Hilda
of Whitby
Abbess and Peacemaker
17 November 680
Hilda
(known in her own century as "Hild") was the grandniece of
King Edwin of Northumbria, a kingdom of the Angles. She was born in 614
and baptized in 627 when the king and his household became Christians.
In 647 she decided to become a nun, and under the direction of Aidan
she established several monasteries. Her last foundation
was at Whitby. It was a double house: a community of men and another of
women, with the chapel in between, and Hilda as the governor of both;
and it was a great center of English learning, one which produced five
bishops (during Hilda's lifetime or that of the Abbey?). Here a
stable-boy, Caedmon, was moved to compose religious poems in the
Anglo-Saxon tongue, most of them metrical paraphrases of narratives from
Genesis and the Gospels.
The Celtic peoples of Britain had heard the Gospel well before 300
AD, but in the 400's and 500's a massive invasion of Germanic peoples
(Angles, Jutes, and Saxons) forced the native Celts out of what is now
England and into Wales, Ireland, and Scotland. The invaders were pagans,
and missionaries were sent to them in the north and west by the Celts,
and in the south and east by Rome and other churches on the continent of
Europe.
Roman and Celtic traditions differed, not in doctrine, but on such
questions as the proper way of calculating the date of Easter, and the
proper style of haircut and dress for a monk. It was, in particular,
highly desirable that Christians, at least in the same area, should
celebrate Easter at the same time; and it became clear that the English
Church would have to choose between the old Celtic customs which it had
inherited from before 300, and the customs of continental Europe and in
particular of Rome that missionaries from there had brought with them.
In 664 the Synod of Whitby met at that monastery to consider the matter,
and it was decided to follow Roman usage.
Hilda herself greatly preferred the Celtic customs in which she had
been reared, but once the decision had been made she used her moderating
influence in favour of its peaceful acceptance. Her influence was
considerable; kings and commoners alike came to her for advice. She was
urgent in promoting the study of the Scriptures and the thorough
education of the clergy. She died 17 November 680.
Acknowledgements:
Text adapted from Kiefer's
Biographies
Image from
Orthodox England
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