Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | into paganism for three years, till Christianity is finally
2 0, Int | successful rebellion after three years, when the Mercians threw
3 0, Int | episcopate of twenty-two years. Bertwald succeeds him at
4 I, V | Augustus; and reigned seventeen years. Being naturally of a harsh
5 I, VI | the army, reigned twenty years, and created Maximian, surnamed
6 I, VI | it for the space of seven years, he was at length put to
7 I, VI | Carausius, held it three years, and was then vanquished
8 I, VI | who thus at the end of ten years restored Britain to the
9 I, VI | incessantly for the space of ten years, with burning of churches,
10 I, IX | held the empire for six years after the death of Valens;
11 I, X | Honorius, held it thirteen years. In his time, Pelagius, [
12 I, XI | Augustus, being emperor, two years before the invasion of Rome
13 I, XI | rule in Britain, almost 470 years after Caius Julius Caesar
14 I, XII | Whereupon they suffered many years from the sudden invasions
15 I, XIII | Roman empire twenty-six years. In the eighth year of his
16 I, XIV | who had been for so many years plundering the country.
17 I, XV | ruled the empire seven years. Then the nation of the
18 I, XVI | enemies, about forty-four years after their arrival in England.
19 I, XVII | power. [429 A.D.]~Some few years before their arrival, the
20 I, XVIII | daughter, a child of ten years of age, to be healed of
21 I, XXIII | and reigned twenty one years. In the tenth year of his
22 I, XXIII | presided over it thirteen years, six months and ten days.
23 I, XXXII | through a course of many years, and in the fulness of time
24 I, XXXIV | which lasted twenty-four years, and the first year of the
25 II, I | Roman Apostolic see thirteen years, six months, and ten days,
26 II, II | in a cycle of eighty-four years. Besides, they did many
27 II, IV | Fontaines), worked for twenty years among the Franks and Burgundians,
28 II, V | temporal kingdom fifty-six years, entered into the eternal
29 II, V | of February, twenty-one years after he had received the
30 II, VII | having ruled the church five years, departed to heaven in the
31 II, XII | him, he wandered for many years as an exile, hiding in divers
32 II, XII | I have for so many long years been a vagabond through
33 II, XIV | Paulinus, for the space of six years from this time, that is,
34 II, XV | province was in error for three years, till Sigbert succeeded
35 II, XV | pontifical authority seventeen years, he ended his days there
36 II, XIX | abolished these two hundred years, but it is also daily condemned
37 II, XX | most gloriously seventeen years over the nations of the
38 II, XX | that nation for twenty-two years with varying success.~ A
39 II, XX | being then forty-eight years of age, and all his army
40 III, II | who is still living, a few years ago, walking carelessly
41 III, IV | seventy-seven, about thirty-two years after he came into Britain
42 III, IV | wit, for the space of 150 years, till the year of our Lord
43 III, VII | the same city; but many years after, when Haedde was bishop,"
44 III, VII | Angles, where he lived three years in banishment, and learned
45 III, VII | as their bishop for many years. At length the king, who
46 III, VII | and full of days. Not many years after his departure out
47 III, VII | the same city, and many years diligently governed the
48 III, VIII | it most nobly twenty-four years and some months. He was
49 III, VIII | left untouched for seven years, at the expiration whereof
50 III, IX | Northumbrians, reigned nine years, including that year which
51 III, XIV | young man of about thirty years of age, succeeded him on
52 III, XIV | and held it twenty-eight years with much trouble, being
53 III, XIV | office of a bishop nineteen years, two months, and twenty-one
54 III, XIV | province of the Deiri seven years in very great prosperity,
55 III, XVII | had been bishop sixteen years; for having a church and
56 III, XVII | bishopric. It happened some years after, that Penda, king
57 III, XIX | in birth. From his boyish years, he had earnestly applied
58 III, XIX | preaching the Word of God many years in Scotland, he could not
59 III, XIX | very hour. And again, four years after, when a more beautiful
