St
Botolph – greatly venerated as the most influential missionary of the
seventh century, founded a monastery in 654, appears to have led a peaceful life
and died in 680. His feast is still venerated in the dioceses of Brentwood,
Nottingham and Northampton on 17 June each year.
The
actual life of St Botolph is shrouded in mystery and conflict.
It is my hope that this short (and inadequate) account of his life and
times will give you a glimpse into England in the Seventh Century and more
especially, into the life of Botolph, Man, Priest, Abbot and Saint.
The fact that over seventy churches and five towns and villages are dedicated to St Botolph reflect his importance as one of the most important missionaries of the Seventh Century. He was a pioneer of the Benedictines Rule in England and many Kings and Prelates visited his monastery to listen to his preaching and teaching. There are varieties of posthumous honours awarded to his memory (and relics).
Many
references are made to the building of a monastery at Ikenhoe in 654 and its
destruction in 870 and most of the information concerning these events is scant
and confused. Writers have followed
each other’s assumptions without thought or care, that Ikenhoe was in
Lincolnshire, there is no real evidence to support the Boston (Botolphs Stone)
tradition or that Wikanford (a Lincoln suburb) was the site of Ikenhoe. It must be south within the limits of the Kingdom of East
Anglia.
The
churches dedicated to St Botolph extend from East Anglia westward to
Warwickshire, northward through Lincolnshire into Yorkshire, and southward
through Essex and London into Kent and Sussex.
Some churches are dedicated to St Botolphs actual presence, some
associated with his remains, and some to Benedictine rivals.
There
are many reasons for identifying Ikenhoe with Iken in Suffolk.
The permission to build the monastery was granted by an East Anglian
whose jurisdiction in 654 cannot have extended into Lincolnshire.
The sermon preaches by St Ceolfrid with its reference to the life of
Botulf referred expressly to the East Angles (Angli Orientalis).
As Ikenhoe was destroyed in 870 by the murdering Eadmund and, as St
Edmund was also put to death in Suffolk, Ikenhoe may be presumed to be in
Suffolk. The ancient Saxon Chronicle under the year 654 says Botolph
began to timber that Minster at Ikenhoe (the word timber tends to refer to the
fact that a more durable building of timber was erected, in place of a temporary
erection of mud and wattle).
This
point has some bearing on the later biographers of the brief reign of Ethelhere…Botulf
was born in East Anglia and went to Germany to study the gospel accompanied by
his brother Adulf. They became
monks (Adulf later becoming a bishop). Botulf
returned to become chaplain to a nunnery, where two of the sisters of Ethelmund,
King of the Southern Angles, stayed and studied.
Botulf was given a grant of land by Ethelhere (654) and Ethelmund
(654-657) following prolonged negotiations.
Botulf preferred untilled, unoccupied land should be given to him for his
monastery…
St
Botolph began a monastic community based on the Benedictine way of life at
Ikenhoe. In the course of the first
twenty years, two major journeys are said to have been undertaken by Botolph.
The first to the Thames - where he built a church in honour of St Martin.
There is dispute even here over where the actual site was (on the Kentish
side of the river near Northfleet or Tempsford on the Bedford Ouse) but it is
the second journey, thirteen years after the building of Ikenhoe, which has
gathered more importance. The
journey was as a result of the need for rest following a snakebite! And resulted
in two churches (St Peter and St Paul) being constructed, somewhere in East
Anglia, as the grant to build came from the same King who granted the building
of the monastery.
In
670 Ceolfrid visited the monastery for a considerable period after his
ordination at Ripon in 667. Here St
Ceolfrid preached many famous sermons, inspired by Botolph's life and example. Botolph is said to have been buried in several places - this
accounts for the stages in the translation of his remains on several journeys.
There are references to his age and infirmities and documents suggest he
was over sixty at his death. If
this is so, at least 27 years of his early life are largely unaccounted for.
Before
Botolph returned to England in 647, he stayed at a monastery Farmoutier-en-Brie
in Saxonia, where he met the two sisters of King Ethelmund - and to whom he owed
his introduction to the East Anglian Court.
King Annas daughter Ethelburga and stepdaughter Saethryd became abbesses
of Farmoutier but so many princesses studied there and it is not possible to
identify the names of the two with absolute integrity.
But,
where did Botolph (Botulf) originate from - the greatest unsolved difficulty in
his life and times. Folcard
describes him as de Saxonica Gente (of Saxon origin or nationality), but says he
was loved by the Scots because he illustrated by his example what he preached
from his mouth. The Slesvig
Breviary contradicts this and says he was a Scot (i.e. Irish of Royal descent).
