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Dunstan was born
near Glastonbury in the southwest of England about the year 909, ten years
after the death of King Alfred. During the Viking invasions of the ninth
century, monasteries had been favorite targets of the invaders, and by
Dunstan's time English monasticism had been wiped out. In its restoration in
the tenth century, Dunstan played the leading role. He was born of an
upper-class family, and sent to court, where he did not fit in. At the
urging of his uncle, the Bishop of Westminster, he became a monk and a
priest, and returned to Glastonbury, where he built a hut near the ruins of
the old monastery, and devoted himself to study, music, metal working
(particularly the art of casting church bells, an art which he is said to
have advanced considerably), and painting. A manuscript illuminated by him
is in the British Museum. He returned to court and was again asked to leave;
but then King Edmund had a narrow escape from death while hunting, and in
gratitude recalled Dunstan and in 943 commissioned him to re-establish
monastic life at Glastonbury. (Glastonbury is one of the oldest Christian
sites in England, and is associated in legend with King Arthur and his
Court, with Joseph of Arimathea, and with other worthies. It has been said
that the Holy Grail, the chalice of the Last Supper, is hidden somewhere
near Glastonbury.) Under Dunstan's direction, Glastonbury became an
important center both of monasticism and of learning. The next king, Edred,
adopted Dunstan's ideas for various reforms of the clergy (including the
control of many cathedrals by monastic chapters) and for relations with the
Danish settlers. These policies made Dunstan popular in the North of
England, but unpopular in the South.
Edred was succeeded by his sixteen-year-old nephew Edwy, whom Dunstan openly
rebuked for unchastity. The furious Edwy drove Dunstan into exile, but the
North rose in rebellion on his behalf. When the dust settled, Edwy was dead,
his brother Edgar was king, and Dunstan was Archbishop of Canterbury. The
coronation service which Dunstan compiled for Edgar is the earliest English
coronation service of which the full text survives, and is the basis for all
such services since, down to the present. With the active support of King
Edgar, Dunstan re-established monastic communities at Malmesbury,
Westminster, Bath, Exeter, and many other places. Around 970 he presided at
a conference of bishops, abbots, and abbesses, which drew up a national code
of monastic observance, the Regularis Concordia. It followed Benedictine
lines, but under it the monasteries were actively involved in the life of
the surrounding community. For centuries thereafter the Archbishop of
Canterbury was always a monk.
Dunstan took an active role in politics under Edgar and his successor
Edward, but under the next king, Ethelred, he retired from politics and
concentrated on running the Canterbury cathedral school for boys, where he
was apparently successful in raising the academic standards while reducing
the incidence of corporal punishment. On Ascension Day in 988, he told the
congregation that he was near to death, and died two days later.
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