/
This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

| CHAP. | PAGE | |
|---|---|---|
| X. | How, while Arcadius was reigning, Pelagius the Briton waged proud wars against the grace of God [395–408] | 50 |
| XI. | How, during the reign of Honorius, Gratian and Constantine were created tyrants in Britain, and how the former was soon killed in Britain and the second in Gaul [395–423] | 52 |
| XII. | How the Britons, devastated by the Scots and Picts, sought help from the Romans; the latter came a second time and built a wall across the island. But since this was immediately broken through by the aforementioned enemies, they were oppressed by a greater calamity [410] | 54 |
| XIII. | How, during the reign of Theodosius the Younger, in whose time Palladius was sent to the Scots believing in Christ, the Britons begged for help from the consul Aetius but did not obtain it [408–450] | 62 |
| XIV. | How the Britons, forced by a famous famine, drove the barbarians from their lands; and how, without delay, a great abundance of crops, luxury, pestilence, and the destruction of the people followed | 64 |
| XV. | How the English nation was invited to Britain, at first driving the adversaries further away; but not long after, having joined in a treaty with them, they turned their arms against their allies [? 447] | 68 |
| XVI. | How the Britons won their first victory against the English nation, under the leadership of the Roman, Ambrosius [? 500] | 74 |
| XVII. | How Bishop Germanus, sailing to Britain with Lupus, calmed the tempest of the sea first, and then the tempest of the Pelagians, by divine power [429] | 76 |
| XVIII. | How the same man gave sight to a blind girl of a tribune, and then, arriving at the place of Saint Alban, received relics of him and placed them with those of the blessed apostles or other martyrs [429] | 82 |