic and Roman churches disagreed on several issues. The most important was the
date of Easter. There were other differences over baptismal customs and the style of
tonsure worn by monks. To settle the matter of which tradition
Northumbria would follow, King
Oswiu summoned the
Synod of Whitby in 664. After hearing arguments from both sides, the king decided in favor of the Roman tradition, as this was followed by the successors of
Saint Peter. In the late 8th century,
Viking raids had a devastating impact on the church in northern and eastern England. Monasteries and churches were raided for wealth in the form of golden crosses, altar plate, and jewels decorating relics and illuminated Bibles. Eventually, the raids turned into wars of conquest and the kingdoms of Northumbria,
East Anglia, and parts of
Mercia became the
Danelaw, whose rulers were
Scandinavian pagans.
Alfred the Great of Wessex () and his successors led the Anglo-Saxon resistance and reconquest, culminating in the formation of a single
Kingdom of England.
Early organization Under papal authority, the English church was divided into two
ecclesiastical provinces, each led by a
metropolitan or
archbishop. In the south, the
Province of Canterbury was led by the archbishop of Canterbury. It was originally to be based at London, but Augustine and his successors remained at Canterbury instead. In the north, the
Province of York was led by the
archbishop of York. Theoretically, neither archbishop had precedence over the other. In reality, the south was wealthier than the north, and the result was that Canterbury dominated. In 668,
Theodore of Tarsus became archbishop of Canterbury. He reformed many aspects of the church's administration. At the
Synod of Hertford in 672,
canons were adopted to promote greater uniformity, among these that the English bishops should hold an
annual council at Clovesho. A major reorganisation of the English church occurred the late 700s. King
Offa of Mercia wanted his own kingdom to have an archbishop since the archbishop of Canterbury was also a great Kentish
magnate. In 787, a council of the English church attended by two
papal legates elevated the
Diocese of Lichfield into an archbishopric. There were now three provinces in England: York, Lichfield and Canterbury. However, this arrangement was abandoned in 803, and Lichfield was reabsorbed into the Province of Canterbury. Initially, the diocese was the only administrative unit in the Anglo-Saxon church. The bishop served the diocese from a
cathedral town with the help of a group of priests known as the bishop's
familia. These priests would baptise, teach and visit the remoter parts of the diocese.
Familiae were placed in other important settlements, and these were called
minsters. Most villages would have had a church by 1042, as the
parish system developed as an outgrowth of
manorialism. The
parish church was a
private church built and endowed by the
lord of the manor, who retained the
right to nominate the parish priest. The priest supported himself by farming his
glebe and was also entitled to other support from parishioners. The most important was the
tithe, the right to collect one-tenth of all produce from land or animals. Originally, the tithe was a voluntary gift, but the church successfully made it a compulsory tax by the 10th century. () is an example of late Anglo-Saxon church architecture In the late 10th century, the
Benedictine Reform movement helped to restore
monasticism in England after the Viking attacks of the 9th century. The most prominent reformers were Archbishop
Dunstan of Canterbury (959–988), Bishop
Æthelwold of Winchester (963–984), and Archbishop
Oswald of York (971–992). The reform movement was supported by King
Edgar (). One result of the reforms was the creation of monastic cathedrals at
Canterbury,
Worcester,
Winchester, and
Sherborne. These were staffed by
cloistered monks, while other cathedrals were staffed by
secular clergy called
canons. By 1066, there were over 45
monasteries in England, and monks were chosen as bishops more often than in other parts of western Europe. By 1000, there were eighteen dioceses in England:
Canterbury,
Rochester,
London,
Winchester,
Dorchester,
Ramsbury,
Sherborne,
Selsey,
Lichfield,
Hereford,
Worcester,
Crediton,
Cornwall,
Elmham,
Lindsey,
Wells,
York and
Durham. To assist bishops in supervising the parishes and monasteries within their dioceses, the office of
archdeacon was created. Once a year, the bishop would summon parish priests to the cathedral for a synod. Royal authority and ecclesiastical authority were mutually reinforcing. Through the
coronation ritual, the church invested the monarch with sacred authority. In return, the church expected royal protection. In addition, the church was a wealthy institution—owning 25–33% of all land according to the
Domesday Book. This meant that bishops and abbots had the same status as secular
magnates, and it was vital that king's appointed loyal men to these influential offices. During the Anglo-Saxon period, kings were able to "govern the church largely unimpeded" by appointing bishops and abbots. Bishops were chosen by the king and tended to be recruited from among
royal chaplains or monasteries. The bishop-elect was then presented at a synod where clerical approval was obtained and consecration followed. The appointment of an archbishop was more complicated and required approval from the pope. The archbishop of Canterbury had to travel to Rome to receive the
pallium, his symbol of office. These visits to Rome and the payments that accompanied them (such as
Peter's Pence) was a point of contention.
