Saint Aelfheah
- Aelfheah also spelled:
- Elphege, Alphage, or Alphege
- Also called:
- Elphege the Martyr, or Godwine
- Born:
- 954, Gloucestershire?, Eng.
- Died:
- April 19, 1012, Greenwich, London
- Also Known As:
- Saint Alphege
- Saint Alphage
- Saint Elphege
- Elphege the Martyr
- Godwine
Saint Aelfheah (born 954, Gloucestershire?, Eng.—died April 19, 1012, Greenwich, London; feast day, April 19) was the archbishop of Canterbury who was venerated as a martyr after his murder by the Danes.
Of noble birth, Aelfheah entered the Benedictine abbey of Deerhurst, Gloucestershire, and later became a hermit at Bath, Somerset, where followers elected him abbot. Aelfheah was a friend of Archbishop St. Dunstan of Canterbury, through whose influence he was named bishop of Winchester in 984. Aethelred II the Unready, king of the English, sent Aelfheah as ambassador to King Olaf I Tryggvason of Norway, who in 994 entered Britain and whom Aelfheah confirmed and allegedly persuaded not to invade England again.
In 1005 he became the 29th archbishop of Canterbury and immediately went to Rome to receive the pallium (symbol of metropolitan jurisdiction) from Pope John XVIII. Back in England, he called the Council of Enham (1009?) in a futile effort to halt the social demoralization caused by the devastating Danish invasions. On Sept. 8, 1011, the Danes began their sack of Canterbury and seized Aelfheah. He was ill-treated and held seven months without ransom, which he refused to pay with money that the poor would have had to supply as taxes. Aelfheah thereupon was slain by the Danes, after first being pelted with ox bones remaining from their feast.
He was first buried at St. Paul’s Cathedral, London, by order of King Canute of Denmark, England, and Norway; his body was removed to Canterbury in 1023 amid great splendour. From the earliest years after his death he was venerated as a martyr. The parish church of Greenwich is dedicated to him.