3-718: The New Minster Liber Vitae is a confraternity book produced in Winchester , in southern England, in 1031. It records the names of visitors to the New Minster, Winchester and contains other information too, as well as a contemporary image of King Cnut the Great and his second wife Queen Emma of Normandy (below right). The original manuscript is now kept in the British Library in London, as Stowe MS 944. It and
6-431: A liber memorialis (memorial book) or liber vitae (book of life), is a medieval register of the names of people who had entered into a state of spiritual brotherhood (confraternity) with a church or monastery in some way, often by visiting it in the capacity of a pilgrim. Persons named in such a book were actively remembered in the prayers of the priests or monks. In many cases these books were established as early as
9-642: The Durham Liber Vitae are the only surviving Anglo-Saxon confraternity books. On folio 29, a later writer has added the names of King Edward the Confessor , Queen Edith and the aetheling Edgar . In a recent article, Tom Licence has argued this list shows that Edgar was considered as King Edward's legitimate heir before Edward's death in 1066. Confraternity book A confraternity book ( German : Verbrüderungsbuch , Latin : liber confraternitatum or confraternitatis ), also called
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