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| CAP. | PAGE | |
|---|---|---|
| XXIV. | That the province of the Mercians, after King Penda was killed, received the faith of Christ: and that Oswiu, for the victory he obtained, gave possessions and territories for the building of monasteries [655–658] | 448 |
| XXV. | That a question was raised concerning the time of Easter against those who had come from Scotland original: "Scottia", here referring to Ireland/Dal Riata [664] . | 456 |
| XXVI. | That Colman, defeated, returned home; and Tuda served in the bishopric in his stead: and what the custom of the church was like under those teachers [664] . | 478 |
| XXVII. | That Egbert, a holy man of the English nation, led a monastic life in Ireland [664–729] . . . . | 484 |
| XXVIII. | That upon the death of Tuda, Wilfrid was ordained bishop in Gaul, and Chad among the West Saxons, in the province of the Northumbrians [665] . . . . | 490 |
| XXIX. | That the priest Wigheard was sent from Britain to Rome to be ordained archbishop: and how letters from the apostolic pope soon reported that he had died there [667] . . . . | 494 |
| XXX. | That the East Saxons, in a time of plague, returned to idolatry, but were soon corrected of their error through the persistence of Bishop Jaruman [665] . . . . | 502 |