Preaching,politics and episcopal reform in Wulfstan's early writings |
| |
Authors: | Jay Paul Gates |
| |
Affiliation: | City University of New York |
| |
Abstract: | Putting Wulfstan's earliest legal texts – the Canons of Edgar and the so‐called Peace of Edward and Guthrum – in dialogue with his homilies on the role of the bishop, this article argues that, from his earliest writings, Wulfstan adapted approaches from Kings Alfred and Edgar as well as from the Benedictine reform to make ambitious claims concerning the role of the bishop in the secular sphere. These claims went beyond the contemporary understanding of the relationship between bishop and king both in England and on the Continent, to frame the bishop as the primary authority in the nation because he is the teacher of teachers. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|