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  1. AUGUSTINE OF CANTERBURY, ST. Apostle of England, first archbishop of Canterbury; d. May 26, 604. Augustine (Austin) was prior at St. Andrew's on the Coelian Hill, Rome, when gregory i (the Great) sent him with 30 monks to evangelize the Anglo-Saxons. After difficulties in Gaul and his return to Rome, he was consecrated bishop and landed at ...

  2. May 20, 2024 · Modern Canterbury is a market town and regional service centre. It has some light industries and attracts hundreds of thousands of tourists each year. Its many educational institutions include the University of Kent at Canterbury (founded 1965) and Canterbury Christ Church College (1962). Area city (local authority), 119 square miles (309 ...

  3. ambitious young men. At the time Canterbury Cathedral was a centre of learning and artistic patronage. The legal and diplomatic training that Becket received in his nine years with Theobald was life-changing. In 1154 the archbishop recommended him as royal chancellor to the new king, Henry II, and the two men became great friends.

  4. Aug 22, 2021 · Canterbury became Cant-wara byrg, meaning the Kentish men's city. The Latinists afterwards modelled it to Cantuaria before the English again changed it to its present name of Canterbury. It has kept its name from about the time of the Norman conquest, which began in 1066. Chatham. The name Chatham was first recorded as Cetham in 880. The ...

  5. First established by the Romans 2,000 years ago, the Kentish cathedral city and former pilgrimage destination of Canterbury is best known for its long involvement in the religious, political and secular history of England. The very first Archbishop of Canterbury was St. Augustine, the founder of Christianity in Kent, with this coveted position ...

  6. Adrian of Canterbury, Saint, an African by birth, d. 710.He became Abbot of Nerida, a Benedictine monastery near Naples, when he was very young. Pope Vitalian intended to appoint him Archbishop of Canterbury to succeed St. Deusdedit, who had died in 664, but Adrian considered himself unworthy of so great a dignity, and begged the Pope to appoint Theodore, a Greek monk, in his place.

  7. Oct 23, 2013 · Canterbury became a popular place of pilgrimage after the murder of the Archbishop, Thomas Becket (Thomas a Becket). He was killed in the cathedral on the orders of King Henry II in 1170. One of the most famous English books is the Canterbury Tales , about pilgrims journeying to the city.

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