Saint Aldate (/ˈɔːldeɪt/; died 577) was a bishop of Gloucester, venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church with the feast day of 4 February. Aldate's life is not detailed historically, but he was probably a Briton killed by the Anglo-Saxons at Deorham. He is reported to have roused the countryside to resist pagan invasion forces. He is mentioned in the Sarum and other martyrologies; his feast occurs in a Gloucester calendar (14th-century addition); churches were dedicated to him at Gloucester and Oxford, as well as a famous Oxford street: St Aldate's, Oxford and a minor street in Gloucester. But nothing seems to be known of him: it was even suggested that his name was a corruption of "old gate".
He is also venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church.[1]
References
- ^ February 17 / February 4. https://www.holytrinityorthodox.com/htc/orthodox-calendar/
- Baring-Gould and Fisher, ii. 426–8; Early British Kingdoms after 1100, ii. 40
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