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  1. Æthelnoth murió en 1038, el 28 de octubre, el 29 de octubre, el 30 de octubre o el 1 de noviembre. Antes de su muerte, algunas de sus funciones episcopales fueron realizadas por un sacerdote real, Eadsige. Fue enterrado en la Catedral de Canterbury. Se le considera santo, con fiesta el 30 de octubre. Si bien figura en las Vidas de los santos ...

  2. Æthelnoth [a] (died 1038) was the archbishop of Canterbury from 1020 until his death. Descended from an earlier English king, Æthelnoth became a monk prior to becoming archbishop. While archbishop, he travelled to Rome and brought back saint's relics. He consecrated a number of other bishops who came from outside his archdiocese, leading to ...

  3. Æthelnoth es un clérigo anglosajón que murió en 1038. Relacionado con la antigua casa real de Wessex, fue el trigésimo primer arzobispo de Canterbury desde 1020 hasta su muerte.

  4. Æthelnoth (d. 1038). Archbishop of Canterbury from 1020. Often referred to as ‘the Good’, and thought to have influenced Cnut, who was generous to Canterbury and granted him extensive powers of jurisdiction. Source for information on Æthelnoth: The Oxford Companion to British History dictionary.

  5. 30 de oct. de 2014 · Æthelnoth was the impetus behind the ceremonial return to Canterbury in 1023 of the body of St Ælfheah, the archbishop one before Æthelnoth, who had been murdered by a Danish army in 1012. The return of the martyr's body to Canterbury was a large-scale public spectacle, involving the body being taken by ship from St Paul's, where the ...

    • Clerk of Oxford
  6. ETHELNOTH OF CANTERBURY, ST. Archbishop, called "the Good"; d. Oct. 29, 1038. Son of ealdorman Aethelmaer, Ethelnoth (or Æthelnoth) was a monk of glastonbury and dean of Christ Church, canterbury, before his consecration to that see by wulfstan of worcester, archbishop of York, (Nov. 13, 1020). Source for information on Ethelnoth of Canterbury, St.: New Catholic Encyclopedia dictionary.

  7. Before have a child, Æthelnoth and Gænburg, an Anglo-Saxon husband and wife, made a will for the distribution of their property upon their death.