The Saxon name Botwulf is not even conclusive evidence as many names were
changed (Maelduib, for instance, that of the Irish founder of Malmesbury, being
altered to Maidulf, and the original name may have been Saxonised into Botwulf
as it was afterwards Normanised into Botolph).
The name of Botolph deos not appear in the Saran Missal and is not
associated in any way with the west of England, but it is found in various
Calendars and Missals (see appendix). St
Botolphs Day was still celebrated in Scotland until the early 14th
Century.
Ancient
manuscripts and breviaries refer to Botolph at often conflicting times.
Olaf Worm (rectory of Copenhagen Academy) in the 16th Century
gives an account in his Runic Lexicon of 1650 of the appearance of St Botolph's
name in Old Runic Kalendars, stating that the three days ending 17 June were
formerly known in Denmark as the Botelmas or Bodelmas (St Botolph's Mass) and
describes in detail a staff, inscribed in runic characters with the names of St
Vitus, St William and St Botolph. The
insertion of the name of St William (Abbot of Eskilhoe in the Diocese of
Roskilde) shows that the staff cannot have been older than the Thirteenth
Century. Whether the tradition
actually goes back to St Willibrord, whose work was largely destroyed for two
centuries after his death, or whether it can only be traced back to the early
part of the Eleventh Century, when the Bishops of Scania, Funen and Roskilde
were consecrated in 1022 by the Archbishop of Canterbury, about the time when
Canute was interesting himself with the removal of St Botolph's remains is a
question which cannot be answered definitely.
However, the tradition is sufficiently ancient and widespread to give
significant importance to the statements contained in the Slesvig Breviary.
If
St Botolph was really (as the Breviary asserts) of Irish birth, how can this be
reconciled with Folcards ascription of Saxon origin.
The technicalities of the use of words Saxon and Saxony are slightly
obscure Saxon without an adjective was applied to inhabitants of Sussex then to
those of Wessex and Essex. Saxonia
(when applied to foreign parts) generally meant Francia.
If St Botolph was an inmate of the Saxon Monastery before going to
Farmoutier-en-Brie, a writer four Centuries later may have thought him to be a
Sussex man (especially if his Irish birth was obscured by a Saxonised name).
The existence of Botolph in Sussex as well as of Hardham and Heene (all
of which have churches dedicated to St Botolph) held to support this view.
At Ikenhoe, however, St Botolph applied the Benedictine Rule (not the
Irish) but like him, as Folcard put it…. vetera novis miscens, et nova
veteribus (the old blends with the new, and the new become old).
But
how did St Botolph's name reach the Slesvig Breviary - we can look at the
explanation with reference to the mistake by which Folcard substitutes Adolph
for Jurmin as the name of the one with whom the posthumous honours are
associated. The mistake is
doubtless due to the fact that Jurmins eldest brother was Ealdwulf (a king of
East Anglia) and that the names of Ealdwulf and Eadwulf are often confounded and
that Jurmins brother was taken to be St Botolphs brother.
It is stated that Adolf was consecrated a Bishop in Frisia. If he came from Ikenhoe (and St Willibrord, the consecrating
Bishop, himself a Benedictine, usually chose Benedictines as his helpers), the
mistake would be more intelligible.
St
Willibrord became Archbishop of the Frisians in 695, fifteen years after the
death of St Botolph, and Archbishop of Utrecht in 722.
Though Northumbrian, he was educated in the Irish Monastery of
Rathmelsigi. If therefore, the
Slesvig Breviaries account of St Botolphs Irish origin goes back ultimately to
St Willibrord, the authority cannot be treated lightly.
In
the church of St Mary Magdalen, Wiggenhall, Norfolk, a window (described by Mr
Bond in Church Dedication) pictures St Botolph mitred, wearing Mass robes, a
Crosier turned outwards with hands giving an act of benediction. St Botolph was a Missionary Bishop without see or promise of
succession. He is referred to on
several occasions as Pontifax Almus (kindly High Priest) but more frequently the
title of Abbot is ascribed to him. There
is no doubt that Botolph was a man who was devoted to His Lord and the
Benedictine Rule was the most important structure in his life.
The
identification of Ikenhoe with Iken explains much that is obscure in connection
with the accounts of the translation of his remains.
Kind Edgar granted Ethelwold, Bishop of Winchester, permission to remove
St Botolph's body from his monastery at Ikenhoe.
