- Trumwine of Abercorn
Trumwine was the only ever
Bishop of theNorthumbrian see of thePicts , based atAbercorn .Although his previous background is unknown, [Kirby, "Earliest English Kings", p. 91.] in
681 , during the reign of KingEcgfrith of Northumbria , Trumwine was appointed "Bishop of the Picts" byTheodore of Tarsus , thenArchbishop of Canterbury . [Bede ,Ecclesiastical History .] This was part of a more general division of the Northumbrian church by the Archbishop, who also divided the Bishopric of Hexham from the Bishopric of Lindisfarne. [Bertam Colgrave (tr.), "Bede: The Ecclesiastical History of the English People", p. 403, s.v. 192.] After the defeat and death of Ecgfrith at theBattle of Dunnichen in685 , Trumwine was forced to flee from his Pictish bishopric, retiring to the monastery atWhitby . [Bede,Ecclesiastical History .] It is possible that Trumwine was present at the aforementioned battle, [Fraser, "Battle of Dunnichen", p. 47.] and certainly he would have been a valuable source of advice for Ecgfrith. [Fraser, "Battle of Dunnichen", pp. 43-4.] Whatever the case here, the English were defeated, expelled fromSouthern Pictland , and the English episcopal establishment at Abercorn was hence abandoned and the diocese ceased to exist. The territory of modernWest Lothian hence probably passed into the hands of the Verturian kings, although it is also possible that the British of Alt Clut took it over. [D.P.Kirby, "Earliest English Kings", p. 86.]In his days after
685 , it is known that Trumwine interacted withBede , and Bede's "Life of Saint Cuthbert" tells us that Trumwine was used as one of its sources. Trumwine is said to have related a story aboutSaint Cuthbert 's childhood, which in turn had supposedly been told to Trumwine by Cuthbert himself. [Bede, "VC", ch. 1.]He was buried in Saint Peter's church in Whitby. [CathEncy|wstitle=St. Trumwin]
Notes
References
* Colgrave (tr.), Bertam, "Bede: The Ecclesiastical History of the English People", (Oxford, 1969), Edited with an Introduction and Notes by Judith McClure & Roger Collins, (Oxford, 1994/1999)
* Fraser, James E., "The Battle of Dunnichen, 685, (Gloucestershire, 2002)
* Kirby, D.P., "The Earliest English Kings", (London, 1992), Revised Ed. (London, 2000)
* Webb, J.F., & Farmer, D.H., (trs.), "The Age of Bede", (London, 1965)
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