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Caedmon

4 bytes removed, 01:59, May 27, 2009
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According to [[Bede]], writing in the 7th century, Cædmon was a cow-herd at a Yorkshire [[monastery]], who was unable to sing in public until he miraculously found himself able to sing the ''Creation'', a poem of nine lines. St. [[Hilda of Whitby|Hilda]], the abbess of [[Whitby Abbey]], encouraged his new calling and asked him to join the monastery. The poem we know as "Cædmon's Hymn" was written down by [[Bede]] in Latin in his ''[[Ecclesiastical History of the English People]]''. The Anglo-Saxon version commonly read today is not, in actuality, Cædmon's own work, but comes from an Anglo-Saxon translation of Bede's history made sometime during the reign of St. [[Alfred the Great]].
 
== Cædmon's hymn of creation ==
 
{|
|Nu scylun hergan   hefaenricaes uard
*[http://www.whitby-uk.com/cgi-bin/site.nav/whitby.pl?page=caedmon Caedmon at ''Whitby Attractions'']
[[Category:Celtic and Anglo-Saxon Saints]]
[[Category:Hymnographers]]
[[Category:Monastics]]
[[Category:Saints]]
[[Category:Saints of the British Isles]]
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