Saint Augustine of Canterbury

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From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Date: 20080424
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Saint Augustine of Canterbury ô´gestēn, -tĬn; ôgŭs´tĬn , d. c.605, Italian missionary, called the Apostle of the English, first archbishop of Canterbury (from 601). A Roman monk, he was sent to England, as the head of some 40 monks, by Pope St. Gregory I. Arriving in 597, they were well received by King Æthelbert , who was converted by Augustine, thus making him the first Christian king in Anglo-Saxon England. Æthelbert gave the monks land at Canterbury, and a church was built on the site of the present cathedral. A monastery was also ...

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