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Biography:

St. Boniface

The English monk St. Boniface (ca. 672-754) is known as the Apostle of Germany because he organized the Church there in the 8th century.

Named Winfrith by his well-to-do English parents, Boniface was born probably near Exeter, Devon. As a boy, he studied in Benedictine monastery schools and became a monk himself in the process. For 30 years he lived in relative peace, studying, teaching, and praying. In his early 40s he left the seclusion of the monastery to do missionary work on the Continent. Because his first efforts in Frisia (now the Netherlands) were unsuccessful, Winfrith went to Rome in search of direction. Pope Gregory II renamed him Boniface, "doer of good," and delegated him to spread the gospel message in Germany.

In 719 the missionary monk set out on what was to be a very fruitful venture. He made converts by the thousands. Once, the story goes, he hewed down the giant sacred oak at Geismar to convince the people of Hesse that there was no spiritual power in nature. In 722 the Pope consecrated him bishop for all of Germany. For 30 years Boniface worked to reform and organize the Church, linking the various local communities firmly with Rome. He enlisted the help of English monks and nuns to preach to the people, strengthen their Christian spirit, and assure their allegiance to the pope. He founded the monastery of Fulda, now the yearly meeting place of Germany's Roman Catholic bishops. About 746 Boniface was appointed archbishop of Mainz, where he settled for several years as head of all the German churches.

Over the years he kept up an extensive correspondence, asking directives of the popes, giving information about the many Christian communities, and relaying to the people the popes' wishes. In 752, as the pope's emissary, he crowned Pepin king of the Franks. In his 80s and still filled with his characteristic zeal, Boniface went back to preach the gospel in Frisia. There, in 754 near the town of Dokkum, Boniface and several dozen companions were waylaid by a group of savage locals and put to death. His remains were later taken to Fulda, where he was revered as a martyr to the Christian faith.

Boniface was a man of action, but he was also sensitive to the feelings of those with whom he came in contact. His organizing genius and loyalty to Rome influenced Germany's Christianity for centuries.

Further Reading

The Life of Saint Boniface was written by a German priest, Willibald, shortly after Boniface's death. A translation of this work and some excerpts from Boniface's correspondence are contained in C.H. Talbot, ed., The Anglo-Saxon Missionaries in Germany (1954). A more modern interpretation of his life is given by Eleanor Shipley Duckett in Anglo-Saxon Saints and Scholars (1947). Godfrey Kurth's biographical study Saint Boniface (trans. 1935) contains a helpful bibliography.

Additional Sources

Boniface, Saint, Archbishop of Mainz, ca. 675-754., The letters of Saint Boniface, New York: Norton, 1976, 1940.

The Greatest Englishman: essays on St. Boniface and the Church at Crediton, Exeter: Paternoster Press, 1980.

Sladden, John Cyril., Boniface of Devon: apostle of Germany, Exeter, Paternoster Press, 1980.

 
 
British History: St Boniface

Boniface, St (c.675-754). St Boniface was possibly the greatest of early Anglo-Saxon missionaries. Named Wynfrith, he left England in 718, working first with Willibrord in Frisia before beginning his own work in Hesse and Thuringia as regional bishop. Appointed archbishop in 731 and ultimately papal legate, supported by Frankish rulers, he became a leading ecclesiastical figure in Europe. In 754 he returned to evangelize in Frisia, where he and his followers were killed by heathen robbers.

 
Wikipedia: St. Boniface (provincial electoral district)

St. Boniface is a provincial electoral division in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It should not be confused with the federal electoral division of the same name, which includes most of the provincial riding's territory but has expanded borders and a larger population base. The riding has existed, in one form or another, since the province's creation.

In Manitoba's first general election (1870), the riding was divided into St. Boniface East and St. Boniface West. It became a single constituency in 1874, and has existed continuously since then.

The riding elected two members by preferential balloting in 1949 and 1953. On all other occasions, it has been a single-member constituency.

St. Boniface is located in the central-eastern Winnipeg. Its boundaries roughly correspond with the historical community of St. Boniface, Manitoba, which was a distinct civic jurisdiction before being amalgamated with the City of Winnipeg in 1971.

The riding's population in 1996 was 19,646. The average family income in 1999 was $45,193, with an unemployment rate of 10.50%. The service sector accounts for 18% of the riding's industry, with a further 15% in health and social services.

St. Boniface has historically been home to the largest francophone community in the Winnipeg area. According to a 1999 census, 34% of the riding's residents speak French as their first language -- the highest rate in the province. The riding's aboriginal population is 8%, and almost 19% of the population is over 65 years of age.

For many years after the introduction of partisan politics in 1882, St. Boniface was a hotly-contested battleground riding between the provincial Liberals and Conservatives (although candidates of the parliamentary left were also elected in the 1930s and 1940s). During the 1950s and 1960s, it was generally regarded as a safe seat for the Liberals.

In 1969, St. Boniface MLA Laurent Desjardins decided to sit as a Liberal Democrat, supporting the New Democratic Party government of Edward Schreyer. He formally joined the NDP in 1971, and (aside from an overturned election result in 1973), continued to represent the area until 1988.

The provincial Liberals recaptured the seat in 1988, during a period of resurgence for that party in the province. After Neil Gaudry's death in 1999, the seat was again won by the New Democrats.

In 2003, NDP MLA Greg Selinger was re-elected with about 75% of the popular vote.

List of Provincial Representatives

St. Boniface East (1870-1874)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Marc-Amable Girard Governing Coalition/Cons 1870 1874

St. Boniface West (1870-1874)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Louis Schmidt Governing Coalition/Cons 1870 1874

St. Boniface (single-member riding, 1874-1949)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Marc-Amable Girard Governing Coalition/Cons 1874 1878
Alphonse LaRiviere Governing Coalition/Lib-Cons 1878 1888
Roger Marion Cons 1888 1892
James Prendergast Cons-Lib, then Lib 1892 1896
Jean-B. Lauzon Cons 1897 1899
S.A.D. Bertrand Lib 1899 1900
Joseph Bernier Cons 1900 1903
Horace Chevrier Lib 1903 1907
Joseph Bernier Cons 1907 1915
Joseph Dumas Lib 1915 1920
Joseph Bernier Independent 1920 1926
Cons 1927 1932
Harold Lawrence ILP 1932 1941
Austin Clarke Lib-Prog 1941 1945
Edwin Hansford CCF 1945 1949

St. Boniface (two-member riding, 1949-1958)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Joseph Van Belleghem Lib-Prog 1949 1953
Edwin Hansford CCF 1949 1953
Roger Teillet Lib-Prog 1953 1958
L. Raymond Fennell Lib-Prog 1953 1958

St. Boniface (single-member riding, 1958-)

Name Party Took Office Left Office
Roger Teillet Lib-Prog 1958 1959
Laurent Desjardins Lib-Prog 1959 1961
Lib 1961 1969
Liberal-Democrat 1969 1971
NDP 1971 1973
J. Paul Marion Lib 1973 1974
Laurent Desjardins NDP 1974 1988
Neil Gaudry Lib 1988 1999
Greg Selinger NDP 1999 present

 
 

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Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "St. Boniface (provincial electoral district)" Read more

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