60 III, XX | held that see seventeen years, Honorius ordained Thomas
61 III, XX | he had been bishop five years, Bertgils, surnamed Boniface,
62 III, XX | he ruled the church nine years, four months, and two days;
63 III, XXI | things were set on foot two years before the death of King
64 III, XXIII | When Cedd had for many years held the office of bishop
65 III, XXIV | the Abbess Hilda, who, two years after, having acquired an
66 III, XXIV | southern provinces, three years after he had slain King
67 III, XXIV | the Easter festival. Three years after the death of King
68 III, XXIV | governed the Mercians seventeen years, and had for his first bishop
69 III, XXV | appointed a cycle of nineteen years, which either you are ignorant
70 III, XXVI | Aidan was bishop seventeen years, Finan ten, and Colman three.~
71 III, XXVI | he received in the early years of his episcopate, to be
72 III, XXVII | our Lord 729, being ninety years of age, he departed to the
73 IV, I | Egbert, who held it for nine years. The see then became vacant
74 IV, I | venerable age, being sixty-six years old. Hadrian proposed him
75 IV, II | and spent in it twenty-one years, three months, and twenty-six
76 IV, III | in that province for two years and a half, the Divine Providence
77 IV, V | throne, which he held eleven years and seven months. Bisi,
78 IV, V | having been bishop seventeen years, he was ordained by Theodore
79 IV, VI | he had held it but a few years, and in his, place ordained
80 IV, VIII | a boy, not above three years old, called Aesica; who,
81 IV, IX | who, having lived many years in that monastery, always
82 IV, IX | tried for the space of nine years; to the end, that whatever
83 IV, IX | come; who had, for many years, been so disabled in all
84 IV, IX | eternal reward.~For three years after the death of her Superior,
85 IV, X | monastery with great vigour many years, till she was of an extreme
86 IV, XI | When he had spent thirty years as a king and a soldier
87 IV, XII | themselves, held it for about ten years; and during their rule he
88 IV, XII | When he had held it for two years, and whilst the same bishop
89 IV, XII | Theodore; who also, three years after the departure of Wilfrid,
90 IV, XIII | that district for three years before his arrival in the
91 IV, XIII | during the space of five years, until the death of King
92 IV, XV | like servitude for many years; for which reason, during
93 IV, XIX | she lived with him twelve years, yet she preserved the glory
94 IV, XIX | midst of her flock, seven years after she had been made
95 IV, XIX | had been buried sixteen years, thought fit to take up
96 IV, XIX | health. And when, so many years after, her bones were to
97 IV, XX | composed in elegiac verse many years ago, in praise and honour
98 IV, XX | a mother in God.~"Twelve years she had reigned, a bride
99 IV, XXI | a youth about eighteen years of age, and much beloved
100 IV, XXIII | at the age of sixty-six years. Her life falls into two
101 IV, XXIII | for the first thirty-three years of it she spent living most
102 IV, XXIII | God.~When she had for some years governed this monastery,
103 IV, XXIII | governed this monastery many years, it pleased Him Who has
104 IV, XXIII | the same trouble for six years continually; during all
105 IV, XXIII | served Him upwards of thirty years in the monastic life. This
106 IV, XXIV | he was well advanced in years, he had never learned anything
107 IV, XXV | answered, "I am still young in years and strong of body, and
108 IV, XXVI | enjoyed for about forty-six years. Among the many English
109 IV, XXVI | Streanaeshalch; and there for many years, with a few of his own brethren,
110 IV, XXVI | when he had reigned twelve years after his brother Egbert,
111 IV, XXVI | Egbert,who had reigned nine years: he was wounded in battle
112 IV, XXVII | Lindisfarne. He had for many years led a solitary life, in
113 IV, XXVII | having thus spent many years in the monastery of Mailros,
114 IV, XXVIII | mentioned. But forasmuch as many years ago we wrote enough concerning
115 IV, XXVIII | served God in solitude many years, the mound which encompassed
116 IV, XXIX | 687 A.D.]~HAVING spent two years in his bishopric, he returned
117 IV, XXX | it had been buried eleven years, and how his successor in
