Pegenlic or flūsclic: The Old English
Prose Legends of St. Andrew
Scott DeGregorio, University of Michigan at Dearborn
With the coming of a Christianity nourished on Roman liturgical custom,
the Anglo-Saxons inherited a system of devotional practices centered on
the cults of those saints already venerated in the Western Church.1 While
native English saints' cults soon developed and prospered, it was the major
saints of the Church whose cults had been brought over by the Roman
missionaries that were the most popular, and of these, the cult of the
apostle Andrew occupied an important place.2 The knowledge that Pope
Gregory the Great had held this first-called of apostles and brother of St.
Peter in high esteem, dedicating to him his monastery on Mount Coelius
(from which no less than Augustine of Canterbury himself was dispatched
to head up the English mission), must surely have fueled Andrew's cult
early on, and probably had something to do with the devotion that Bishop
Wilfrid is known to have paid him.3 In the later period, this apostle's popularity
is expressed in the calendars and other liturgical books as well as in
Latin writings such as the lives of St. Dunstan, all four of which tell of his
devotion to Andrew.4
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