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canons
St Aidan
Augustinian
Bede
Great Britain
Northumberland
United Kingdom
Bamburgh
England
Henry I


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Bamburgh - St Aidan

Bamburgh - St Aidan
Saint Aidan´s church dates from the late 12th century. The chancel, was added in 1230. According to Bede, St Aidan built a wooden church outside the castle wall, on the site of the current church, in AD 635, and he died here in AD 652. St Aidan had been called to Bamburgh from Iona by King Oswald to establish Christianity in his kingdom of Northumbria.

In 1123 Bamburgh was given to the Augustinian priory at Nowell in Yorkshire by Henry I. The grant was finally confirmed by the pope about a century later, so that the Augustinians could establish a cell of canons here.

The canons remained until the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VII, when they were forced to leave. After the Reformation, St Aidan's became the parish church for the village but its maintenance was neglected. Over the subsequent centuries repairs were undertaken, including significant restorations during the 1800s.

Bede reports that he fell ill in Bamburgh, thought to be the site of the present village church. A tent was erected against the western wall, perhaps because moving him would have hastened his end. He died here on the 31st of August 651.

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