Abstract

This article investigates the representation of the Anglo-Saxons as a ''chosen people' in Bede's 'Historia ecclesiastica'. Although Bede rarely makes the connection between the 'gens Anglorum' and the people of Israel explicit, I argue that he was continuing and reinventing a tradition in Christian historiography, which represented individual Christian nations after patterns established by Old Testament authors. I argue that appreciating the centrality of this biblical motif is crucial for our understanding of 'Historia ecclesiastica' and consequently for our understanding of how national identity developed in Anglo-Saxon England.

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