Monkwearmouth-Jarrow is a twin-foundation English monastery, located …

Years: 687 - 687

Monkwearmouth-Jarrow is a twin-foundation English monastery, located on the River Wear, at Monkwearmouth, and the River Tyne, at Jarrow, respectively, in the Kingdom of Northumbria (now in the metropolitan county of Tyne and Wear).

The monastery had been founded in 674 by Benedict Biscop, first with the establishment of the monastery of St. Peter's, Monkwearmouth on land given by Egfrid, King of Northumbria.

His idea had been to build a model monastery for England, sharing his knowledge of the experience of the Roman traditions in an area previously more influenced by Celtic Christianity stemming from missionaries of Melrose and Iona.

A papal letter in 678 had exempted the monastery from external control, and in 682 the king had been so delighted at the success of St. Peter's, he had given Benedict more land in Jarrow and urged him to build a second monastery.

Benedict had erected a sister foundation (St Paul) at Jarrow, appointing Ceolfrith as its superior, who had left Monkwearmouth with twenty monks (including his protégé the young Bede) to start the foundation in Jarrow.

Benedict had brought workmen from Francia to build these churches, the first ecclesiastical structures in Britain built of stone, and furnished it with glass windows, pictures, service books and the library he had collected on his travels.

Window glass being unusual in England at this time, Benedict had imported glassmakers from Francia, who had established a workshop at the Monkwearmouth site, which stands on a nearby site on the river Wear.

The library Benedict had created on his travels to Rome and then given to the monastery makes it the cradle not only of English art but of English literature—Jarrow is where the Venerable Bede receives his early education under Ceolfrith's patronage and will live, write and die as a monk.

Related Events

Filter results