A Father Eadred Murder Mystery

The Last Days

It is the year 833, and in the land of the East Angles, the rains have failed. The poor pray and starve. Then foreign hermits enter the north of the kingdom. They preach that God’s wrath has fallen upon the people because the king and the head of the Church are heralds of the Antichrist and have allowed sin to flourish. […]

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Cambridge Independent article, 28 October 2025

SINCE 1819 Subscribe Now Father Eadred returns to solve another fenland murder mystery in Lindsay Jacob’s new book, ‘The Last Days’  By Adrian Peel  –  adrian.peel@iliffemedia.co.uk  Published: 07:00, 28 October 2025  | Updated: 11:35, 29 October 2025 Author Lindsay Jacob’s previous tome, The Fenland Spell, a crime novel set in the Kingdom of the East Angles in the year 832, was

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Exploring the Depths of Anglo-Saxon Paganism: Unveiling Ancient Beliefs and Practices

Introduction to Anglo-Saxon Paganism Anglo-Saxon paganism, a variant of Germanic paganism, flourished in early medieval England before the widespread adoption of Christianity. This pre-Christian religion was a tapestry of beliefs, rituals, and cultural norms deeply intertwined with the daily lives of the Anglo-Saxons. The Spiritual Landscape of Early England The religious landscape of Anglo-Saxon England

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murder mystery novel

Anglo-Saxon Saints – Piety and Compromise

Selection Criteria (Acknowledgement. I am grateful to Dr Francis Young for kindly taking the time to read an earlier version of this article and making helpful suggestions to correct several factual errors. I take full responsibility, of course, for any remaining errors or omissions and interpretations about Anglo-Saxon saints). The Anglo-Saxon Church was awash with

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Mystical Life in Anglo-Saxon England – Conversion

Part Two: Anglo-Saxon Conversion As part of the research for my novels, Murder at Elmstow Minster and The Fenland Spell, I have delved into Anglo-Saxon spirituality – ‘pagan’ and Christian. In Part One of this series, I concluded by saying that there were some core aspects of pagan spirituality that would be certain to cause

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Mystical Life in Anglo-Saxon England

Part One: ‘Pagan’ Spiritual Beliefs If I were to venture a breathtakingly broad generalization of the spiritual history of the Anglo-Saxons, I would use the metaphor of a giant interconnected system of rivers and streams with ‘pagan’ (i.e. non-Christian) and some Christian waters intermingling with tolerance and little impediment up to the Conversion period. From

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