Saint Oswald et l'abbé Eadnoth de Ramsey,
Saint Oswald
Évêque
de Worcester puis d'York (✝ 992)
Il servit le Christ
comme chanoine de Winchester, puis comme moine de Saint Benoît à
Fleury-sur-Loire et revint à Winchester comme évêque puis archevêque d'York.
À Worcester en Angleterre, l’an 992, saint Oswald, évêque. D’abord
chanoine de Winchester, puis moine à Fleury, il fut placé ensuite sur le siège
de Worcester, et, quelque temps après, il eut encore à diriger l’Église d’York.
Il établit la Règle de saint Benoît dans de nombreux monastères et fut un
maître affable, joyeux et savant. (éloge le 28 février omis les années
bissextiles)
Martyrologe
romain
St. Oswald
Archbishop of York, d. on 29 February, 992. Of Danish parentage,
Oswald was brought up by his
uncle Odo, Archbishop of Canterbury, and instructed by Fridegode. For some time he was dean
of the house of the secular canons
at Winchester, but led by the desire of a stricter life
he entered the Benedictine Monastery
of Fleury, where Odo
himself had received the monastic
habit. He was ordained there and in 959 returned to England betaking
himself to his kinsman Oskytel, then Archbishop of York. He took an active part in ecclesiastical affairs at York
until St. Dunstan procured his appointment to the See of Worcester. He was consecrated by St. Dunstan in 962. Oswald
was an ardent supporter of Dunstan in his efforts to purify the Church from abuses, and aided by King Edgar he carried out
his policy of replacing by communities the canons
who held monastic possessions.
Edgar gave the monasteries of St. Albans, Ely, and Benfleet to Oswald,
who established monks at Westbury
(983), Pershore (984), at
Winchelcumbe (985), and at Worcester, and re-established Ripon.
But his most famous foundation was that of Ramsey
in Huntingdonshire, the church
of which was dedicated in 974,
and again after an accident in
991. In 972 by the joint action
of St. Dunstan and Edgar, Oswald
was made Archbishop of York, and journeyed to Rome to receive the pallium from John XIII. He retained, however, with the sanction
of the pope, jurisdiction over the diocese of Worcester where he frequently resided in order to foster his monastic
reforms (Eadmer, 203). On Edgar's
death in 975, his work, hitherto so successful, received a severe check at the
hands of Elfhere, King of Mercia, who broke up many communities. Ramsey,
however, was spared, owing to the powerful patronage
of Ethelwin, Earl of East Anglia. Whilst Archbishop of York, Oswald
collected from the ruins of Ripon
the relics of the saints, some of which were conveyed to Worcester. He died in the act
of washing the feet of the poor, as was his daily custom
during Lent, and was buried
in the Church of St. Mary at Worcester. Oswald
used a gentler policy than his colleague Ethelwold and always refrained from violent
measures. He greatly valued and promoted learning amongst the clergy and induced many scholars to come from Fleury.
He wrote two treatises and some synodal
decrees. His feast is celebrated on 28 February.
Sources
Historians
of York in Rolls Series, 3 vols.; see Introductions by RAINE. The anonymous and contemporary life of the
monk of Ramsey, I, 399-475, and EADMER, Life
and Miracles, II, 1-59 (also in P.L., CLIX) are the best authorities; the
lives by SENATUS and two others in vol. II are of little value; Acta SS., Feb., III, 752; Acta O.S.B. (Venice, 1733), saec. v,
728; WRIGHT, Biog. Lit., I (London,
1846), 462; TYNEMOUTH and CAPGRAVE, ed. HORSTMAN, II (Oxford, 1901), 252; HUNT,
Hist. of the English Church from 597-1066
(London, 1899); IDEM in Dict. of Nat.
Biog., s.v.; LINGARD, Anglo-Saxon
Church (London, 1845).
Parker, Anselm. "St. Oswald." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol.
11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 29 Feb. 2016
<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11348b.htm>.
Transcription. This
article was transcribed for New Advent by Herman F. Holbrook. Saint Oswald, and
all ye holy Bishops and Confessors, pray for us.
Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur.
+John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.
St. Oswald, Bishop of Worcester and Archbishop of York
From
his life, written by Eadmer; also from Florence of Worcester, William of
Malmesbury, and, above all, the elegant and accurate author of the History of
Ramsey, published by the learned Mr. Gale, p. 385. The life of this saint,
written by Folcard, abbot of Thorney, in 1068, Wharton thinks not extant.
Mabillon doubts whether it be not that which we have in Capgrave and Surius.