Post-Conquest (1066–1500) In 1066,
William, Duke of Normandy, invaded England claiming he was the rightful heir to Edward the Confessor. He appealed to
Pope Alexander II who gave his blessing and ordered English clergy to submit to William's authority. At the time of the
Norman Conquest, there were only 15 diocesan bishops in England, increased to 17 in the 12th century with the creation of the sees of Ely and Carlisle. This is far fewer than the numbers in France and Italy. A further four medieval dioceses in
Wales came within the Province of Canterbury. The Norman Conquest led to the replacement of the old Anglo-Saxon elite by a new ruling class of
Anglo-Normans in both the secular nobility as well as the episcopate. In 1070, three
papal legates arrived to oversee the reform of the English church. At a council held at Winchester,
Archbishop Stigand of Canterbury, his brother Bishop
Æthelmær of Elmham, and the married Bishop
Leofwin of Lichfield were deprived of office. At a later council at Windsor, Bishop
Æthelric of Selsey was also deprived of his office. Another bishop,
Æthelwine of Durham, lost his see when he was declared an
outlaw and imprisoned by the king. By the end of the year, there were only two Anglo-Saxon bishops left:
Siward of Rochester and
Saint Wulfstan of Worcester. Thereafter, William was able to fill the English sees with reformists such as
Lanfranc of Bec for Canterbury and
Thomas of Bayeux for York. He continued the English custom of recruiting bishops from the
royal household and
chapel. In 1072, William and his archbishop, Lanfranc, sought to complete the programme of reform begun by Archbishop Dunstan. Durham and Rochester cathedrals were refounded as Benedictine monasteries, the secular cathedral of Wells was moved to monastic Bath, while the secular cathedral of Lichfield was moved to Chester, and then to monastic Coventry. Norman bishops were seeking to establish an endowment income entirely separate from that of their cathedral body, and this was inherently more difficult in a monastic cathedral, where the bishop was also titular abbot. Hence, following Lanfranc's death in 1090, a number of bishops took advantage of the vacancy to obtain secular constitutions for their cathedrals – Lincoln, Sarum, Chichester, Exeter and Hereford; while the major urban cathedrals of London and York always remained secular. Furthermore, when the bishops' seats were transferred back from Coventry to Lichfield, and from Bath to Wells, these sees reverted to being secular. Bishops of monastic cathedrals, tended to find themselves embroiled in long-running legal disputes with their respective monastic bodies; and increasingly tended to reside elsewhere. The bishops of Ely and Winchester lived in London as did the archbishop of Canterbury. The bishops of Worcester generally lived in York, while the bishops of Carlisle lived at Melbourne in
Derbyshire. Monastic governance of cathedrals continued in England, Scotland and Wales throughout the medieval period; whereas elsewhere in western Europe it was found only at
Monreale in Sicily and
Downpatrick in Ireland. As in other parts of medieval Europe, tension existed between the local monarch and the Pope about civil judicial authority over clerics, taxes and the wealth of the Church, and appointments of bishops, notably during the reigns of
Henry II and
John (see
Investiture Controversy). An important aspect in the practice of medieval Christianity was the
veneration of saints, and the associated
pilgrimages to places where the
relics of a particular saint were interred and the saint's tradition honoured. The possession of the relics of a popular saint was a source of funds to the individual church as the faithful made donations and benefactions in the hope that they might receive spiritual aid, a blessing or a healing from the presence of the physical remains of the holy person. Among those churches to benefit in particular were: St. Alban's Abbey, which contained the relics of England's
first Christian martyr; Ripon, with the shrine of its founder
St. Wilfrid; Durham, which was built to house the body of Saints
Cuthbert of Lindisfarne and
Aidan; Ely, with the shrine of
St. Etheldreda;
Westminster Abbey, with the shrine of its founder St.
Edward the Confessor; and Chichester, which held the honoured remains of
St. Richard. All these saints brought pilgrims to their churches, but among them the most renowned was
Thomas Becket, the late archbishop of Canterbury, who was assassinated by henchmen of
King Henry II in 1170. As a place of pilgrimage Canterbury was, in the 13th century, second only to
Santiago de Compostela.
John Wycliffe (about 1320 – 31 December 1384) was an English theologian and an early dissident against the Roman Catholic Church during the 14th century. He founded the
Lollard movement, which opposed a number of practices of the church. He was also against papal encroachments on secular power. Wycliffe was associated with statements indicating that the Church of Rome is not the head of all churches, nor did St Peter have any more powers given to him than other disciples. These statements were related to his call for a reformation of its wealth, corruption and abuses. Wycliffe, an Oxford scholar, went so far as to state that "The Gospel by itself is a rule sufficient to rule the life of every Christian person on the earth, without any other rule." The Lollard movement continued with his pronouncements from pulpits even under the persecution that followed with Henry IV up to and including the early years of the reign of Henry VIII. == Reformation (1509–1603) ==