[2] The actual document names Eadwulf as Bishop of York, which indicates that at some point the document was altered, probably after the Norman Conquest of England, as part of the Canterbury-York dispute over the primacy of Britain.
[3] In his signing an act of the Councils of Clovesho in 803, Eadwulf gives his name and title as Eadwulf Syddensis civitatis episcopus and the location of the former Roman city (civitatis) of Syddensis, or Sidnacester, has been greatly debated.
[4] In 1695, Edmund Gibson placed it at Stow, other proposals have been Caistor, Louth and Horncastle.
[6] More recently Lincoln has been suggested as a possible site.
This article about an English bishop or archbishop is a stub.