According to ancient chronicles, the body was to be divided into three
parts by order of the King; the head to the monastery at Ely, the middle to
Thorney and the rest reserved for the King and subsequently presented to
Westminster Abbey by Edward the Confessor.
There are slight variations in other documents, suggesting that the
middle went to Westminster and the remainder to Thorney (all references to the
head state Ely very clearly). Other
writers refer to the various resting places en route to Ely, Thorney and
Westminster. For example, St
Botolph's fame in Denmark is attributed to the consecration of three Danish
bishops by the Archbishop of Canterbury in the same year that permission was
given to remove the bones of St Botolph from Grundisburgh (where on the night of
translation a light came from the funeral bier and illuminated the darkness).
It is more than likely that the division of bones took place at
Grundisburgh (near the spot where the roads to Thorney and Ely would diverge
from the road to London). Other
places on the route to the final resting place are names in various breviaries -
for example, Botolph Bridge (near Peterborough) indicates a stage or stopping
place to avoid the areas (at that time) under the sea.
So,
where is St Botolph buried - the
threefold theory is the most common, but numerous shrines have been built (Abbey
of St Edmund at Bury for example) in honour of St Botolph's relics. At various
places in the UK, mention is made of keepers of St Botolph's relics, gilds of St
Botolph, Keeper of St Botolph's Arm. In
1389 it is recorded in the Gild Certificates in London that St Botolph's gild
met on the eve of St Botolph to eat bread and cheese and to drink the health of
St Botolph together.
Just as St Botolph was regarded as one of the greatest of seventh century missionaries, it is worth mentioning the Hanseatic League (a mediaeval political and commercial league of Germanic towns) whose presence in England led to so many outbursts of anti-German feeling in the 15th century - found in St Botolphs cult a link with their own land. Their meeting place was not far from St Botolphs Billingsgate. The gate at Billingsgate which they were under obligation to repair, joined another church dedicated to St Botolph.
At their Boston meeting place they came into contact with St Botolphs fair, St Botolphs church. There can be little doubt that Hanseatic influence helped to make St Botolphs feast better than in north west Germany, St Botolph's name being associated with trade and travel. According to Olaf Worm, St Botolph was associated with weather and crops (in Denmark) and according to Weever, his relics were carried in procession in connection with prayers for rain (St Edmundbury).
In the Slesvig Breviary there is an account that on one occasion, when distributing food to the poor at his monastary, he found that none was left and told his disciples not to be purturbed as the Lord would restore more than they had given, whereupon four boats, laden wiith food and drink, were seen to approach, sent by faithful friends through whom God ministered to St Botolph.
The River Ore (or Aide) was then navigable far above Iken and the Saxon boat found in a grave mound at Snape (nearly opposite Iken) may serve as an illustration of the kind of boat which brought provisions.
The explanation of St Botolphs association with the weather and crops may refer to his selection of previously uncultivated lad at Ikanhoe for his habitation. This interest in agriculture is common to most early Benedictines and not peculiar to Botolph alone. The Slesvig Breviary relates an incident that an eagle carried off one of his fowls near the spot where ha had built a church in honour of St Martin which shows his interest in poultry.
Looking closely at more minor and often obscure writers it is clear to see that the land occupied by Botolphs monastary at Iken was once inhabited by Chrisitians, presumably in British times. Earlier inhabitants (shown by Neolithic remains) are there only by evidence. There is little more to say regarding who they were or why they were present. St Botolphs life was tormented by demons but as to the exact nature we are unsure - varying in explanation for evil spirits haunting the land and water - ghosts, devils and even an illustrated fish-demon. The daemons at Iken may each have been a few degenerate descendants of an earlier race, but it is impossible to say what race. It is certain that St Botolphs life was plagued with both physical evil and spiritual evil, but he persevered unto the end in his fight against evil and oppression and gave his life willingly to God.
Butler's Life of the Saints ends his brief account of the life of St Botolph with his record of a visit of St Ceolfrid, Abbot of Wearmouth, that he once journeyed to the East Angles that he might see the foundation of Abbot Botolph, whom fame had proclaimed far and wide as a man of remarkable life and learning - full of the Holy Spirit ... and that, after having been instructed as far as possible in a short time, he returned home so well founded that no one could be found better versed than he, either in eclesiastical or monastic tradition.
From St Botolph, His Life and Times. by Professor Kenneth Keenan, Ll.B., Ph.D., FCIB.