118 IV, XXX | he had been buried eleven years, Divine Providence put it
119 IV, XXXII | performed by his relics three years ago, and was told me lately
120 IV, XXXII | after having been many years buried, they took some part
121 V, I | of that degree for many years in the monastery which is
122 V, I | the isle of Fame twelve years, and died there; but was
123 V, I | Northumbrians for nineteen years.~
124 V, V | company; and living many years after, continued in the
125 V, VII | governed his nation for two years, quitted his crown for the
126 V, VII | indiction, aged about thirty years, in the reign of our most
127 V, VII | having reigned thirty-seven years over that nation, he in
128 V, VIII | for he was eighty-eight years of age; which number of
129 V, VIII | of age; which number of years he had been wont long before
130 V, VIII | the bishopric twenty-two years, and was buried in St. Peter’
131 V, IX | knowledge, for he had lived many years as a stranger and pilgrim
132 V, IX | for the space of two whole years to that nation and to its
133 V, XI | gone thither had spent some years teaching in Frisland, Pippin,
134 V, XI | having been thirty-six years a bishop, and now, after
135 V, XIII | observed, that in his first years he did some good actions,
136 V, XVIII | Osred, a boy about eight years of age, succeeding him in
137 V, XVIII | the throne, reigned eleven years. In the beginning of his
138 V, XVIII | presided most vigorously four years; both of them were fully
139 V, XVIII | bishop. He also died some years ago, and the bishopric has
140 V, XIX | had been bishop forty-five years. His body, being laid in
141 V, XIX | and virtuous beyond his years, he conducted himself so
142 V, XIX | themselves. At fourteen years of age he chose rather the
143 V, XIX | Having served God some years in that monastery, and being
144 V, XIX | having stayed with him three years, received from him the tonsure,
145 V, XIX | when he was about thirty years of age, the same Agilbert
146 V, XIX | ruled that church three years, he retired to take charge
147 V, XIX | invitation. Nevertheless, five years after, being again accused,
148 V, XIX | bishop for nearly forty years, ought by no means to be
149 V, XIX | visit you at the end of four years. And when you come into
150 V, XIX | thus he lived in peace four years, till the day of his death.
151 V, XIX | office of a bishop forty-five years, he passed away and with
152 V, XX | clergy, and kept him twelve years, to the end that he might
153 V, XXI | contained in a cycle of nineteen years, which began long since
154 V, XXI | Theodosius, for a hundred years to come. Cyril also, his
155 V, XXI | a series of ninety-five years in five cycles of nineteen
156 V, XXI | five cycles of nineteen years. After whom, Dionysius Exiguus
157 V, XXI | five hundred and thirty-two years, if they will; after the
158 V, XXI | Paschal cycles of nineteen years were sent by command of
159 V, XXI | erroneous cycles of eighty-four years being everywhere blotted
160 V, XXII | Abbot Dunchad, about eighty years after they had sent Bishop
161 V, XXII | Egbert, remained thirteen years in the aforesaid island,
162 V, XX III| had governed thirty-four years and a half. The next year
163 V, XX III| after he had reigned eleven years, and appointed Ceolwulf,
164 V, XX III| held his see thirty-seven years, six months and fourteen
165 V, XX III| having now continued some years without a bishop, receives
166 V, XX III| hundred and eighty-live years after the coming of the
167 V, XXIV | most gloriously fifteen years. To whom Lucius, king of
168 V, XXIV | emperor, reigned seventeen years; he fortified Britain with
169 V, XXIV | Valentinian, reigned seven years; in whose time the English,
170 V, XXIV | Northumbrians, and he reigned twelve years.~In the year 565, the priest,
171 V, XXIV | he had reigned seventeen years, died and left the government
172 V, XXIV | he had reigned thirty-one years over the nation of the Mercians,
173 V, XXIV | Mercians, having reigned five years, went to Rome. [V, 19.]~
174 V, XXIV | care of kinsmen, at seven years of age, to be educated by
175 V, XXIV | perhaps entries under the years 731, 732, 733 and 734 which
176 V, XXIV | which continued almost, two years, divers grievous sicknesses
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