Felix is first mentioned in the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle—a collection of
annals compiled in the late 9th century—under the year 633. "Manuscript A" of the
Chronicle states that Felix "preached the faith of Christ to the East Angles". Another version of the
Chronicle, "Manuscript F", written in the 11th century in both
Old English and
Latin, elaborates upon the short statement contained in "Manuscript A": :"Here there came from the region of Burgundy a bishop who was called Felix, who preached the faith to the people of East Anglia; called here by King Sigeberht; he received a bishopric in Dommoc, in which he remained for seventeen years." remains of the parish church in
Babingley, Norfolk. One of three churches in
East Anglia dedicated to the saint, the dedication suggests that a pre-
Conquest church once existed at or nearby to the site. According to Bede, Felix was sent to promote Christianity in the land of the East Angles by the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Honorius. Bede wrote of the exertions of Sigeberht, king of the East Angles: :"As soon as he began to reign he made it his business to see that the whole kingdom shared his faith. Bishop Felix most nobly supported his efforts. This bishop, who had been born and consecrated in Burgundy, came to Archbishop Honorius, to whom he expressed his longings; so the archbishop sent him to preach the word of life to this nation of the Angles." Among the East Anglian
traditions associated with Felix, one relates that he founded the church in
Babingley, Norfolk, in 631 when he arrived there to convert the East Angles. The ruins stand about north of where a navigable
estuary once existed, and where Felix is said to have landed. Sigeberht was the first English ruler to receive
baptism before becoming king. Probably a son of
Rædwald (ruled 599 to 624) and the brother of Rædwald's successor,
Eorpwald, he was forced into exile during Rædwald's rule, after which he became a devout Christian and a man of learning. In about 627, Eorpwald was killed by
Ricberht, who then ruled the East Angles for three years. Sigeberht became king of the East Angles after Richberht's death in 630. According to the historian Marios Costambeys, Felix's arrival in East Anglia seems to have coincided with the start of a new period of order established by Sigeberht when he became king. Costambeys adds that Sigeberht's accession may have been the reason Honorius decided to send Felix to East Anglia. Peter Hunter Blair challenged the assertion by mediaeval sources that spoke of Felix and Sigeberht travelling together from Francia to England, as in his view the text of the
Ecclesiastical History of the English People can be taken to mean that Felix went to East Anglia because he was prompted to by Honorius. ==Bishop of the East Angles==