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Saint Botolph

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Botolph, Botulph or Botulf (born 610, died circa 680) was an English abbot and saint. He is the patron saint of the various aspects of farming and the Danish patron saint of travellers. His feast day is celebrated either on 17 June (in England) or 25 June (in Scotland), and his translation on 1 December.

[Icon of St. Botolph:[link]]

Life and works

Little is known about his life, other than doubtful details in a surviving account written four hundred years after his death by the eleventh-century monk Folcard. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records for the year 6531: The Middle Angles, under earldorman Penda, received the true faith. King Anna was killed and Botulf began to build the church at Ikanho. There is no modern town named Icanho (which means 'ox-island' or more strictly, 'ox hill', as in Plymouth Hoe) and the location is disputed; it may be in southern Lincolnshire, where some of the newly Christianized Middle Angles lived, but is most likely to have been by the estuary of the Alde in Suffolk, where a church remains on top of an isolated hill in the parish of Iken; just the place for an early monastery. [(Here, the Anchorage was the home of an anchoret.)]2. The Life of St Ceolfrith, written around the time of Bede by an unknown author mentions an abbot named Botolphus in East Anglia, "a man of remarkable life and learning, full of the grace of the Holy Spirit". Lincolnshire was not in East Anglia but Iken was3.

Botolph is supposed to have been buried at his foundation of Icanho. In 970 King Edgar gave permission for his remains to be transferred to Burgh, near Woodbridge where they remained for some 50 years before being transferred, on the instructions of Cnut, to their own tomb at the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds.

His relics were later translated (with those of his brother Adulf) to Thorney, although his head was transferred to Ely and other portions to Westminster Abbey and other houses.

Church dedications

Many churches between Yorkshire and Sussex are dedicated to him, with a concentration in East Anglia, including Colchester, Eynsford, Hadstock, Shepshed and the Lincoln deanery called Christianity. However, probably the best known is The Stump in the Lincolnshire town of Boston (Botolph's town), from which the Massachusetts city of Boston takes its name through the influence of John Cotton.

Secular connections

St. Botolph founded the monastery of Ikanhoe in East Anglia, and the place name was "Botolphston" (from "Botolph's stone" or "Botolph's town"), later shortened to "Boston".

He is remembered in the names of both the market town of Boston in Lincolnshire (100 miles north of London), and Boston in Massachusetts, America.

In the New England city of Boston, St Botolph is the name of a street (St. Botolph Street), a private club [link] and the President's House at Boston College.

There is also a St. Botolph Street in London, England, as well as its being the name of several churches dedicated to the saint.

Cambridge University's poetry journal in the 1950s was called St. Botolph's Review, for which Ted Hughes wrote.

References

External links

Footnotes

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
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