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Edmund and Abingdon
** Edmund of Abingdon
Edmund Rich ( also known as Saint Edmund or Eadmund of Canterbury, and as Saint Edmund of Abingdon ) ( 1175 – 1240 ) was a 13th century Archbishop of Canterbury in England.
Edmund may have been educated at the monastic school in Abingdon.
* Royal Berkshire History: St. Edmund of Abingdon
* St. Edmund Hall, Oxford: Birth of St Edmund of Abingdon
* St. Edmund Rich of Abingdon at Patron Saints ' Index
It is named after St Edmund of Abingdon, Oxfordshire, the first known Oxford Master of Arts and the first Oxford-educated Archbishop of Canterbury, who lived and taught on the college site.
which is a popular, if conservative, estimate for the establishment of the Hall, but is in fact the date of the canonisation of St Edmund of Abingdon.
St Edmund of Abingdon
* St Edmund of Abingdon
* Saint Edmund of Abingdon, 13th-century Archbishop of Canterbury: He was born in Abingdon, as were his sisters, Saint Alice of Catesby and the Blessed Margaret Rich.
He studied at the University of Oxford, attending lectures by Edmund of Abingdon.
* Montagu Henry Edmund Towneley-Bertie, 13th Earl of Lindsey, 8th Earl of Abingdon ( 1887 – 1963 )
* Montagu Henry Edmund Towneley-Bertie, 8th Earl of Abingdon ( 1887 – 1963 ) ( succeeded as 13th Earl of Lindsey in 1938 )
The college is named after St Edmund of Abingdon ( 1175 – 1240 ) who was the first known Oxford Master of Arts, and Archbishop of Canterbury 1234 – 1240.
His former tutor, Edmund of Abingdon, had become archbishop of Canterbury.
Edmund Ludlow joined Waller at Abingdon to place Oxford under siege.
* Saint Edmund Rich, otherwise Edmund of Abingdon
* St. Edmund Rich ( 1175 – 1240 ), also known as Edmund of Abingdon, Archbishop of Canterbury

Edmund and Saint
In 1913 — the year of Edmund Husserl's Ideas, Niels Bohr's quantized atom, Ezra Pound's founding of imagism, the Armory Show in New York, and, in Saint Petersburg, the " first futurist opera ," Victory Over the Sun — another Russian composer Igor Stravinsky, working in Paris for Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, composed The Rite of Spring for a ballet, choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky, that depicted human sacrifice.
The Society of St Edmund settled in Winooski Park, Vermont, and established Saint Michael's College in 1904 where the deeds and values of Saint Edmund's life continue through fulfilment of the College's mission.
Before the introduction of firearms, bows or crossbows were often used — Saint Sebastian is usually depicted as executed by a squad of Roman auxiliary archers in around 288 AD ; King Edmund the Martyr of East Anglia, by some accounts, was tied to a tree and shot dead by Viking archers on 20 November 869 or 870 AD.
Of royal exactions he was more impatient ; and, after the retirement of Archbishop ( Saint ) Edmund, constituted himself the spokesman of the clerical estate in the Great Council.
It was established as a Catholic colony by Judge Edmund F. Dunne, and Saint Leo University is located nearby.
es: Saint Edmund Hall
The 15th century Church of England parish church of Saint Edmund is said to have been built by two maiden ladies of the Pever family, whence the name " Maids ' Moreton ".
The abbey is a shrine to Saint Edmund, the Saxon King of the East Angles.
The silver threepence had another completely new reverse – three interlinked rings of Saint Edmund, with the inscription, while the obverse shows a left-facing effigy of the king with the inscription and a very small silver engravement.
At the time of his death, Prince George's full style was His Royal Highness The Prince George Edward Alexander Edmund, Duke of Kent, Earl of Saint Andrews and Baron Downpatrick, Royal Knight of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, Royal Knight of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle, Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order.
Dudley has a history dating back to Anglo-Saxon times, its name deriving from the Old English ' Duddan Leah ' ( meaning Dudda's clearing ) and one of its churches being named in honour of the Anglo-Saxon King and Saint, Edmund.
Henry had arranged the marriage to conciliate his Anglo-Saxon subjects: Saint Margaret had been a granddaughter of the Anglo-Saxon King Edmund Ironside, and a great-niece of Edward the Confessor ; as such, the marriage represented a union between the new Norman rulers of England and the old Anglo-Saxon dynasty.
One of the most famous, Saint Edmund Campion was to go on from the College to the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits.

Edmund and theologian
In his 1882 book, The Relations of the Church to Society — Theological Essays, a Jesuit theologian, Father Edmund J. O ' Reilly, wrote: "... not that an interregnum covering the whole period would have been impossible or inconsistent with the promises of Christ, for this is by no means manifest.
According to Lutheran theologian Edmund Schlink, most important in Christian ecumenism is that people focus primarily on Christ, not on separate church organizations.
* Edmund Clowney ( 1917 – 2005 ), theologian and pastor, professor ( 1952 – 1984 ) and president ( 1966 – 1984 ) of Westminster Theological Seminary
* Edmund Sears, Unitarian theologian

Edmund and Archbishop
In 1246 Edmund Rich, former Archbishop of Canterbury ( died 1240 ), was named a saint.
** Edmund Grindal, Archbishop of Canterbury ( d. 1583 )
More recently arrived refugees, however, including Edmund Grindal, the future Archbishop of Canterbury, favoured a stricter application of the book.
* July 6 – Edmund Grindal, Archbishop of Canterbury ( b. 1519 )
* July 26 – Edmund Grindal succeeds Matthew Parker as Archbishop of Canterbury.
Edmund was finally involved in a conspiracy in 1330, allegedly to restore Edward II, whom he claimed was still alive: Isabella and Mortimer broke up the conspiracy, arresting Edmund and other supporters – including Simon Mepeham, Archbishop of Canterbury.
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Edmund Rich, condemned the marriage for this reason.
In 1997, Archbishop Edmund Michał Piszcz of Warmia and the community of Ermlanders in Western Germany commemorated Kaller and placed busts of him in Germany and Poland.
In 1234, Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury effected a reconciliation.
Another English Benedictine community, the Priory of St. Edmund, which had been formed in Paris in 1615 by Dom Gabriel Gifford, later Archbishop of Rheims and primate of France, was expelled from Paris during the Revolution, and eventually took over the vacant buildings of the community of St Gregory's in 1818.
As Archbishop of Canterbury, Lyfing crowned two English kings: Ethelred's son Edmund Ironside in 1016 and Cnut the Great in 1017.
The archbishop was present, along with Archbishop Wulfstan of York, at council that proclaimed the first of these law codes and which was held by Edmund at London, over Easter around 945 or 946.
Here King Edmund besieged King Olaf and Archbishop Wulfstan in Leicester, and he might have controlled them had they not escaped from the stronghold in the night.
Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury, officiated.
* Life and Acts of Edmund Grindal, Archbishop of Canterbury ( 1710 )
He received his episcopal consecration on the following November 30 from Archbishop Henry K. Moeller, with Bishops John Baptist Morris and Thomas Edmund Molloy serving as co-consecrators.
* Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury in the 13th century, lectured on mathematics at the universities of Oxford and Paris

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