SACRED HEART PARISH
Waterlooville 

A SAINT for the WEEK

April 19th.

St. Alphege.

Born about 953, he was successively a monk of Deerhurst (Glocs.), a hermit in Somerset, Abbot of Bath and, in 984, bishop of Winchester in succession to St. Ethelwold.  He was used as an emissary to placate the Danish invaders who came to London and Wessex in 994, converted their leader to Christianity, and persuaded them to withdraw.  In 1005 he became Archbishop of Canterbury.  Another Danish force now overran southern England (1011) and the king, the famously named Ethelred the Unready, was unable to cope with them, despite the payment of the tribute tax known as the Danegeld.  They besieged Canterbury and took Alphege hostage, demanding an enormous ransom which the Archbishop refused to allow the people to pay.  Finally, in 1012, after a drunken feast, the Danes had Alphege axed to death at Greenwich.  Under King Canute, he was enshrined at Canterbury in 1023.  Later, the Norman archbishop Lanfranc suspended the celebration, questioning whether Alphege was actually a martyr for the faith.  The answer, supplied by St. Anselm, was that, like St. John the Baptist, Alphege was a martyr for justice and truth; the feast was then duly restored.  By an act of prescience, St. Thomas Becket, in his last sermon at Canterbury before his murder, praised Alphege as the first Canterbury martyr.