See also Portiforium S. Oswaldi Archiep. Eborac. Codex MS. crassus in 8vo.
exaratus circa annum 1064, in Bennet College, Cambridge, mentioned by Waneley,
Catal. p. 110.
A.D.
992
ST.
OSWALD was nephew of St. Odo, archbishop of Canterbury, and to Oskitell, bishop
first of Dorcester, afterwards of York. He was educated by St. Odo, and made
dean of Winchester; but passing into France, took the monastic habit at Fleury.
Being recalled to serve the church, he succeeded St. Dunstan in the see of
Worcester about the year 959. He shone as a bright star in this dignity, and
established a monastery of monks at Westberry, a village in his diocess. He was
employed by duke Aylwin in superintending his foundation of the great monastery
of Ramsey, in an island formed by marshes and the River Ouse in
Huntingdonshire, in 972. St. Oswald was made archbishop of York in 974, and he
dedicated the church of Ramsey under the names of the Blessed Virgin, St.
Benedict, and all holy virgins. Nothing of this rich mitered abbey remains
standing except an old gate-house, and a neglected statue of the founder,
Aylwin, with keys and a ragged staff in his hand to denote his office; for he
was cousin to the glorious king Edgar, the valiant general of his armies, and
the chief judge and magistrate of the kingdom, with the title of alderman of
England, and half king, as the historian of Ramsey usually styles him. 1 St. Oswald was almost always occupied in
visiting his diocess, preaching without intermission, and reforming abuses. He
was a great encourager of learning and learned men. St. Dunstan obliged him to
retain the see of Worcester with that of York. Whatever intermission his
function allowed him he spent at St. Mary’s, a church and monastery of
Benedictins, which he had built at Worcester, where he joined with the monks in
their monastic exercises. This church from that time became the cathedral. The
saint, to nourish in his heart the sentiments of humility and charity, had
everywhere twelve poor persons at his table, whom he served, and also washed
and kissed their feet. After having sat thirty-three years he fell sick at St.
Mary’s in Worcester, and having received the Extreme-unction and Viaticum,
continued in prayer, repeating often, “Glory be to the Father,” &c., with
which words he expired amidst his monks, on the 29th of February, 992. His body
was taken up ten years after and enshrined by Adulph his successor, and was
illustrated by miracles. It was afterwards translated to York on the 15th of
October, which day was appointed his principal festival.
St.
Oswald made quick progress in the path of perfect virtue, because he studied
with the utmost earnestness to deny himself and his own will, listening
attentively to that fundamental maxim of the Eternal Truth which St. Bennet, of
whose holy order he became a bright light, repeats with great energy. This holy
founder declares in the close of his rule, that, He who desires to give himself
up to God, must trample all earthly things under his feet, renounce everything
that is not God, and die to all earthly affections, so as to attain to a
perfect disengagement and nakedness of heart, that God may fill and entirely
possess it, in order to establish therein the kingdom of his grace and pure
love for ever. And in his prologue he cries out aloud, that he addresses
himself only to him who is firmly resolved in all things to deny his own will,
and to hasten with all diligence to arrive at his heavenly kingdom.
Note 1. The
titles of honour amongst our Saxon ancestors were, Etheling, prince of the
blood: chancellor, assistant to the king in giving judgments: alderman, or
ealderman, (not earldorman, as Rapin Thoyras writes this word in his first
edition,) governor or viceroy. It is derived from the word Ald or old, like
senator in Latin. Provinces, cities, and sometimes wapentakes, had their
alderman to govern them, determine law-suits, judge criminals, &c. This
office gave place to the title of earl, which was merely Danish, and introduced
by Canute. Sheriffe or she-reeve, was the deputy of the alderman, chosen by
him, sat judge in some courts, and saw sentence executed; hence he was called
vicecomes. Heartoghan signified, among our Saxon ancestors, generals of armies,
or dukes. Hengist, in the Saxon chronicle, is heartogh, such were the dukes
appointed by Constantine the Great, to command the forces in the different
provinces of the Roman Empire. These titles began to become hereditary with the
offices or command annexed under Pepin and Charlemagne, and grew more frequent
by the successors of these princes granting many hereditary fiefs to noblemen,
to which they annexed titular dignities. Fiefs were an establishment of the
Lombards, from whom the emperors of Germany, and the kings of France, borrowed
this custom, and with it the feodal laws, of which no mention is found in the
Roman code. Titles began frequently to become merely honorary about the time of
Otho I. in Germany.
