- Hwaetberht
Hwaetberht (died 740s) was
Abbot ofMonkwearmouth-Jarrow Priory where he had served as amonk .He was elected to succeed Abbot
Ceolfrith in 716 or 717 when Ceolfrith set off on apilgrimage toRome .Bede reports that Hwaetberht had himself made a pilgrimage to Rome, "and had stayed there a good long while, learning, copying down and bringing back with him all that he thought necessary for his studies" during the papacy of Sergius I (687–701).Hwaetberht was the author of a collection of sixty
riddle s, known as the "Enigmata Eusebii", written under thepen-name Eusebius. These were written as a supplement to forty riddles written earlier byTatwine ,Archbishop of Canterbury . Bede's "De temporum ratione " is dedicated to Hwaetberht and Bede appears to have regarded him highly. A part of the correspondence between Hwaetberht andSaint Boniface has survived, date tocirca 747, placing Hwaetberht's death after that date.It was during Hwaetberht's time that the remains of Abbots
Sigfrith andEosterwine were reburied alongside those ofBenedict Biscop next to the main altar at Jarrow.References
* Bede, "Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow" in Webb and Farmer (eds & trs), "The Age of Bede." London: Penguin, 1998. ISBN 0-140-44727-X
* Lapidge, M., "Hwaetberht", in M. Lapidge et al., "The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England." Blackwell, 1999. ISBN 0-631-22492-0
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* [http://eagle.cch.kcl.ac.uk:8080/pase/DisplayPerson.jsp?personKey=-945 Hwætberht 1] at [http://eagle.cch.kcl.ac.uk:8080/pase/ Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England]
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