at the bottom of the page is the dating formula at the start of the legates' report to Hadrian, from a copy made . George's name can be seen at the start of the last line. After his appointment to Amiens, George spent more time in Francia than in Italy. In the division of Francia that followed the death of Pippin III in 768, Amiens fell within the kingdom of Charlemagne. George was one of twelve bishops from Francia sent to attend the
Lateran synod of 769, which confirmed the deposition of Constantine II. In the spring of 773, Charlemagne sent George, Abbot and a certain Alboin to Pope
Hadrian I in Rome to ascertain the state of affairs in Italy. The envoy's report confirmed that the Lombards were delinquent in their treaty obligations, paving the way for Charlemagne's
invasion of Italy. A letter from Hadrian to Charlemagne dated about 782 confirms that George was a subject of both the pope and the king with dual loyalty for his two bishoprics. In 786, George led a
papal legation to England. Setting out from Italy, he was accompanied by Bishop
Theophylact of Todi as co-legate and Abbot
Wigbod of Trier as Charlemagne's representative. Several sources, including the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, treat this mission as the first of its kind since
Augustine of Canterbury's two centuries earlier. One of the purposes of the mission was to coordinate the celebration of
litanies in England and France for Charlemagne's victory in the
Saxon Wars and the baptism of the Saxon leader
Widukind. According to the
Northern Annals, "George held primacy among" the legates "and they were honourably received by kings and bishops, and by princes and nobles of this country." The legates' report, in the form of a letter to Hadrian, survives, albeit incomplete. According to their report, the legates landed in
Kent and "rested" at
Canterbury as guests of Archbishop
Jænberht before travelling to the court of King
Offa of Mercia. A
legatine council was held in Mercia attended by Offa, his bishops and King
Cynewulf of Wessex. After this, the legates split up, with George going to
Northumbria and Theophylact visiting
Wales. In Northumbria, George held a council attended by King
Ælfwald I and Archbishop
Eanbald I of York. The report to Pope Hadrian is most detailed concerning the Northumbrian council. It was attended by
Alcuin and
Pyttel, who accompanied George and Wigbod back to Mercia as the legates of Ælfwald and Eanbald. After George's return to Mercia, a new council was convoked by Offa at which the decisions of the Northumbrian council were read out and accepted. George returned to the continent in late 786. His report was available in Rome by January 787. He brought Alcuin back with him to the Frankish court. In 790, when Alcuin was back in Northumbria, he wrote to Abbot
Adalard of Corbie asking him "to send greetings to my [spiritual] father George." George's last recorded act was to consecrate the churches of the
Abbey of Saint-Riquier in 798. ==Notes==