Reeve among the English Saxons was a steward. The bishop’s reeve was a bishop’s steward for secular affairs, attending in his court. Thanes, i. e. servants, were officers of the crown whom the king recompensed with lands, sometimes to descend to their posterity, but always to be held of him with some obligation of service, homage, or acknowledgment. There were other lords of lands and vassals, who enjoyed the title of thanes, and were distinguished from the king’s thanes. The ealdermen and dukes were all king’s thanes, and all others who held lands of the king by knight’s service in chief, and were immediate great tenants of the king’s estates. These were the greater thanes, and were succeeded by the barons, which title was brought in by the Normans, and is rarely found before the Conqueror. Mass thanes were those who held lands in fee of the church. Middle thanes were such as held very small estates of the king, or parcels of lands of the king’s greater thanes. They were called by the Normans vavassors, and their lands vavassories. They who held lands of these, were thanes of the lowest class, and did not rank as gentlemen. All thanes disposed of the lands which they held (and which were called Blockland) to their heirs, but with the obligations due to those of whom they were held. Ceorle (whence our word churl) was a countryman or artizan, who was a freeman. Those ceorles who held lands in leases, were called sockmen, and their lands sockland, of which they could not dispose, being barely tenants. Those ceorles who acquired possession of five hides of land with a large house, court, and bell to call together their servants, were raised to the rank of thanes of the lowest class. An hide of land was as much as one plough could till. The villains or slaves in the country were labourers, bound to the service of particular persons; were all capable of possessing money in property, consequently were not strictly slaves in the sense of the Roman law.
Witan or Wites, (i. e. wisemen,) were the magistrates and lawyers. Burghwitten signified the magistrates of cities. Some shires (or counties) are mentioned before king Alfred; and Asserius speaks of earls (or counts) of Somerset, and Devonshire, in the reign of Ethelwolph. But Alfred first divided the whole kingdom into shires, the shires into tithings, lathes, or wapentacks, the tithings into hundreds, and the hundreds into tenths. Each division had a court subordinate to those that were superior, the highest in each shire being the shire-gemot, or folck-mote, which was held twice a year, and in which the bishop or his deputy, and the ealderman, or his vicegerent the sheriff, presided. See Seldon on the Titles of Honour; Spelman’s Glossary, ed noviss. Squires on the Government of the English Saxons. Dr. William Howel, in his learned General History, t. 5. p. 273, &c. N. B. The titles of earle and hersen were first given by Ifwar Widfame, king of Sweden, to two ministers of state, in 824; on which see many remarks of Olof Delin, in his excellent new history of Sweden, c. 5. t. 1. p. 334. [back]
Rev.
Alban Butler (1711–73). Volume II: February. The Lives of the Saints. 1866.
There are two saints called
Oswald in England: one was
a king, the other a monk.
The king lived
in the 7th century in Northumbria: he brought St Aidan to Lindisfarne and
his feast is on 5th August.
The monk, of
danish origin, lived in the 10th century and became bishop of
Worcester, and later archbishop of York; his feast is on 28th February. It is
about the latter that Patrick Duffy
writes here.
A monk of Danish family
Oswald was of a
Danish family and was brought up by his uncle Oda, who sent him to the
Benedictine abbey of Fleury-sur-Loire to become a monk.
Bishop of Worcester
When Oswald returned to England as a priest in 958/9, he worked for
another Danish patron, Oskytel, who had recently
become archbishop of York. His activity for Oskytel attracted the
notice of Saint Dunstan, then bishop of Worcester and in the process of moving
to become archbishop of Canterbury. Dunstan persuaded King Edgar to
appoint Oswald bishop of Worcester in his place in 961.
Founding monasteries
Oswald founded a
number of monasteries at Westbury-on-Trym (near Bristol), at Ramsey (in
Cambridgeshire) in collaboration with Ethelwold, bishop of Winchester and
Pershore and Evesham (in Worcestershire). He also succeeded in gradually
changing the cathedral chapter in Worcester from priests to monks, supposedly
because the clergy would not give up their wives.
Archbishop of York
In 972 Oswald became archbishop of York, and was able to bring Abbo and
other monks of Fleury to York to teach for a number of years.
Death and memory
But Oswald also
held on to the diocese of Worcester, presiding over both dioceses. And it was
at Worcester that on 29th February 992 he died, while he was washing the
feet of the poor, a practice that had become his daily custom during Lent. He
was buried in the Church of St Mary at Worcester. His feast is
celebrated on 28th February. He is closely associated with other monks who
became bishops – like St Dunstan (909-988) and St Ethelwold (908-984) – in
restoring monasticism in England.
SOURCE : http://www.catholicireland.net/saintoftheday/st-oswald-912-992-english-monk-bishop/oswald-2-2/