The Venerable Bede (c. 673–735 AD) was an Anglo-Saxon monk, scholar, and historian at the monasteries of Wearmouth and Jarrow. He is best known for The Ecclesiastical History of the English People, but his most technically brilliant work is De Temporum Ratione (“The Reckoning of Time,” 725 AD). In it, Bede laid out a clear, accurate method for calculating the date of Easter that became the standard across Western Europe.
This wasn’t just a technical fix. It resolved bitter church divisions, unified Christian practice, and helped Christianity absorb pagan spring traditions—making the faith more appealing to converts. The result shaped Western civilization’s calendar, culture, and sense of time itself.

The Great Easter Debate: Why Dates Mattered So Much
Early Christians wanted Easter (the celebration of Jesus’s resurrection) on a Sunday, linked to the Jewish Passover but not identical to it. Different traditions used different lunar cycles:
- The Roman/Alexandrian method (19-year Metonic cycle, refined by Dionysius Exiguus) placed Easter between March 22 and April 25, always after the spring equinox (fixed at March 21), on the first Sunday after the first full moon.
- The Celtic/Irish method (older 84-year cycle) could put Easter as early as March 21 and sometimes clashed with the Roman date by up to a month.
In 7th-century Britain, this created chaos. King Oswiu of Northumbria and his queen celebrated different Easters in the same palace—one feasting while the other fasted. Missionaries from Ireland (via Iona) and from Rome were in open rivalry.
In 664 AD, at the Synod of Whitby, King Oswiu called a council to settle it. Bishop Colmán defended the Irish tradition (tracing it to St. John). Wilfrid argued for Rome (tracing it to St. Peter). Oswiu famously asked: “Who is greater in the kingdom of heaven, Columba or the Apostle Peter?” He chose Peter—and Rome.
Bede (writing decades later) recorded Oswiu’s words:
“Peter is guardian of the gates of heaven, and I shall obey his commands… otherwise, when I come to the gates of the kingdom, he who holds the keys may not be willing to open them.”
Bede also described the pain of division:
“This dispute rightly began to trouble the minds and consciences of many people, who feared that they might have received the name of Christian in vain.”

The decision aligned England with continental Europe, but the practical method still needed explaining. That’s where Bede came in.
What Bede Did to Change the Debate
Bede didn’t invent the Dionysian tables—he clarified, defended, and popularized them. In De Temporum Ratione he:
- Showed why the 19-year cycle was astronomically superior.
- Explained lunar “saltus” (the leap of the moon) and equinox rules.
- Provided tables that projected Easter dates centuries ahead.
- Tied everything to theology: time itself reveals God’s order.
His work spread rapidly. By Charlemagne’s time (late 8th century), Bede’s computus was the textbook of the Carolingian Renaissance. It fixed the Western calendar for Easter until the Gregorian reform in 1582—and even today the Orthodox churches use a version of the same system.
Bede also popularized the Anno Domini (AD) dating system we still use. Before him, years were counted from emperors or local kings. Bede made “the year of our Lord” the default in Europe.

The Pagan Connection: How “Easter” Got Its Name
Bede is our earliest and essentially only early medieval source for connecting the English term “Easter” to pre‑Christian tradition. In De Temporum Ratione (chapter 15), while listing the old Anglo‑Saxon month names, he writes that the spring month Eosturmonath was once named after a goddess called Ēostre, in whose honor feasts were held, and that in his own day Christians used that inherited month‑name for the Paschal season.
Modern scholars generally agree that the English word “Easter” comes from this month‑name Eosturmonath (and related Germanic forms), whose deeper linguistic roots seem to be connected with “dawn” or “east,” rather than directly from a fully known pagan myth about Ēostre herself. Bede clearly believed that such a goddess had existed, but outside his brief notice we have almost no reliable information about her cult or symbolism, and it is difficult to reconstruct more than that.
Anglo‑Saxon Christians retained a familiar local calendar term and applied it to the Christian feast of the Resurrection, much as many other languages simply kept or adapted their traditional words for Passover (Pascha). Later folk customs in Europe—such as decorated eggs, hares or “Easter bunnies,” and various spring motifs—developed over many centuries within Christian cultures and are not securely documented as deliberate, early “repurposings” of a specific Anglo‑Saxon pagan spring festival in Bede’s time.

This wasn’t “paganism sneaking in.” It was smart missionary strategy: meet people where they were. The same thing happened with Christmas (Saturnalia/Yule) and many saints’ days. Christianity didn’t erase the old festivals—it baptized them.
The Positive Impact Through the Centuries
Bede’s work on Easter didn’t stand alone; it fed into wider changes that still touch us today.
- Church life and unity — A more widely shared way of dating Easter helped churches in the British Isles and on the continent celebrate the great feast on the same day more often, strengthening a sense of belonging to one church rather than many competing local traditions.
- Mission and pastoral care — Using the established spring feast of the Resurrection, tied to the broader Christian calendar, helped converts step into a pattern of worship that marked the seasons with Christian meaning instead of abandoning a sense of sacred time altogether.
- Calendar and learning — The effort to keep track of Easter and the church year pushed monks and scholars to study the movements of the sun and moon, do careful calculations, and keep written records, which supported the growth of astronomy, mathematics, and historical writing in the early Middle Ages.
Bede did not create the Roman method or single-handedly “win” the Easter controversy, but his clear teaching helped make a complex system easier to understand in monasteries and schools. This support allowed the Roman pattern to become more established in England and much of Western Europe. In this way, he didn’t just address the question of “When is Easter?”—he also integrated the story of Christ’s death and resurrection into the annual rhythm of Western Christians’ lives, echoing an 8th-century monk who believed that even the old pagan months could lead to the new Christian hope.









































