The Venerable Bede

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Venerable Bede. In 731 AD, in the most far-flung corner of the known universe, a book was written that represented a height of scholarship and erudition that was not to be equalled for centuries to come. It was called the Ecclesiastical History of the Angle Peoples and its author was Bede. A long way from Rome, in a monastery at Jarrow in the North East of England, his works cast a light across the whole of Western Civilisation and Bede became a bestseller, an internationally renowned scholar and eventually a saint. His Ecclesiastical History has been in copy or in print ever since it was written in the eighth century and his edition of the Bible remains the Catholic Church’s most authoritative Latin version to this day.How did Bede achieve such ascendancy from such an obscure part of Christendom? And what was so remarkable about his work?

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Guests

  • Richard Gameson 6 episodes
    Reader in Medieval History at the University of Kent at Canterbury
  • Sarah Foot 6 episodes
    Professor of Early Medieval History at the University of Sheffield
  • Michelle Brown 3 episodes
    A manuscript specialist from the British Library

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Programme ID: p004y26h

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p004y26h

Auto-category: 270 (Christian church history)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. In 731 AD, in what Pope Gregory called the outermost edge of the known world, a book was written that reached a dazzling height of scholarship and erudition not to be equaled for centuries to come.