Tatberht
Tatberht was an eighth century Anglo Saxon Saint, Abbot[1] and contemporary of the venerable Bede.[2]
Provenance
He is known to history through the writing of Bede, the Secgan Hagiography, Stephen of Ripon, Hugh Candidus and Byrhtferth.
Life
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Tatberht was appointed the second Abbot of Ripon, in accord with the terms of the will[1] of the Abbeys founder Saint Wilfrid,[3] who was notable for arguing the Roman position at the Synod of Whitby.
A relative of his predecessor Wilfred,[4] with whom he worked closely,[5] Tatberht, was named in Wilfrid’s will as joint heir with Saint Acca the patron of Bede.[6] Tatberht and Acca commissioned Stephen of Ripon [7] to write a life of Wilfrid[8][9][10][1]
Veneration
According to Hugh Candidus and Byrhtferth he is buried at Ripon,[11] along with Saints Wilfrid, ‘’’Albert’’’, Botwine and Sicgred and ‘’’Wildegel’’’, while there is evidence he was re-interred in Peterborough Abbey.[12] and he is commemorated on 5 June.
References
- "Tatberht 2". Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England.
- Peter Darby, Bede and the End of Time (Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2012) page 89
- Tatberht biography.
- Oswald By Bernard J. Muir, Andrew J. Turner Wilfrid Eadmer of Canterbury: Lives and Miracles of Saints Oda, Dunstan, and (Oxford University Press, 2006) page 271.
- Bede, Eddius Stephanus and the ‘Life of Wilfrid’ English Historical Review (1983) XCVIII : pages 101-114.
- Bede,The Age of Bede (Penguin UK, 2004) page 178.
- William Trent Foley, Images of Sanctity in Eddius Stephanus' Life of Bishop Wilfrid (Edwin Mellen Press, 1992) page 7.
- Acca at Oxford DNBM
- between the joint patronage of Tatberht and Acca, their generation the best recorded in the Dark Ages (historiography)|Dark Ages]] before Alfred the Great.
- Antonia Gransden, Historical Writing in England: c. 500 to c. 1307 (Psychology Press, 1996) page 60.
- Nicholas Brooks, Catherine Cubitt (Continuum, 1996) page 254.
- Nicholas Brooks, Catherine Cubitt (Continuum, 1996) page 274.