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  1. St Alphege was an 11th century Archbishop of Canterbury whom the invading Danes captured and held to ransom in 1011. He insisted that no ransom was paid so the Danes took him with to Greenwich, where they eventually killed him during a drunken rage by throwing ox bones at him. He was initially buried in St Paul’s Cathedral but translated to ...

  2. Alphege (Elphege, Alfege, and many variants) was born in the village of Weston near Bath and became an anchorite (form of hermit), later a monk at Deerhurst in Gloucestershire. He was appointed Abbot of Bath by Dunstan, and later Bishop of Winchester (984 AD) and Archbishop of Canterbury (1005 AD). By 1011 AD, the Danes had conquered much of ...

  3. St. Alphege, or more properly Aelfheah, was, traditionally, born of a noble family in Weston near Bath (Somerset), about the year AD 953. While he was still very young, he renounced the World and, notwithstanding the tears and entreaties of his widowed mother, retired into the monastery of Deerhurst, in Gloucestershire, where he served God with ...

  4. St Alphege ward, Solihull. Hi, I'm Samantha, your Conservative Councillor for St Alphege Ward on Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council. I'm here to help, so please don't hesitate to get in touch.

  5. J. Alphege Brewer, British artist and etcher. In words and images, an exploration of the British artist whose glorious etchings of European cathedrals. and other scenes of church, college, and. community have graced parlor walls in. America and overseas for more than a century. Get the book! www.JAlphegeBrewer.info. Information about the early ...

  6. 15 de abr. de 2015 · Alphege became Archbishop of Canterbury in 1005 amidst a longstanding war between the Anglo-Saxons and the Danes. Like most such wars, peace often seems to have won the day, when one or the other party does something remarkably stupid that ignites the conflict once again. And it was in 1011 that the battle stirred again.

  7. 3 de ene. de 2021 · Alphege parece haber sido particularmente importante para Becket, quien "de cierta manera adoptó a Alphege como un santo patrón", dice De Hamel.