Today is the feast day of St Boniface, so here are 10 things you might not know about him.
Little is known about his early life other than that, at an early age, he attended a monastery in what was probably Exeter, against his father’s wishes.
His original name was Winfrid or Winfred.
He was given the name Boniface by Pope Gregory II after the fourth-century martyr Boniface of Tarsus.
Pope Gregory III made him Archbishop of Germany.
According to the Orthodox church, he’s a patron saint of England and Germany. He’s also the patron of the county of Devon and Winnipeg, Canada. The latter is because a missionary called Father Norbert Provencher built a log church on the banks of a river in what would eventually become Winnipeg and named it for him. The log church was in due course consecrated as Saint Boniface Cathedral.
He was a missionary in Frisia, which is today the Netherlands and Germany. Once he began his work there, he never returned to England, but kept in contact with people there by letter.
One of the things he’s known for is cutting down an ancient Oak tree that was sacred to Germanic pagans. "Jupiter's oak" was located near the present-day town of Fritzlar in Germany. At least, he started to cut it down, but a strong wind occurred and finished the job. When the probably outraged local pagans saw that their gods did not strike Boniface down, they converted to Christianity.
His missionary work wasn’t always as successful as that and it was his lifelong ambition to fully convert the Frisians. On his final mission there, he was killed by armed robbers after telling his bodyguards not to fight them. He allegedly said, "Cease fighting. Lay down your arms, for we are told in Scripture not to render evil for evil but to overcome evil by good." So the robbers slaughtered them, but all for nothing. When they opened the chests the party had been carrying they were disappointed to find they were full of books and manuscripts and not the treasure they’d hoped to find.
Some traditions believe it was Saint Boniface who invented the Christmas Tree.
St Boniface Down, the highest point in the Isle of Wight, is named after him.






