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  1. Shrines. St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury (destroyed) St Augustine's, Ramsgate. Augustine of Canterbury (early 6th century – most likely 26 May 604) was a Christian monk who became the first archbishop of Canterbury in the year 597. He is considered the "Apostle to the English”.

  2. Saint Augustine of Canterbury (born Rome?—died May 26, 604/605, Canterbury, Kent, England; feast day in England and Wales May 26, elsewhere May 28) was the first archbishop of Canterbury and the apostle to England, who founded the Christian church in southern England.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Agostinho de Cantuária ( Roma, primeiro terço do século VI – Cantuária, provavelmente em 26 de maio de 604) foi um monge beneditino que se tornou o primeiro arcebispo de Cantuária em 597. É considerado o "Apóstolo dos ingleses" e o fundador da Igreja na Inglaterra. [ 1]

  4. Today the archbishop has four main roles: [6] He is the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Canterbury, which covers the east of the County of Kent and the extreme north-east of Surrey. Founded by Augustine of Canterbury in 597, it is the oldest bishopric in the English church.

    From [a]
    Until [b]
    Incumbent
    Notes
    597
    26 May 604 or 605
    Canonised: St Augustine of Canterbury.
    c. 604
    2 Feb 619
    (Laurentius, Lawrence) Canonised: St ...
    619
    24 Apr 624
    Translated from London; [10] canonised: ...
    624
    10 Nov bet. 627 and 631
    Translated from Rochester; [10] ...
    • between
    • deposed
    • circa
    • deprived
  5. 21 de mai. de 2018 · Augustine of Canterbury, Saint (d.604) First Archbishop of Canterbury. He was sent from Rome in 596 by Pope Gregory I , at the head of a 40-strong mission. Arriving in Kent in 597, Augustine converted King Ethelbert and introduced Roman ecclesiastical practices into England .

  6. St Augustine of Canterbury (453-604) Benedictine monk and first Archbishop of Canterbury. Augustine served as prior to St Andrew’s monastery in Rome before being commissioned in 596 by Pope Gregory the Great to take the gospel to the ‘Angles’ (now Anglo Saxons).