Abstract
Without doubt one of the more famous events in the progress of the con troversy over the dating of Easter which chronically vexed the churches of Britain and Ireland between the late sixth and the late eighth centu ries is the transfer ral of his kingdom by Nechtan or Naiton, who was king of the Picts roughly between 706x713 and 729, to the so-called 'Roman' system of calculating the date of Easter. It is famous partly because Bede devotes a great deal of attention to it, and we will return to his story shortly. For advocates of the confrontational narrative of seventhand eighth-century insular church history, it also forms a climactic final episode. After the struggles and insults of the 'Synod of Whitby' in 664, Bede's Naiton brings an end to the tale, spurning the Columban church, kicking them and Celtic Christianity out of his kingdom, and embracing the Roman system, with all its attendant evils. The Columban church, now isolated, has no option but to change also. This explanation is dramatically satisfying, but historically less so. Like so much of the history of the early church in Scotland, it is bound up with modern political and religious factionalism. Was Naiton an English imperialist flunky? A Romanist stooge, allowing the authority of the Pope and St Peter into his realm? Or, conversely, a Pictish nationalist, rejecting the insidious Irish influences of the Celtic church? Or was he more a creation of Bede's exegetical mind bringing an 'end to history' in a biblically satisfying way? This article does not set out to assess the effect of his actions on the church, or their motivations?that will have to await a separate occasion. Rather, it examines the king and his back ground, in order to get a firmer sense of the context, genealogical, cul tural and political, in which his reform took place.1 Nevertheless, it is well worth first looking at Bede's testimony con cerning Naiton for what it says. Bede's description of the king, both in his own words, and in the words he quotes from his abbot, Ceolfrith's
Accepted Version (
Free)
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have